LASG header
Follow TrishABQ on Twitter Follow us
 
"Remember Your Humanity" blog

Update of noon, June 15, 2011

House Appropriations Committee slashes $100 million from huge proposed plutonium facility at Los Alamos

Republican-led committee seeks to hold back LANL project pending resolution of major issues

Republicans would limit Obama-led nuclear weapons “surge,” citing budget restrictions, management problems

Contact: Greg Mello, 505-265-1200 office or 505-577-8563 cell, mid-afternoon and evening

June 15 update to June 14 press release (attached below)

Albuquerque – Today the House Appropriations Committee (HAC) act to slash next year’s spending on the proposed new plutonium facility at Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL), cutting $100 million (M) – about 37% – from the project and calling for a delay in the construction planned on the facility for the duration of the coming fiscal year, i.e. until at least October 1, 2012.

In his opening remarks Subcommittee Chairman Rodney Freylinghuysen (R-NJ) said the proposed bill would cut out from the Administration’s request for nuclear warheads

…hundreds of millions of dollars for construction projects that are not ready to move forward, capabilities that are secondary to the primary mission of keeping our stockpile ready, and yes, slush funds that the Administration has historically used to address its needs.  The recommendation before you eliminates these weaknesses and it is responsible.

There was no discussion or debate, and no amendments were offered to the proposed bill (pdf) and report (pdf), regarding nuclear warhead programs in the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA).

The bill must now be passed by the House as a whole and sent to the Senate for consideration.

It will be difficult politically to add money to any portion of this bill in the House at this point in its development. Even in the absence of a widely-perceived fiscal shortfall, amendments to appropriations bills offered on the floor usually must specify an offsetting source of funds for any proposed funding increase.

The Senate has not completed the budget allocation process and no Energy and Water appropriations markup is scheduled, raising doubts regarding whether this bill can be passed before the end of the federal fiscal year on September 30, in which case a continuing resolution (CR) is likely.

The funding levels and restrictions on any NNSA programs and projects in any CR, including the proposed new facility at LANL (called the Chemistry and Metallurgy Research Replacement Nuclear Facility or CMRR-NF) would then be subject to further negotiation.

Study Group Director Greg Mello, “While not yet law, the endorsement of this deep cut and the associated delay of at least one year in the project by the powerful House Appropriations Committee is yet another indication that Congress doubts the wisdom of proceeding with this project at this time.

“NNSA should analyze the readily-apparent alternatives to this wasteful, unnecessary, and destructive project, which we believe will harm national security, our environment, and the federal fisc. We need to invest in energy efficiency and renewable energy infrastructure and jobs, not wildly wasteful new nuclear bomb projects. NNSA must try to understand that the Cold War is over.”

***ENDS***

June 14 press release

House Appropriations Committee may slash $100 million from huge proposed plutonium facility at Los Alamos– final vote tomorrow

Republican-led committee may seek to hold back LANL project pending resolution of major issues

House poised to limit cost of Obama-led nuclear weapons “surge,” citing budget restrictions, management problems

Albuquerque – The House Appropriations Committee (HAC) today released its draft Energy and Water Development Appropriations bill (pdf) and associated report (pdf), prepared by the HAC’s Energy and Water Development Subcommittee and approved by that subcommittee on June 2. On that day the Subcommittee published a summary table (pdf) of its overall priorities in relation to those of the Administration as well as an overview of its priorities, but details were not available until today.

The full HAC will take up this proposed legislation tomorrow at 9:30 am EDT (video and audio available).

The Obama Administration, through the agency of the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) which manages the nation’s nuclear stockpile as well as the DoD, has sought large increases in nuclear weapons spending (pdf). (See the chart in this press release for historical context.) At LANL these proposed increases were to be unprecedented since the Manhattan Project and were pushed through Congress on an “emergency” basis in order to buy Republican Senate votes for New START ratification, which occurred on December 22, 2010.

NNSA’s most recent budget request (pdf) included $300 million for fiscal year (FY) 2012 for the proposed Chemistry and Metallurgy Research Replacement Nuclear Facility (CMRR-NF) at Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL). The official current (rough) estimate for CMRR-NF is $4.7 to $5.8 billion (B) (pdf), but a senior government official recently warned Study Group Director Greg Mello that costs, if past experience with major construction projects is any guide, could rise much higher still.

The draft Energy and Water bill would cut CMRR-NF heavily and hold back any construction until October 2012 at the earliest.

Project 04–D–125, Chemistry and Metallurgy Research Replacement (CMRR), Los Alamos National Laboratory.—The Committee recommends $200,000,000, $100,000,000 below the budget request. The Committee fully supports the Administration’s plans to modernize the infrastructure, but intends to closely review the funding requests for new investments to ensure those plans adhere to good project management practices. The latest funding profile provided to the Committee indicates that over half the funding requested for the Nuclear Facility would be used to start early construction activities. The recommendation will support the full request for design activities, but does not provide the additional funding to support early construction. The NNSA is not prepared to award that project milestone since it must first resolve major seismic issues with its design, complete its work to revalidate which capabilities are needed, and make a decision on its contracting and acquisition strategies. (p. 131)

This $100 million (M) cut is 90% of all the Committee’s proposed cuts in NNSA construction, meaning that House Appropriations is almost uniquely targeting CMRR-NF among all proposed NNSA construction for cuts. The Committee would also hold back a proposed new transuranic nuclear waste facility at LANL.

NNSA had requested $270.1 M for CMRR-NF specifically, the balance of the proposed $300 M CMRR budget line being allocated to completing the first CMRR building, the Radiological Laboratory, Utility, and Office Building (RLUOB). So the $100 M cut would amount to 37% of the proposed CMRR-NF budget for FY2012.

Overall, the Committee would slash $498 M from the Obama request for NNSA nuclear Weapons Activities, adding only 3% in FY2012 to the FY2011 enacted budget, a 6.6% cut from Obama’s warhead request. Considering inflation, nuclear warhead spending would not rise.

The ascendency of budget concerns in the Republican-led House meant that the Committee was given only 84% of what Obama asked for Energy and Water programs overall. Relatively speaking, the Committee protected the nuclear weapons establishment – but not CMRR-NF.

Mello, who traveled to Washington in late May to meet for a week with members of Congress and their staff concerning this facility and related issues, remarked, “Many people in Washington are looking closely at the rising costs and the unresolved design and management issues of CMRR-NF. Given these concerns, this proposed cutback and delay in construction are hardly a surprise. They are however a welcome relief from the rush-to-failure approach we see in this project, which lacks clarity about overall mission need, specific requirements, design concept, and just about everything else. NNSA has very good alternatives which do not build this building, and they need to look closely at them.”

“More broadly, appropriators are concerned that the departments of Energy and Defense are not fully considering the cost and programmatic implications of NNSA modernization, or considering the full range of alternatives available:

‘It is incumbent upon the experts at the NNSA to provide a range of options which would meet defense requirements and to ensure that a range of alternatives are considered, taking into account the DOE resource implications of each alternative.’ (p. 83)

These are our concerns – and what we ask – as well.”

In the fall of 2010 NNSA was poised to initiate subcontracting (pdf, see p. 170) for the first stages of CMRR-NF construction (here is the whole project schedule, pdf), but LANL pulled all references to construction from its web site and held back all construction subcontracting during the course of litigation filed by the Los Alamos Study Group under the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). After the Study Group’s lawsuit was filed the NNSA initiated a Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement (SEIS) process, which is currently underway. Citing the SEIS and the lack of construction, Judge Herrera dismissed the Study Group’s lawsuit on May 23. The Study Group is currently considering an appeal to the 10th Circuit, and other legal options.

***ENDS***


^ back to top

2901 Summit Place NE Albuquerque, NM 87106, Phone: 505-265-1200

home page contact contribute