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Committee passes provision on Canadian nuclear waste storage

'Our Great Lakes are central to our Michigan way of life, and any nuclear waste spill would be devastating,' says Sen. Debbie Stabenow
2022-01-03 Nuclear power
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U.S. Sen. Debbie Stabenow (D-Michigan), co-chair of the U.S. Senate Great Lakes Task Force, announced the Committee on Environment and Public Works passed her provision requiring the Biden Administration to work with Canada on an alternative location to permanently store nuclear waste.

For years, Stabenow has opposed Canada’s plan to permanently store high-level nuclear waste in the Great Lakes Basin. 

“Placing a nuclear waste facility next to one of the world’s largest supplies of fresh water makes absolutely no sense and is dangerous. Our Great Lakes are central to our Michigan way of life, and any nuclear waste spill would be devastating. This provision requires the Biden Administration to work with our Canadian neighbors to stop any plans to store nuclear waste so close to the Great Lakes,” said Stabenow in a news release.

Over 40 million people in the United States and Canada get their drinking water from the Great Lakes. Meanwhile, the Nuclear Waste Management Organization, a nonprofit created by the Canadian government, is proposing to build a permanent nuclear waste repository at South Bruce to store high-level nuclear waste in the Great Lakes Basin. The waste could take tens of thousands of years to decompose to safe levels, the release added.