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Action For Nuclear Abolition
Updated
9/29/06

We invite you to join us in international nonviolent
resistance to U.S. Nuclear policies. Together we will build community
and take direct action for nuclear abolition. With our Western Shoshone
hosts and friends from around the world, we will wise up, rise up,
honor and resist.
Action for Nuclear Abolition working
for complete nuclear disarmament and closure of the Nevada Test
Site. Along with our ongoing work in building alliances with affected
communities, organizing and supporting conferences, workshops, speeches,
rallies, and direct actions, we also mobilize internationally to
bring activists to Shut Down the Nevada Test Site, Stop Skull Valley
& Stop Yucca Mountain.

Nuclear Weapons, Environmental
Management and Waste Disposal in the Energy Department's FY06 Budget
Request
Funding for nuclear weapons should be reduced, but it goes
up to $6.63 billion in FY06, a $46.7 million increase from
the prior year. This level is more than one and a half times the
amount the U.S. spent on average during the Cold War and is wholly
unnecessary to preserving the safety of the nation's nuclear arsenal.
Funding for environmental cleanup and
waste management should be maintained, but it is cut $548 million
dollars, a 7.8 percent drop from the prior year. The Department
of Energy (DOE) has abandoned its earlier commitment to transfer
resources from closure sites to those awaiting closure in favor
of cutting funding and accelerating DOE out of the cleanup business.
The largest cuts are at the most contaminated sites -- Hanford and
Savannah River -- where essential water resources are threatened.
Funding for environmental cleanup and
waste management at seven weapons sites should be maintained, but
is cut by about $18 million, a more than 9 percent drop.
In addition, a new Office of Environmental Projects and Operations
in the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA), the semi-autonomous
body within the DOE is responsible for nuclear weapons, would take
over those sites. NNSA should pay for cleanup of newly generated
wastes but the Office of Environmental Management (EM) should maintain
responsibility for cleanup as the office with developed expertise,
the single point of contact within DOE on cleanup, and because EM's
culture of secrecy is less severe than NNSA's.
Funding for the Robust Nuclear Earth Penetrator
should be eliminated, but the request includes $8.5 million for
the program, $4 million through the NNSA and $4.5 million
through the Air Force for drop tests. Congress zeroed out funding
for this project in FY05 and the Pentagon has yet to issue a military
requirement for the weapon. The RNEP is not a low-yield nuclear
weapon and will cause massive collateral damage. Pushing new nuclear
weapons undermines our nonproliferation objectives.
Funding for the Reliable Replacement Warhead
is $9.35 million and should be canceled. This new project
aims to produce a new design warhead with a longer shelf-life without
testing. ANA and other arms control groups are concerned this new
weapon could lead to new missions, expanded production, and a return
to full-scale testing. Further, it signals to the world that the
U.S. never intends to honor its obligation under the NonProliferation
Treaty to eventually disarm its nuclear stockpile.
Funding for warhead dismantlement should
be bolstered but NNSA requests only $35.2 million for the
Retired Warhead Stockpile Systems account and fails to report that
Congress awarded $75 million for dismantlement in FY05, showing
only $35 million allocated for the present fiscal year. NNSA budget
projections for dismantlement show a steady decline over the next
five years, rather than ramping up to meet the requirements under
the Moscow Treaty.
Funding should be cut for Life Extension
Programs ($348 million) and Stockpile Systems ($311.8 million),
the programs that upgrade and modernize warheads. Instead, the priority
should be on dismantlement which is crowded out by Life Extension
programs performed at the same facilities at Pantex, near Amarillo,
Texas and Y-12 in Oak Ridge, Tennessee.
Funding should be struck for the Modern
Pit Facility (MPF), a new nuclear bomb plant for which NNSA requests
$7.6 million for in FY06. This is an increase above the
$7 million awarded after Congress cut the Administration's $30 million
request in FY05. NNSA wants to spend $125.7 million on the MPF over
the next five years. A new bomb plant is unnecessary as the arsenal
continues to be certfied as safe and reliable. Building a new bomb
plant for mass production of existing pits and future new-design
pits undermines our nonproliferation objectives.
The $25 million requested to enhance the
readiness of the Nevada Test Site to conduct underground nuclear
testing within 18 months should be canceled. Last year
Congress rejected the NNSA's effort to shorten the lead time in
which to return to full-scale testing from 24 months to 18. The
U.S. should ratify the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty rather than
accelerating the momentum towards resuming testing and undermining
global nonproliferation norms.
Tritium production in Tennessee's Watts
Bar commercial nuclear power plant should stop and the $87.6
million for producing tritium and maintaining the
current tritium inventory should be cut. This is
an increase from FY05's level of $79.1 million and is unneeded given
the dramatic reduction in tritium production at Watts Bar. Future
reductions to actively deployed nuclear weapons will both lower
the overall need for tritium and offer opportunities to recycle
existing tritium from retired weapons. Producing weapons grade materials
in a commercial reactor is hypocritical given our firm opposition
to this activity in other nations.
Funding for the construction of the National
Ignition Facility (NIF) is $141.9 million and should be cut.
This level is an increase from $129 million the prior year and adds
to the $4 plus billion cost overrun of the project. The Lawrence
Livermore National Laboratory, where NIF is based, wants to perform
additional plutonium experiments not in the NIF baseline, an added
provocative mission which Congress should debate.
DOE's request of $651.4 million for Yucca
Mountain should be cut. The request includes $351.4 million
through the defense nuclear waste disposal account and another $300
million through the nuclear waste disposal account. This represents
an increase of $79 million over FY05, but a lower amount than was
requested in FY05 due to legal battles over institutional controls
and a delay in the license application to the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission (NRC). DOE hopes to submit its license application to
the NRC by December.
Funding should be cut for NNSA's FY06
request of $338.6 million for the MOX Fuel Fabrication Facility
and $24 million for the Plutonium Disassembly and Conversion
Facility. This request comes despite over $700 million remaining
unspent from prior years due to delays in starting construction
of these projects over disputes with Russia over liability issues
in the plutonium disposition program there. Meanwhile, DOE's Environmental
Management program includes $10 million for the initial conception
design of a new Plutonium Disposition Facility to enable the immobilization
of plutonium stored at Savannah River Site that cannot be converted
into mixed oxide fuel.
- Peace
Camp -- Located across Highway
95 from the Nevada Test Site. This area of reclaimed Western
Shoshone land has been the site of Peace Camps and Protests.
These are just a few of the protests that occurred at the Nevada
Test Site
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