President Trump has issued a lot of Executive Orders that will destroy the country by enabling rampant environmental destruction, this one is nuclear. The public has only until May 4, 2026 to comment on this outrageous docket! Linda Williams had an excellent article in CounterPunch about it:
https://www.counterpunch.org/2026/04/22/a-guide-to-commenting-on-rules-removing-public-oversight-of-nuclear-reactor-safety/
Special thanks to Lynda Williams for alerting us to Fred Schofer's awesome comments! Below are our comments regarding the proposed rule that would effectively destroy the NRC, the country, and the world.
U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission
Office of the Secretary
ATTN: Rulemakings and Adjudications Staff
Washington, DC 20555
Docket ID NRC-2025-1503
To the NRC:
President Donald John Trump (DJT) has removed federal regulatory authority throughout numerous industries and environments: Oil and gas exploitation, copper mining, uranium mining, fossil fuel use. Drug regulation, medical procedures, food safety... all gutted by DJT Executive Orders (EOs).
Prior to DJT, America was trying to protect its people and the environment. Without those two things, we are lost. Gone. Nonexistent.
But of all the industries DJT is deregulating, none have the ability to harm as many people as seriously (cancer, heart attacks, deformities, miscarriages...) as the nuclear industry.
Since the mid 1970s the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) has stood between releases of large quantities of toxic nuclear materials and public safety. The NRC was formed when the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) was broken into two separate entities. The AEC was too focused on promoting nuclear power ("too cheap to meter" was their slogan, for an energy system that has always been among the most expensive available, and far too risky to properly insure, hence the anti-social "Price-Anderson Act" (PAA)).
Safety concerns were handed over to the NRC, and the rest (including most of the funding) went to the new Department of Energy (DOE), which continues to promote and finance new nuclear power plants, as well as all the military uses of nuclear energy (including nuclear safety, whatever that means, at military installations).
If you ask the DOE to consider "safety" they'll tell you that's not their job, that's the NRC's. If you ask the NRC to consider the idea that nuclear power plants are simply not reasonable, they'll tell you... wait for it... that's the DOE's responsibility. If someone wants to build one, the NRC's only job is to make sure it's safe.
But how safe? The relatively young nuclear industry is still mostly held to what were assumed to be, when the NRC was formed, reasonable safety standards.
What's wrong with the current safety standards? Plenty:
First, the assumed level of safety, set by considerations such as ALARA and LNT ("As Low As Reasonably Achievable" and "Linear, No Threshold") were based on false assumptions, such as that "Reasonably Achievable" had to also mean "affordable" and that "reference man" was a good baseline to use.
It should have been assumed then — and is well known now to be true — that women and children are far more vulnerable to radiation's harmful effects than grown men: As much as 100 times **or more** for a fetus or infant! Yet today the standards for radiation exposure are still based on "reference man" (who happened to also be white, young, of proper weight and in good health to begin with).
Second, the NRC was quickly captured by the nuclear industry, which provides nearly all its funding (so when reactors close, funding gets tighter far more than the work load gets lighter). The NRC being solely responsible for safety simply didn't work, as evidenced by the Three Mile Island nuclear meltdown in 1979, an avoidable accident which resulted from improper training of the operators for the conditions experienced. The entire nuclear industry became afraid another meltdown would shut it down completely. There were protests across the nation wanting as much. (This writer took part in some of them.)
In response, nuclear plant operators formed an alternative safety organization called INPO (Independent Nuclear Power Operators). The problem with INPO is the secrecy: The public is not allowed to know, and even the NRC is not privy to INPO's inner workings. And yet the public has to pay for any failures of the nuclear industry, and was promised openness for such a risky business in our midst. (A former head of INPO is now the Chairman of the NRC. Go figure.)
Third, the utter failure of the NRC (and INPO) is plainly evidenced by the existence — and repeated extending — of PAA. PAA limits the price any nuclear power company has to pay out for damages it does to human life and property. PAA does this by both a hard cap on the total payout, and a sharing of the cost of damages among the entire industry. The loser is the public. While extreme accidents are supposed to be extremely rare, they have been missed many times by fractions of an inch or less — and as reactors become more and more embrittled and old, the risk of catastrophic accidents greatly increases.
Fourth, none of the guidelines for the use of commercial nuclear energy (or military nuclear, for that matter) take sufficient account of the alternatives to nuclear energy that are cheaper, cleaner, sustainable, and do not risk catastrophic accidents, sabotage, or massive environmental damage lasting for eons — which are all major problems for nuclear energy, preventing it from having any reasonable role in the world's civilian energy supply. Indeed, solar and wind are out-performing (cheaper, faster, safer) nuclear energy even in China and everywhere else. For example, in a four-year period, Texas was able to install about 36 GW of renewable energy for about $36 Billion. In Georgia, the two new nuclear reactors took 15 years to install and produce only 2 GW of electricity for about the same price. Nuclear is NOT affordable!
This is one reason the NRC has never been able to make commercial nuclear reactors truly "safe." Real safety is not affordable. Instead, the NRC tries to reduce the CHANCE of an accident, since they cannot make catastrophic nuclear accidents impossible.
Nor have they (the NRC, the DOE, the AEC, or the whole nuclear industry) been able to solve the nuclear waste problem, as the incredibly toxic substance is piled up at EVERY commercial nuclear site, whether the reactor is operating or has permanently shut down. Nuclear waste transportation is still a hazardous endeavor every time it happens, which isn't nearly as often as planned. That may be fortunate: America's roads and rails, bridges and tunnels are old and worn out, and moving tens of thousands of canisters at least once means these hazardous places MUST be traversed over and over (perhaps first to a "temporary" storage site, then to a permanent repository, neither of which exists at this time, nor are any projected, except in the dreams of the reactor operators).
Despite the severe, even crippling, problems the nuclear regulatory environment entails (unsolvable nuclear waste problems, unsolvable terrorism, sabotage and war threats, unsolvable earthquake, tornado, derecho, tsunami, asteroid threats...) the industry has persisted, feebly, even halfheartedly: Two new reactors at absurd ratepayer costs and with even more absurd government subsidies, built amidst enormous corruption scandals and at the expense of building solar and wind systems which are never vulnerable to nearly all the threats listed earlier in this paragraph (and many others particular to nuclear power, such as meltdowns due to embrittlement or any other reason).
Under these conditions, America has gone from a high of about 120 reactors down to the low 90s, despite the two new ones, and the prospects for further plummeting of the industry are near 100% as reactors age: Many are past their original life expectancy of forty years already. Why? Because running an old reactor is a lot more profitable than building a new one!
Just hope the inevitable shutdowns and other anomalies aren't catastrophic, or too costly to justify.
Can Small Modular Nuclear Reactors (SMNRs) solve the cost problem? Not a chance, for many reasons (let alone all the other problems).
To start with: Because spreading the problem out among hundreds of new locations, with LESS security, NO evacuation plan for the local population, NOT informing local emergency responders (or the public) about what's going on and what they might face in a catastrophic event... is a recipe for disaster. But that will be the situation if this regulatory change is made.
A multitude of additional problems that the proposed change will create were outlined in a comment regarding this Docket (ID NRC 2025-1503) by retired NRC Team Lead for Regulatory Analysis and Rulemaking Project Manager Fred Schofer.
These include such problems such as: Allowing Department of War (DOW, aka DOD (Department of Defense)) and Department of Energy (DOE) designs for experimental and/or military reactors to be converted to commercial use — which has utterly different requirements — without additional review or consideration of safety, applicability, efficiency, or even for cost-effectiveness, need, safer (and cheaper) alternatives, or the availability of waste disposal solutions, or uranium fuel (will there be mines? Reprocessing? Neither? Will new reactors be dependent or nuclear fuel from Russia?).
A similar missing data problem is currently occurring at several reactor sites in America, where there are sudden plans to restart reactors that had been (supposedly) permanently closed. The missing data is the records that were destroyed during the period after the original closure and before the re-licensing process began. Vital records that should be available to reveal problem areas at the plant, known problems that need watching, and also: Any misbehavior that was caught, patterns of such, and undoubtedly any other records the original company ONLY kept because they HAD TO — until they didn't have to keep them anymore because the reactor had closed. Those would be the first records to be destroyed — and the most important! Many of the employees who worked at the plant (and knew its quirks) will have retired or moved on.
As indicated in Mr. Schofer's comment, the DOE and DOW/DOD do not even have the records needed to properly evaluate the various reactor designs that the DOE is offering to private entities for commercial production at scale. Most of the designs have little chance of succeeding, in part because the market will never be big enough for all the planned versions of all the "new" reactors (and in large part because they have already proven to be impractical for one reason or another).
And at least as important: Many won't ever smash an atom because wind, wave, solar, geothermal and so forth are all cheaper, more reliable and far, far safer -- and don't need half the careful analysis to determine they're safe enough to deploy, because the "bounding accident scenarios" are far, far smaller: If a wind turbine falls over, it might kill a cow or something. If an SMNR is compromised by a terrorist, half a state might need to be evacuated.
And that SMNR would be operating without a review by ANY independent agency! The NRC was created because independent review is the ONLY way that it's the least bit possible to ensure the safety of the public. Real safety has proven (in reality) to be impossible: Catastrophic accidents over time are inevitable, whether caused by nefarious humans, clumsy ones, negligent ones, honest ones tasked with the impossible, or by Mother Nature, Bad Luck or War.
All SMNRs require much higher concentrations of Uranium-235 and/or Plutonium-239 in order for them to achieve some magic level of cost-effective operation, which is expected to be achieved by both mass production (unlikely to ever happen) and by automating the processes as much as possible (including automating security using remote AI-enabled monitoring which may or may not be able to be compromised...).
No evacuation plan, no evacuation zone, no information shared with local emergency responders... A recipe for disaster could not be better-written by the most devious terrorist! And then to put it right in the middle of a community!
The NRC has never really done a good enough job, but handcuffing its ability to even do its current job is sheer madness.
Ace Hoffman (with Sharon Hoffman), Carlsbad, California USA
###
Docket ID NRC–2025–1503 requires further analysis and documentation before it can reasonably be evaluated by the public or federal agencies.
As Fred Schofer, a former Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) employee points out in his public comment to this Docket (reference below), many provisions of the proposed legislation contradict existing legislation and NRC regulations. These discrepancies would put the NRC in an impossible position: The agency would not be able to determine if a proposed commercial reactor that relies on Department of Energy (DOE) or Department of War(DOW)/Department of Defense (DOD) certification meets NRC requirements. NRC staff would have to reject all such applications, which would put them in direct violation of this new proposed regulation.
Regulations for DOE and DOW/DOD reactors are intended to allow small-scale experimental designs. The secrecy surrounding most of these projects is one of the reasons approval of a DOE/DOW/DOD design cannot be extended to commercial reactors. The NRC has a responsibility to independently verify any data submitted by the prospective licensee, yet this regulation would require the NRC to accept DOE/DOW/DOD approvals as proof of safety without verification. This puts public safety at risk.
Current NRC regulations entitle the public to comment on safety issues. Allowing licensees to submit approvals based on classified data makes informed public comment impossible. Similarly, NRC regulations require site-specific risk assessment and emergency planning, and experience with small DOE or DOW/DOD reactors is unlikely to provide the data needed for proper emergency planning for a commercial nuclear plant.
By relying on DOE or DOW/DOD assessments designed for small-scale, short-term experiments, this new interpretation of NRC licensing would also eliminate review of potential dangers from aging equipment and violations of security (both physical security and cybersecurity). Military assessments for experimental reactor designs assume the equipment will only need to operate for a relatively short period of time, and that military advantages outweigh safety concerns.
Commercial reactors have additional levels of safety, cost-effectiveness, and life expectancy (perhaps as much as a century?) not applicable to experimental DOE/DOW/DOD reactors.
Regarding security, DOE and DOW/DOD reactors are usually sited on relatively remote federal property. Commercial reactors based on the same designs could be sited near large population centers without any consideration of the greatly increased potential consequences.
Previous "small-scale" experimental designs for DOE and DOW/DOD reactors have already resulted in death, disease, and environmental damage. Expanding such limited regulations to commercial nuclear reactors violates the very premise of establishing the NRC in the first place: Regulators of nuclear technology cannot be the same people as the promoters of that technology — and there must be both.
NRC licensing requirements should not be abdicated, let alone given over to the self-assertions made by prospective licensees. Rather, nuclear regulations should be made more strict, and Price-Anderson should be eliminated entirely. Either reactors are safe and don't need it, or they are not safe and should not be used. We all know it's the latter, and that there are cleaner, cheaper, utterly safe alternatives such as wind, wave, solar, geothermal and many others, which can never suffer a meltdown and do not create mountains of toxic nuclear waste.
Probabilistic risk assessments for U.S. nuclear power plants discount or ignore numerous "low probability" but perfectly possible events. The frequency of some of these events are truly incalculable (such as terrorism). Many such calculations have proven to be fatally flawed, as shown by major accidents (Three Mile Island, Chernobyl, Fukushima), and numerous "near misses" such as at Davis-Besse and Browns Ferry (both more than once).
The intent of this proposed regulation is clear — and consistent with other recent attempts by the current administration to bypass safety regulations, environmental impact reviews, and public comments in many areas, not just nuclear, based on executive orders. NRC–2025–1503 will weaken commercial nuclear safety even more, and should be rejected.
Lastly, we wish to incorporate by reference and adopt as an addition to these comments the full comments submitted to this docket by Fred Schofer, former NRC Regulatory Analysis Team Lead which identify specific legal deficiencies including the absence of objective acceptance criteria, the unresolved conflict with the NRC’s own prototype definition, the failure to address prototype-to-commercial scaling, and the inadequate regulatory analysis. (https://www.regulations.gov/comment/NRC-2025-1503-0005)
Sharon Hoffman (with Ace Hoffman) Carlsbad, California USA
###
Contact information for the author of this newsletter:
Ace Hoffman
Carlsbad, California USA
Author, The Code Killers:
An Expose of the Nuclear Industry
Free download: acehoffman.org
Blog: acehoffman.blogspot.com
YouTube: youtube.com/user/AceHoffman
Email: ace [at] acehoffman.org
Founder & Owner, The Animated Software Company
Ace Hoffman's Nuclear Failures Reports
Ace has studied nuclear issues since the 1960s. This site was NOT written with AI! (A January 2025 conversation with a chatbot is the ONLY exception.)
Saturday, April 25, 2026
Sunday, April 5, 2026
Pete Kegtrumpsbreath and the Department of War Crimes
by Ace Hoffman
April 5, 2026 War has rules — everybody knows that! If you are defending against an unprovoked attack, the attacker has already violated the rules of war. If you are in the middle of peaceful negotiations at the time, they've already violated the rules twice. If you start your attack by bombing a school full of young girls... By torpedoing a ship known to be unarmed and full of musicians invited to an international affair, hit without warning and without rescuing survivors... If you double-tap that school you bombed... If you cause an environmental catastrophe by blowing up thousands of tons of oil reserves so it rains a toxic storm on a city of more than 10 million people... What are we at so far? Six violations of international law? Eight? Ten? The consequences will inevitably include retaliations over the coming decades. The anger of the survivors does not subside very quickly, even if the perpetrators are eventually brought to justice. When you refuse to sign onto the international land mine treaty, then drop land mines by aerial bombardment in residential areas... When you bomb medical centers, historic cultural sites, water desalination plants, sewage treatment facilities, and infrastructure including factories where medicines are produced... When you punish a population for the crimes of their leaders... There will be consequences. And if you bomb a nuclear power plant... What are the consequences? Because nuclear radiation spreads globally (as do the fumes from oil fires and other toxic attacks, including the use of depleted uranium bullets (shells) which is still uranium, just with a bit less of one isotope. There are many other toxic substances in many "normal" ("non-nuclear) bombs. What if you use a nuclear bomb to blow up a nuclear reactor? What are the consequences for the world? How many international rules of law would such an attack violate? What country, what MADMAN, is forcing humanity to face these questions, and maybe these consequences? Donald J. Trump, J. D. Vance, Pete Hegseth and Mike Johnson are all directly responsible for each of these events (all those events mentioned about except the last one has already happened). Who can stop them? What will the consequences be over the coming decades (long after those four — and myself and maybe you too — are gone)? 9-11, both its immediate destruction and the cancers and lung problems that followed, was a cat scratch compared to the after-effects of a nuclear attack on a nuclear facility: The cancers, deformities, "jelly babies" and other health problems, spread globally. Fair trials and proper punishments for the top-level perpetrators of crimes of this magnitude are very rare. Either the guilty leaders manage to stay in power, or they are hanged or beheaded by those who once admired them, angry when they finally realize they have been mislead. Sometimes the deposed leaders are executed in an effort to avoid a collective punishment that is expected in retaliation for war crimes the leaders convinced others to commit. (The leaders seldom do the crimes themselves.) Is it an endless cycle? For thousands of years, it has been. Whether it can continue in the age of nuclear weapons remains to be seen. With the exceptions of the original bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, nuclear weapons have only been threatened, and even then, nearly always ONLY threatened as a retaliatory measure against another nuclear attack. But here we are, today, wondering not so much IF, but WHEN, Donald J. Trump et al will decide to use a nuclear weapon in war for the first time in world history since August, 1945. As we get closer and closer to the November mid-terms, which he is desperately trying to tilt in his favor by making it costly and difficult for non-white, non-MAGA citizens to vote, and as we get further and deeper into a war Trump himself assured us was necessary (it wasn't) and would only last a few days. We are now nearing the second month of the Iran war with no progress, costing America more than a billion dollars and sometimes some lives each day, and costing Iran many billions more, along with thousands of lives, mostly civilian, and often women and children. How and when will it end? Why did it start in the first place? Will we ever know the real reason? Does the president cheat at golf? I ask this last question because we all know he does, and we all know he is commits war crimes as easily as he cheats at golf. Because as far as he's concerned, both are equally without consequence. We'll see.
The Effects of Nuclear Weapons (originally written by me in 1999): https://acehoffman.blogspot.com/2007/08/effects-of-nuclear-weapons-by-russell.html
Contact information for the author of this newsletter:
Ace Hoffman
Carlsbad, California USA
Author, The Code Killers:
An Expose of the Nuclear Industry
Free download: acehoffman.org
Blog: acehoffman.blogspot.com
YouTube: youtube.com/user/AceHoffman
Email: ace [at] acehoffman.org
Founder & Owner, The Animated Software Company
April 5, 2026 War has rules — everybody knows that! If you are defending against an unprovoked attack, the attacker has already violated the rules of war. If you are in the middle of peaceful negotiations at the time, they've already violated the rules twice. If you start your attack by bombing a school full of young girls... By torpedoing a ship known to be unarmed and full of musicians invited to an international affair, hit without warning and without rescuing survivors... If you double-tap that school you bombed... If you cause an environmental catastrophe by blowing up thousands of tons of oil reserves so it rains a toxic storm on a city of more than 10 million people... What are we at so far? Six violations of international law? Eight? Ten? The consequences will inevitably include retaliations over the coming decades. The anger of the survivors does not subside very quickly, even if the perpetrators are eventually brought to justice. When you refuse to sign onto the international land mine treaty, then drop land mines by aerial bombardment in residential areas... When you bomb medical centers, historic cultural sites, water desalination plants, sewage treatment facilities, and infrastructure including factories where medicines are produced... When you punish a population for the crimes of their leaders... There will be consequences. And if you bomb a nuclear power plant... What are the consequences? Because nuclear radiation spreads globally (as do the fumes from oil fires and other toxic attacks, including the use of depleted uranium bullets (shells) which is still uranium, just with a bit less of one isotope. There are many other toxic substances in many "normal" ("non-nuclear) bombs. What if you use a nuclear bomb to blow up a nuclear reactor? What are the consequences for the world? How many international rules of law would such an attack violate? What country, what MADMAN, is forcing humanity to face these questions, and maybe these consequences? Donald J. Trump, J. D. Vance, Pete Hegseth and Mike Johnson are all directly responsible for each of these events (all those events mentioned about except the last one has already happened). Who can stop them? What will the consequences be over the coming decades (long after those four — and myself and maybe you too — are gone)? 9-11, both its immediate destruction and the cancers and lung problems that followed, was a cat scratch compared to the after-effects of a nuclear attack on a nuclear facility: The cancers, deformities, "jelly babies" and other health problems, spread globally. Fair trials and proper punishments for the top-level perpetrators of crimes of this magnitude are very rare. Either the guilty leaders manage to stay in power, or they are hanged or beheaded by those who once admired them, angry when they finally realize they have been mislead. Sometimes the deposed leaders are executed in an effort to avoid a collective punishment that is expected in retaliation for war crimes the leaders convinced others to commit. (The leaders seldom do the crimes themselves.) Is it an endless cycle? For thousands of years, it has been. Whether it can continue in the age of nuclear weapons remains to be seen. With the exceptions of the original bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, nuclear weapons have only been threatened, and even then, nearly always ONLY threatened as a retaliatory measure against another nuclear attack. But here we are, today, wondering not so much IF, but WHEN, Donald J. Trump et al will decide to use a nuclear weapon in war for the first time in world history since August, 1945. As we get closer and closer to the November mid-terms, which he is desperately trying to tilt in his favor by making it costly and difficult for non-white, non-MAGA citizens to vote, and as we get further and deeper into a war Trump himself assured us was necessary (it wasn't) and would only last a few days. We are now nearing the second month of the Iran war with no progress, costing America more than a billion dollars and sometimes some lives each day, and costing Iran many billions more, along with thousands of lives, mostly civilian, and often women and children. How and when will it end? Why did it start in the first place? Will we ever know the real reason? Does the president cheat at golf? I ask this last question because we all know he does, and we all know he is commits war crimes as easily as he cheats at golf. Because as far as he's concerned, both are equally without consequence. We'll see.
The Effects of Nuclear Weapons (originally written by me in 1999): https://acehoffman.blogspot.com/2007/08/effects-of-nuclear-weapons-by-russell.html
Contact information for the author of this newsletter:
Ace Hoffman
Carlsbad, California USA
Author, The Code Killers:
An Expose of the Nuclear Industry
Free download: acehoffman.org
Blog: acehoffman.blogspot.com
YouTube: youtube.com/user/AceHoffman
Email: ace [at] acehoffman.org
Founder & Owner, The Animated Software Company
Tuesday, March 24, 2026
We will haunt humanity forever with the nuclear waste we produce today.
by Ace Hoffman
March 24, 2026 The main end-product of nuclear power — its reason for existence — is to create incredibly toxic nuclear waste, known as Spent Nuclear Fuel (SNF). Electricity is just a by-product. If electricity was the main product created by nuclear power plants, no one would use nuclear power: Its electricity is too expensive, too dirty, and far too risky (hence, the Price-Anderson Act, a betrayal of the common citizen's right to compensation for harm done by industrial accidents). Pro-nukers call their hobby-horse "green energy" by ignoring the environmental damage of the whole nuclear fuel cycle, the environmental cost of accidents, and especially the unsolved (and unsolvable) problem of nuclear waste. Time has proven accidents are inevitable, as predicted from the beginning by those who studied such things. And physics and chemistry have proven the waste problem unsolvable, also as predicted from the beginning of the nuclear age by those who studied such things. And thus, communities around the world have become de facto nuclear waste dumps. The electricity produced by nuclear power can easily be replaced with cleaner, cheaper, safer alternatives. So what's so valuable about nuclear waste? A small fraction of SNF is the isotope Plutonium-239, which is considered a valuable commodity by some very aggressive nations (including mine) because it can make a very "good" bomb (That is to say: A Plutonium bomb (like the one used in Nagasaki) can make a huge explosion that leaves a legacy of poison afterwards, that kills and maims uninvolved humans (and other living things) that weren't even near (and/or weren't even born) when the bomb exploded somewhere, a bomb that violates all limits of civility to use against anyone. That kind of "good".) Because of its radioactivity, Pu-239 is so toxic that a nearly-invisible speck barely the size of a pepper flake, if diabolically or accidentally deposited in a human lung, would be almost guaranteed to cause lung cancer. On the other hand, there is no known minimum dose that is guaranteed to be safe (Radiation is generally accepted to have a "Linear, No Threshold" (LNT) health effect). How many bombs does a country need? Certainly not MORE than we have ready for delivery by air, land, and sea already (thousands)! The problem is that as a nuclear bomb ages, sitting unused year after year, it become less effective and more likely to just fizzle when finally used, thus becoming a "dirty bomb" (i.e., a radioisotope dispersal device). Nasty, but not what bombs are "good" for. Making new Plutonium bomb cores (known as "pits") is very expensive, and requires SNF, because that's the only place in the world (besides older pits) you can get Pu-239. All Plutonium is man-made in nuclear reactors and needs significant processing before it can be used in a bomb. That's dirty, expensive and difficult, but not insurmountable for any large country. Processing is much harder for a terrorist organization; they would probably prefer to steal Plutonium after it's been processed. So forget the idea that nuclear power is green. It's not. It exists just to manufacture Plutonium. OF COURSE there are many truly clean alternatives for making electricity (wind, wave, solar, geothermal, heat pumps, water wheels, etc.). Nuclear power is far too prone to sudden failure, causing costly temporary or long-term outages (or worse: meltdowns). Nuclear is far too susceptible to sabotage, terrorism, natural phenomena, improper training or inattention, manufacturing errors, and war. And it's far too centralized to be reliable (when one reactor goes down, a million homes suddenly need an alternative power source). It's also far too slow to respond to population shifts, let alone the sudden build-out needed for temporary bubbles (I'm looking at you, AI). Whenever and wherever nuclear power is used, the whole world is left with the waste. Our descendants a thousand generations from now will still be dealing with OUR waste one way or another (either in their environment (YUK!) or still trying to keep it away from humanity — something that the nuclear industry says they'll do, but truly has never done (because, truly, it's impossible). "Consent-based siting" and/or "interim storage" prior to whatever permanent solution they claim might happen (some day) is often promoted as a way to move the SNF "waste" away from locations that are particularly dangerous due to factors such as nearby population density, earthquake risk, danger to groundwater, rising sea-levels, and extreme weather events such as tornadoes. But virtually all discussions about finding a safer storage method and/or location ignore a simple reality: If we continue to produce nuclear waste (about 50 tons per day globally, 10 tons in the U.S. alone (plus military waste), then even if we "solve" today's waste problem, we'll have the same problem tomorrow! Unused nuclear fuel pellets made from natural Uranium are only slightly radioactive, and comparatively, have very few fission products, and no Plutonium at all. So-called "commercial" (highly subsidized, poorly insured) nuclear reactors each produce an average of several hundred pounds of unmanageable, highly toxic nuclear waste every day, starting the moment they "go critical" the first time, because the same process in a nuclear reactor that produces heat to boil water also creates radioactive fission products (created when heavy atoms are split) and activation products (created when stray neutrons are captured by other heavy atoms). Protecting humanity from nuclear waste has proven to be an unsolvable problem. It's not just hard to solve, it's impossible — due to the laws of chemistry, physics, geology, health and human nature! Any so-called "safe" solution has been utterly elusive because nuclear waste is an extremely complex problem that has technical, political, military, humanitarian, and economic difficulties, to name just a few. This is exactly why every piece of proposed nuclear waste legislation brings up the same solutions that have been suggested (in one form or another) for nearly a century: Because trying to do the impossible is both very difficult and very expensive. Problems start right at the beginning: Every city between the current waste dump (such as a nuclear reactor site) and the proposed interim waste site will rightfully complain about dozens, hundreds, or thousands of toxic trips through their location. That's a lot of complainers! Attempts to make SNF transportation "safer" present impossible tradeoffs. For example, "thick-walled" canisters and "transportable" canisters are incompatible requirements: There are weight and size restrictions for every bridge in America, so thicker canister sides means fewer fuel assemblies per canister inside them, which means more trips per site. Each trip has security risks as well as risks from bridge failures, tunnel fires, rolling down the side of a mountain... an endless list of risks, including avoiding major population centers "just in case" (or maybe just to avoid being told "no way, don't go there" which happens whenever people find out nuclear waste will be transported through their town or city). There are many potential catastrophic event scenarios for SNF which have no possible solution, not on the horizon, not on the drawing boards, not at any price, which is why discontinuing the manufacture of nuclear waste is the only reasonable solution. Until we do that, an interim storage location might be useful at some point, but if operating such a storage location convinces society to continue using nuclear power — or worse: enables expanding its use — then creating an interim storage location should be considered an utter failure! In America, any proposed nuclear waste site will be on Native American land because it's all Native American land. A humble suggestion: Offer the destination state a deal: The source state agrees to stop making more nuclear waste forever, so it's a final solution to a huge problem. Of course, that won't be enough incentive, so the source state will need to also offer the state taking the waste a bribe — oops, I mean pay the destination state "rent" for taking the waste "temporarily". Still doesn't sound like a good deal? Of course not! Perhaps the source state should agree to pay these bribes, sorry: storage fees as long as the waste remains at the "interim" storage site in another state, even if it's a long, long time. But pay who, for what? Pay local residents so they never have to work? If they move away will the payments (bribes) stop? And what if the "donor" state breaks its promise to never make more nuclear waste? Will it take back the waste another state already accepted? Not likely! And how do we define "consent" anyway? People living within X number of miles of the proposed site? (Good luck with that!) But accidents can spread globally. And the worst types of accidents — spent fuel fires — although very unlikely, are extremely hazardous if they do happen. They can't be put out with water — although getting close enough to put water on a spent fuel fire wouldn't be very easy anyway. Who gets to vote (to consent) to have a waste site? Each household within a few blocks? Within ten miles (like an evacuation zone for nuclear reactors)? 50 miles? The same payment for every person? A distance-based payment? Woman and children are much more vulnerable to radioactivity than adult males — do they get extra votes on whether they want a nuclear waste dump, and higher payments if they choose to have one? Can children vote on the world they want to live in? What percentage of the voting pool has to approve the site? Do newborns get immediate payments? Will pregnant women and young girls be banned from the area just in case there is an accident? Will they be evacuated first since they are the most vulnerable? The federal government proposes to pay for any and all potential interim storage solutions by robbing the Nuclear Waste Fund -- which exists to pay for a permanent solution. They especially like to rob the interest on the fund, which is the only thing that keeps the fund from depreciating in real value as inflation rises. If a "permanent" federal repository existed, or was planned, then no one would feel that interim sites would be worth the additional risks entailed by moving the waste an extra time (since every move is risky), let alone going through the political hassles described above. So why can't America find a permanent nuclear waste dump site? Let's look at what really happened last time we tried in earnest (or sort of in earnest): The Yucca Mountain project, which was started in 1983... became the only site to be considered in 1987... and was halted permanently by President Obama in 2010. People often dismiss the failure of Yucca Mountain as political. Indeed, there was strong political opposition to it in Nevada -- but there was strong support for it in many other states. Many people worried about transportation risks, and about enabling the production of even more nuclear waste if Yucca Mountain was opened (since it was only expected to hold about as much waste as already existed at the time). But none of THOSE concerns were going to stop it. The real problem was that there were more than 300 technical problems with the site that still had not been resolved when they gave up trying! Some of the unresolved issues (such as water intrusion) were never going to be solved. Titanium shields a half a foot thick? That might have worked...for a while...maybe. But that leaves 299+ other problems. Claiming that Yucca Mountain was canceled due to "strong political opposition" is just the excuse for the fact that there is NO safe solution anywhere. The thousands of scientists working on Yucca Mountain were allowed to advocate for technically better solutions. The only thing that was off the table was doing basically the same thing somewhere else. The scientists looked at rocketing the waste into space and many other ridiculous solutions, as well as several that were at least somewhat more plausible than flying expensive, polluting and unreliable rockets through a man-made (mostly) debris field already orbiting earth. A lot of people call for "hardened" storage of nuclear waste. That can mean a lot of things, but nothing it might mean is likely to be "hardened" against various kinds of modern missiles, large airplane strikes, asteroids that find their way to earth... the list is actually very long! Only deep underground storage can protect against those things, but if anything goes wrong underground, there may be no way to do anything about it. A large number of incredibly strong buildings is the next best thing, with the significant advantage that the waste can be monitored. Lastly, it is possible to use lasers to actually fission the U-235 and Pu-239, but it has not been done at scale, and more importantly, the nuclear industry doesn't WANT to destroy those isotopes, and the nuclear weapons industry doesn't want to either. But it's the best thing for humanity! Humanity needs to stop making more nuclear waste. There's never, ever going to be a safe solution to all the problems it creates. Ace Hoffman, Carlsbad, California USA ### Essay (from 2017): What is spent nuclear fuel neutralization, and why is it the BEST solution for nuclear waste?:
https://acehoffman.blogspot.com/2017/11/what-is-spent-nuclear-fuel.html
Contact information for the author of this newsletter:
Ace Hoffman
Carlsbad, California USA
Author, The Code Killers:
An Expose of the Nuclear Industry
Free download: acehoffman.org
Blog: acehoffman.blogspot.com
YouTube: youtube.com/user/AceHoffman
Email: ace [at] acehoffman.org
Founder & Owner, The Animated Software Company
March 24, 2026 The main end-product of nuclear power — its reason for existence — is to create incredibly toxic nuclear waste, known as Spent Nuclear Fuel (SNF). Electricity is just a by-product. If electricity was the main product created by nuclear power plants, no one would use nuclear power: Its electricity is too expensive, too dirty, and far too risky (hence, the Price-Anderson Act, a betrayal of the common citizen's right to compensation for harm done by industrial accidents). Pro-nukers call their hobby-horse "green energy" by ignoring the environmental damage of the whole nuclear fuel cycle, the environmental cost of accidents, and especially the unsolved (and unsolvable) problem of nuclear waste. Time has proven accidents are inevitable, as predicted from the beginning by those who studied such things. And physics and chemistry have proven the waste problem unsolvable, also as predicted from the beginning of the nuclear age by those who studied such things. And thus, communities around the world have become de facto nuclear waste dumps. The electricity produced by nuclear power can easily be replaced with cleaner, cheaper, safer alternatives. So what's so valuable about nuclear waste? A small fraction of SNF is the isotope Plutonium-239, which is considered a valuable commodity by some very aggressive nations (including mine) because it can make a very "good" bomb (That is to say: A Plutonium bomb (like the one used in Nagasaki) can make a huge explosion that leaves a legacy of poison afterwards, that kills and maims uninvolved humans (and other living things) that weren't even near (and/or weren't even born) when the bomb exploded somewhere, a bomb that violates all limits of civility to use against anyone. That kind of "good".) Because of its radioactivity, Pu-239 is so toxic that a nearly-invisible speck barely the size of a pepper flake, if diabolically or accidentally deposited in a human lung, would be almost guaranteed to cause lung cancer. On the other hand, there is no known minimum dose that is guaranteed to be safe (Radiation is generally accepted to have a "Linear, No Threshold" (LNT) health effect). How many bombs does a country need? Certainly not MORE than we have ready for delivery by air, land, and sea already (thousands)! The problem is that as a nuclear bomb ages, sitting unused year after year, it become less effective and more likely to just fizzle when finally used, thus becoming a "dirty bomb" (i.e., a radioisotope dispersal device). Nasty, but not what bombs are "good" for. Making new Plutonium bomb cores (known as "pits") is very expensive, and requires SNF, because that's the only place in the world (besides older pits) you can get Pu-239. All Plutonium is man-made in nuclear reactors and needs significant processing before it can be used in a bomb. That's dirty, expensive and difficult, but not insurmountable for any large country. Processing is much harder for a terrorist organization; they would probably prefer to steal Plutonium after it's been processed. So forget the idea that nuclear power is green. It's not. It exists just to manufacture Plutonium. OF COURSE there are many truly clean alternatives for making electricity (wind, wave, solar, geothermal, heat pumps, water wheels, etc.). Nuclear power is far too prone to sudden failure, causing costly temporary or long-term outages (or worse: meltdowns). Nuclear is far too susceptible to sabotage, terrorism, natural phenomena, improper training or inattention, manufacturing errors, and war. And it's far too centralized to be reliable (when one reactor goes down, a million homes suddenly need an alternative power source). It's also far too slow to respond to population shifts, let alone the sudden build-out needed for temporary bubbles (I'm looking at you, AI). Whenever and wherever nuclear power is used, the whole world is left with the waste. Our descendants a thousand generations from now will still be dealing with OUR waste one way or another (either in their environment (YUK!) or still trying to keep it away from humanity — something that the nuclear industry says they'll do, but truly has never done (because, truly, it's impossible). "Consent-based siting" and/or "interim storage" prior to whatever permanent solution they claim might happen (some day) is often promoted as a way to move the SNF "waste" away from locations that are particularly dangerous due to factors such as nearby population density, earthquake risk, danger to groundwater, rising sea-levels, and extreme weather events such as tornadoes. But virtually all discussions about finding a safer storage method and/or location ignore a simple reality: If we continue to produce nuclear waste (about 50 tons per day globally, 10 tons in the U.S. alone (plus military waste), then even if we "solve" today's waste problem, we'll have the same problem tomorrow! Unused nuclear fuel pellets made from natural Uranium are only slightly radioactive, and comparatively, have very few fission products, and no Plutonium at all. So-called "commercial" (highly subsidized, poorly insured) nuclear reactors each produce an average of several hundred pounds of unmanageable, highly toxic nuclear waste every day, starting the moment they "go critical" the first time, because the same process in a nuclear reactor that produces heat to boil water also creates radioactive fission products (created when heavy atoms are split) and activation products (created when stray neutrons are captured by other heavy atoms). Protecting humanity from nuclear waste has proven to be an unsolvable problem. It's not just hard to solve, it's impossible — due to the laws of chemistry, physics, geology, health and human nature! Any so-called "safe" solution has been utterly elusive because nuclear waste is an extremely complex problem that has technical, political, military, humanitarian, and economic difficulties, to name just a few. This is exactly why every piece of proposed nuclear waste legislation brings up the same solutions that have been suggested (in one form or another) for nearly a century: Because trying to do the impossible is both very difficult and very expensive. Problems start right at the beginning: Every city between the current waste dump (such as a nuclear reactor site) and the proposed interim waste site will rightfully complain about dozens, hundreds, or thousands of toxic trips through their location. That's a lot of complainers! Attempts to make SNF transportation "safer" present impossible tradeoffs. For example, "thick-walled" canisters and "transportable" canisters are incompatible requirements: There are weight and size restrictions for every bridge in America, so thicker canister sides means fewer fuel assemblies per canister inside them, which means more trips per site. Each trip has security risks as well as risks from bridge failures, tunnel fires, rolling down the side of a mountain... an endless list of risks, including avoiding major population centers "just in case" (or maybe just to avoid being told "no way, don't go there" which happens whenever people find out nuclear waste will be transported through their town or city). There are many potential catastrophic event scenarios for SNF which have no possible solution, not on the horizon, not on the drawing boards, not at any price, which is why discontinuing the manufacture of nuclear waste is the only reasonable solution. Until we do that, an interim storage location might be useful at some point, but if operating such a storage location convinces society to continue using nuclear power — or worse: enables expanding its use — then creating an interim storage location should be considered an utter failure! In America, any proposed nuclear waste site will be on Native American land because it's all Native American land. A humble suggestion: Offer the destination state a deal: The source state agrees to stop making more nuclear waste forever, so it's a final solution to a huge problem. Of course, that won't be enough incentive, so the source state will need to also offer the state taking the waste a bribe — oops, I mean pay the destination state "rent" for taking the waste "temporarily". Still doesn't sound like a good deal? Of course not! Perhaps the source state should agree to pay these bribes, sorry: storage fees as long as the waste remains at the "interim" storage site in another state, even if it's a long, long time. But pay who, for what? Pay local residents so they never have to work? If they move away will the payments (bribes) stop? And what if the "donor" state breaks its promise to never make more nuclear waste? Will it take back the waste another state already accepted? Not likely! And how do we define "consent" anyway? People living within X number of miles of the proposed site? (Good luck with that!) But accidents can spread globally. And the worst types of accidents — spent fuel fires — although very unlikely, are extremely hazardous if they do happen. They can't be put out with water — although getting close enough to put water on a spent fuel fire wouldn't be very easy anyway. Who gets to vote (to consent) to have a waste site? Each household within a few blocks? Within ten miles (like an evacuation zone for nuclear reactors)? 50 miles? The same payment for every person? A distance-based payment? Woman and children are much more vulnerable to radioactivity than adult males — do they get extra votes on whether they want a nuclear waste dump, and higher payments if they choose to have one? Can children vote on the world they want to live in? What percentage of the voting pool has to approve the site? Do newborns get immediate payments? Will pregnant women and young girls be banned from the area just in case there is an accident? Will they be evacuated first since they are the most vulnerable? The federal government proposes to pay for any and all potential interim storage solutions by robbing the Nuclear Waste Fund -- which exists to pay for a permanent solution. They especially like to rob the interest on the fund, which is the only thing that keeps the fund from depreciating in real value as inflation rises. If a "permanent" federal repository existed, or was planned, then no one would feel that interim sites would be worth the additional risks entailed by moving the waste an extra time (since every move is risky), let alone going through the political hassles described above. So why can't America find a permanent nuclear waste dump site? Let's look at what really happened last time we tried in earnest (or sort of in earnest): The Yucca Mountain project, which was started in 1983... became the only site to be considered in 1987... and was halted permanently by President Obama in 2010. People often dismiss the failure of Yucca Mountain as political. Indeed, there was strong political opposition to it in Nevada -- but there was strong support for it in many other states. Many people worried about transportation risks, and about enabling the production of even more nuclear waste if Yucca Mountain was opened (since it was only expected to hold about as much waste as already existed at the time). But none of THOSE concerns were going to stop it. The real problem was that there were more than 300 technical problems with the site that still had not been resolved when they gave up trying! Some of the unresolved issues (such as water intrusion) were never going to be solved. Titanium shields a half a foot thick? That might have worked...for a while...maybe. But that leaves 299+ other problems. Claiming that Yucca Mountain was canceled due to "strong political opposition" is just the excuse for the fact that there is NO safe solution anywhere. The thousands of scientists working on Yucca Mountain were allowed to advocate for technically better solutions. The only thing that was off the table was doing basically the same thing somewhere else. The scientists looked at rocketing the waste into space and many other ridiculous solutions, as well as several that were at least somewhat more plausible than flying expensive, polluting and unreliable rockets through a man-made (mostly) debris field already orbiting earth. A lot of people call for "hardened" storage of nuclear waste. That can mean a lot of things, but nothing it might mean is likely to be "hardened" against various kinds of modern missiles, large airplane strikes, asteroids that find their way to earth... the list is actually very long! Only deep underground storage can protect against those things, but if anything goes wrong underground, there may be no way to do anything about it. A large number of incredibly strong buildings is the next best thing, with the significant advantage that the waste can be monitored. Lastly, it is possible to use lasers to actually fission the U-235 and Pu-239, but it has not been done at scale, and more importantly, the nuclear industry doesn't WANT to destroy those isotopes, and the nuclear weapons industry doesn't want to either. But it's the best thing for humanity! Humanity needs to stop making more nuclear waste. There's never, ever going to be a safe solution to all the problems it creates. Ace Hoffman, Carlsbad, California USA ### Essay (from 2017): What is spent nuclear fuel neutralization, and why is it the BEST solution for nuclear waste?:
https://acehoffman.blogspot.com/2017/11/what-is-spent-nuclear-fuel.html
Contact information for the author of this newsletter:
Ace Hoffman
Carlsbad, California USA
Author, The Code Killers:
An Expose of the Nuclear Industry
Free download: acehoffman.org
Blog: acehoffman.blogspot.com
YouTube: youtube.com/user/AceHoffman
Email: ace [at] acehoffman.org
Founder & Owner, The Animated Software Company
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