It looks like the government's
nuclear ambitions have been dealt yet another major body blow. This time it's
all about the thorny, intractable issue of nuclear
waste.
Just as yet another nuclear-related
consultation
comes to an end, this time on where to store the UK's highly toxic atomic
legacy, the government has been warned
that it would be "wrong", and possibly even illegal, to
use Sellafield in West Cumbria as a site for long term nuclear waste disposal.
David Smythe, emeritus professor of geophysics at the University of Glasgow and
a nuclear waste expert, said ministers should have ruled out Sellafield - home
to the nation's most enthusiastic nuclear partisans and the long-assumed front
runner in the race to house a waste dump – years ago after spending hundreds of
millions of pounds on research that proved the area was geologically unsuitable
to be a store for radioactive waste. Professor Smythe said, "there is clear
evidence, after the expenditure of some £400m, mostly directed to the Sellafield
area, that West Cumbria possesses no suitable
rocks in which to site such a repository".