Moab UMTRA Plays Russian Roulette With Nuclear Waste
Late May 2011 found me in Moab, Utah once again. While there, one of my projects was to monitor potential flooding along the Colorado River. Previous research and scientific findings indicate that a Colorado River flood at Moab is more likely now than in any recent time.
As temperatures swing, drought prevails and dust storms roam the Four Corners,
a heavy spring snowpack, and a quick thaw could create catastrophic
flooding at Moab. To be sure, most of the town lies on higher ground,
well above the paleo-floodplain. Other than a few commercial buildings
and several campgrounds, the greatest risk is flooding at the Moab Pile.
Remnants of the Atlas Uranium Mill and a colossal
mountain of radioactive tailings together make up the Moab Pile. Since
2009, excavators have filled and sealed steel containers with vast
amounts of the pile’s radioactive earth. From Moab to Crescent Junction, the material takes a free ride via the Union Pacific Railroad's "Train of Pain". Actually, the ride is not free. Through our federal tax dollars, all U.S. Persons pay for its removal.
From the bicycle bridge, looking downstream, the
U.S. 191 Highway Bridge appeared to skim low over the water. With its
gracefully arched concrete supports, there was still some headroom for
the water to flow. Just south of the highway bridge, the Canyonlands by Night
buildings looked vulnerable to me. The riverbanks there were high
enough to allay imminent fears, but their lack of reinforcement made for
inadequate protection in the event of a larger flow. In any event, I
would not want to own their flood insurance company.
Continuing my river tour, I turned off U.S. 191 at Utah State Route 279, better known as the Potash Road.
After skirting the now diminished Moab Pile, I headed downstream.
Despite nearly a decade of attempted extermination using the Tamarisk
Beetle, large, half-dead tamarisk shielded every river view. Soon, I
turned around and drove back to where I could see the Moab Pile, the
Colorado River and the Scott Matheson Wetlands,
all in one panorama. From a distance of about one half mile, the
churning brown, river appeared to lap at the base of the Moab Pile. The
following day, I drove downriver on the opposite bank, along the Kane
Creek Road. With the Matheson Wetlands then to my right, the Moab Pile
stood out on the horizon, along the far riverbank. Although the river
was turgid and brown, its wide channel in that area kept the river in
check.
Both
the Green River and the Colorado River continued to rise until at least
mid-June. Grand Junction, Colorado experienced significant flooding and
bank-erosion, although the river made a long, slow peak there.
Downstream, near Moab, the Red Cliffs Lodge experienced bank erosion and
flooding of temporary structures in what they call their “gravel area”.
According to on-scene reports, the river never approached the hotel or
its guest rooms. The Colorado River bicycle and highway bridges at Moab
stood firmly above the river. Canyonlands by Night remained dry, if not
high above the river crest. The Moab Pile still sits sedately in its old
place, although water backed-up into adjacent drainage channels.
In order to protect the Moab Pile, UMTRA crews have
removed some material from its leading edge. UMTRA has constructed
several small protective berms, as well. However, the paleo-history of
floods along the Colorado River at Moab indicates that the Moab Pile
remains vulnerable to the "three hundred year flood", if it should
happen during the next decade. During that decade of tailings removal,
there is a one-in-thirty chance that a flood of up to ten times the
current 32,000 cfs flow rate will hit Moab. Picture a wall of water
forty or fifty feet higher than the new highway bridge as it sweeps out
of the Colorado Riverway Canyon, and then on towards the Moab Pile.
Recent news reports stated that by 2019, the Moab Pile could be moved. The engineers and workers at the Moab UMTRA
project are so efficient that they haul more radioactive-waste more
quickly than ever before. among other things, they have learned to fill
huge rectangular containers almost to the brim. Even though an initial
infusion of federal stimulus money is now gone, the original twenty-year
plan could culminate in less than fifteen years. Despite the lucrative
contracts to remove it, no one wants to hang around a pile of
radioactive waste any longer than necessary.
Check back here in 2020 to see if disaster struck.
If we are writing our articles from upstream of the current Moab Pile,
you will know that current plans did not go well. If we are then writing
from downstream in sunny Southern California, you will know that we all
won the game of “Nuclear Waste Roulette” now playing out along the
Colorado River at Moab.
By James McGillis at 06:48 PM | | Comments (0) | Link
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