The federal government
is being accused of withholding a key report that could
shed light on whether the United States needs to build
nuclear weapons factories in South Carolina and New
Mexico.
Four environmental
groups are calling for the release of the study that
examines the life span of plutonium pits, the central
cores of nuclear weapons that could be used to defend
the country. The government says the existing pit
stockpile is getting old and needs replacement, but
critics say past studies have suggested otherwise.
That’s why releasing
the report could answer important questions in the
ongoing debate over construction of pit production
plants at the Savannah River Site in South Carolina
and the Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico,
environmentalists say.
The report being
sought updates some studies that have indicated pits
could last up to 100 years, making the need to replace
the country’s existing stockpile less urgent, they
said. Most plutonium pits were produced at a now
shuttered plant in Colorado from 1952-1989. The report
being sought is known as a “Jason’’ study.
“If the new Jason
pit life study supported claims that we need to
produce new pits because of the alleged aging effects,
they would have released it,’’ said Jay Coghlan,
director of Nuclear Watch New Mexico, an atomic
weapons watchdog group. “But they are covering it
up.’’
Savannah River Site
Watch director Tom Clements and S.C. Environmental Law
Project director Amy Armstrong said people need to
know what’s in the study.
“This study is
clearly relevant,’’ Armstrong said. “So it’s
something that should be released. We should have
full transparency.’’
Environmentalists
say pit production could encourage a new nuclear
arms race at a time when the world has more than
enough atomic weapons.
Pit production
also could be environmentally dangerous because
plutonium is one of the most toxic nuclear
materials, and some forms do not break down for
thousands of years.
A July 10 report
in The New York Times said if plutonium escaped the
New Mexico facility under a worse case scenario, the
town of Los Alamos could become unlivable. As many
as 3,200 people could get cancer, leading to 1,000
deaths, the Times reported, relying on a new study
affiliated with Princeton University.
Beyond that,
critics of the pit plant effort say the more than
$30 billion estimated cost of the project is a
concern.
Coghlan said a
Freedom of Information Act request he filed this
year with the federal government for the study has
not been acted upon. A spokesman for the National
Nuclear Security Administration, which is working on
the project, had no immediate comment on why the
study has not been released.
Environmental
groups seeking the study and two other reports
include Coghlan’s organization, Savannah River Site
Watch and Tri-Valley Cares in California. The S.C.
Environmental Law Project also wants the government
to produce the Jason study and others. The groups
previously convinced the federal government to
conduct a comprehensive environmental impact
statement of the project.
At issue is a
plan by the federal government to begin producing at
least 80 plutonium pits each year to replenish
nuclear weapons, while also having a supply ready
for new atomic weapons. More recent efforts have
looked at ramping up production to some 200 pits a
year. The goal is to get the program going by 2030.
To meet that goal,
the government plans to upgrade production
facilities at the New Mexico lab, which has
previously produced small numbers of pits, and to
build a new pit production plant at the Savannah
River Site near the South Carolina-Georgia border.
SRS, which would
produce the bulk of the pits if new factories are
built, is a complex that opened during the Cold War
and was at one time a key cog in producing tritium
and plutonium for atomic bombs. Supporters of the
South Carolina plant, which at times has employed
more than 10,000 people, have been seeking new
missions for more than 30 years.
While the NNSA
did not address why it isn’t releasing the Jason
document, one official with the U.S. Department of
Energy said it’s too risky to avoid updating the
pit stockpile, even if some studies show the pits
have years of life left.
“There are some
conflicting pieces of information; some of the
studies say these pits are good for 100 plus
years, but some of the science disagrees with
that,’’ according to the government official, who
asked not to be identified because the person was
not authorized to speak on the matter. “The
military is privy to non-public information and
they have made the determination these are
needed.’’
“God forbid you
would ever launch a weapon, but if you do, you
damned sure want to make sure it works,’’ the
official said.
Establishing a
pit production factory at the Savannah River Site
has been on the table for at least 20 years and
has been supported by both Democrats and
Republican administrations. Among the plant’s
boosters has been U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C.
The government is now working to remodel a failed
mixed-oxide fuel plant for use as the pit
production factory at SRS. The old fuel plant
project was never finished after billions of
dollars were spent.
Some members
of Congress are critical of plans for the pit
plants, including U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren, a
Democrat from Massachusetts, and Rep. John
Garamendi, a Democrat from California. In a Dec.
16, 2025, letter to U.S. Energy Secretary Chris
Wright, they called for more information to be
released before the Department of Energy and the
NNSA move ahead with new pit production.
“In rushing to
production, NNSA has developed an excessively
risky program structure, with management
concerns around fundamental aspects such as the
cost and schedule,’’ the letter said. “To
prevent further risk, DOE should halt the
planned production of new plutonium pits at the
Savannah River Site until preliminary or
complete aging studies validate the requirement
for new pits.’’