I read with interest the recent article on the DOE proposed line to Yucca Mountain. Why is the DOE going to build a 330 mile railroad to reach Yucca Mountain by a very circuitous route when they could follow the abandoned Las Vegas and Tonapah ROW which is less than half the distance and lots of the grading is done, although eroded over time? What am I missing?
Dick Watkins
There are no railorads to get the spent fuel from where it is to yucca mountain currently. The reason for the odd route is to keep the line away from towns, and to keep it away from the air force bomb range (for obvious reasons). It is an answer to the outcry from certain public people as to the transportation of spent nuclear fuel.
The line cuts off at caliente, either going into the town or bypassing the town, and skirting along the northern edge of the Air Force test range and then heading south to yucca mountain. Follow below link and click on the link inside to go to a video showing the route and the thinking behind the route.
http://www.ocrwm.doe.gov/transport/index.shtml
My thoughts were the same as Mr. Watkins when I first saw the plan. The Tidewater and Tonopah connected to what is now the BNSF Transcon at Ludlow and crossed the LA & SL, now UP, near Baker so a much shorter NEW RR could connect to the Yucca site. However, and I have no specific info about the origin of the materials to be shipped, if they are coming from eastern locations they would have to go west on the Transcon to Ludlow and then northeast on a new RR. Of course if the routing was on the UP from the east they would have to come on the Sunset Route into the LA Basin and then back to Ludlow or Baker.
So after thinking about the complete routing the 350 mile line from Caliente makes sense.
If any of the logic pertains to keeping the trains out of Las Vegas, because its a big city, isn't that logic flawed to the extent that, in order to get say from an eastern power plant to Las Vegas, they'd have to pass through places like Buffalo, Cleveland, Toledo, Chicago (fairly good sized town there), Omaha, Cheyenne, Salt Lake, etc.......
Seems to be a flaw in the logic in terms of it being part of the criteria for the routing of the line.
Thanks to Chris / CopCarSS for my avatar.
I had the same thought as ccltrains about following the old LV&T route too. U.S. 95 does occupy a lot of the actual old right-of-way, but it must be a pretty good path for a rail line, and obviously would be shorter, simpler, and cheaper.
It might have to do with local politics and Las Vegas. The city, which originally owed its existence to UP, has had a contentious relationship with that carrier for a long time and is also, by far, the biggest population center in the state. Since this whole project is controversial and seems to be a bitter pill for a lot of Nevadans, it is probably wise policy to route the whole thing through the hinterlands and away from the view of 98% or 99% of the populace. That's the best reason I can imagine.
Doublestack wrote: ....... Seems to be a flaw in the logic in terms of it being part of the criteria for the routing of the line.
.......
Doublestack:
I do like your point of view and agree with it on a practical and logical plane, however when politics, emotions, local politics, and the strange bedfellows that they attract to their causes; logic and much of the truth are the first casualties
PL
CN conductor wrote:Why is a railroad better than a highway for nuclear waste shipments? First of all, a road would probably be more expensive to build and maintain than a railroad considering the weight of the cargo involved. Heavy loads will require heavy duty road surfaces. Second, you dont want these shipments exposed to the danger of idiot automobile drivers crashing into them. Remember, Nevada is the home of roads with no speed limits, do you really think it would be a good idea to expose these shipments to fools driving 120 mph?
You obviously have not been in Nevada for some years. They have had speed limits on all highways since the 55mph limit was rescinded. On the Interstates the speed limit is 70 mph. On all two lane highways the speed limit is 65 and 70 mph with speed restrictions through all small towns.
Al - in - Stockton
CN conductor wrote: Remember, Nevada is the home of roads with no speed limits, do you really think it would be a good idea to expose these shipments to fools driving 120 mph?
That was only true up to early 1974, when the national 55MPH speed limit went into effect.
I tend to agree with the other posters with respect to a RR costing less to build than an appropriately heavy duty road - which would require transferring the cask somewhere in Nevada or California.
Back in the late 1970's, some spent fuel was being shipped from San Onofre to a point back east via CA 78 and US 395 - the secition of 395 between Escondido and CA 76 had 7% grades. IMHO, it would have been safer shipping it direct via I-5, but that would have involved going through the densely populated sections of Orange County...
Oops. I forgot that much of the T&T ROW was used for US 395. However, a rail line could follow the road at a distance (2-3 miles) for safety and security reasons. As to Las Vegas the line could veer to the west or east to bypass the town. I have not checked topo maps to see if this is feasable. The bypass could be extended and built in conjunction with UP to fully bypass the town and keep the locals (or locos) happy.
There's no doubt, that a rail line could be built to haul a heavier weight than a highway. I'm asking if it would be more practical and cost effective to run the shipments on a highway, either a brand new, purpose built one, or a rebuild of an existing one?
Here's my thought process: The article says that a 330 or so mile railroad will be built to haul 9500 casks over a 50 year span. That works out to about one cask every other day. If a train was put together with several casks, we're talking about a once a week train.
Is it possible, to build a shorter highway, capable of the same thing, without all the expense and upkkep? Is there such a thing as a highway Schnable type car, to spread the weight out? Could the far right lane of an existing muli-lane highway be rebuilt to higher standards? Could the casks be moved at night, in a military type convoy?
As far as safety goes, those casks already face the peril of somebody in a car hitting them at crossing now. I seem to recall reading that the casks are built to be nearly indestructable.
I think they want to keep it off of the highways for security reasons. Terrorists would like to use that material for "dirty" bombs. On a line running through the middle of nowhere, ANYONE near the tracks would stick out like a sore thumb.
Just my own theory.
Reality TV is to reality, what Professional Wrestling is to Professional Brain Surgery.
Murphy Siding wrote: CN conductor wrote:Why is a railroad better than a highway for nuclear waste shipments? First of all, a road would probably be more expensive to build and maintain than a railroad considering the weight of the cargo involved. Heavy loads will require heavy duty road surfaces. Second, you dont want these shipments exposed to the danger of idiot automobile drivers crashing into them. Remember, Nevada is the home of roads with no speed limits, do you really think it would be a good idea to expose these shipments to fools driving 120 mph? There's no doubt, that a rail line could be built to haul a heavier weight than a highway. I'm asking if it would be more practical and cost effective to run the shipments on a highway, either a brand new, purpose built one, or a rebuild of an existing one? Here's my thought process: The article says that a 330 or so mile railroad will be built to haul 9500 casks over a 50 year span. That works out to about one cask every other day. If a train was put together with several casks, we're talking about a once a week train. Is it possible, to build a shorter highway, capable of the same thing, without all the expense and upkkep? Is there such a thing as a highway Schnable type car, to spread the weight out? Could the far right lane of an existing muli-lane highway be rebuilt to higher standards? Could the casks be moved at night, in a military type convoy? As far as safety goes, those casks already face the peril of somebody in a car hitting them at crossing now. I seem to recall reading that the casks are built to be nearly indestructable.
The only "new build" in question is a connection between the national rail system and the Yucca Mountain Depository. The technical question is whether a "private" (as opposed to open to public-use) roadway would be as cost-effective as a railway. The answer is no. The cost of construction and operation is less expensive for a railway.
It is also less expensive to move the casks by railway from the origin point to the jump-off point for Yucca Mountain, whether the casks continue on by rail or by road. The military-style convoys you propose are technically feasible but they are not only extremely costly to conduct but they have a high disruption cost on the public highway system. The cost of making trucks and private vehicles pull over or park while this entourage waddles past adds up to a big number over time.
Once you have the cask on a railcar you would like to keep it on a railcar until the last possible moment. That's true for all rail-carried commodities whether it's coal or casks, but especially so when the commodity is big, heavy, and hard to handle. That makes the highway possibility to Yucca Mountain a poor choice.
Could you build an extra lane or rebuild a shoulder. Sure, but you could build a whole new rail line for far less money. Think of what happens at every bridge, culvert, overpass, interchange, big-city elevated section, etc., that the highway passes over, under or through.
This entire exercise is a technical solution to a policy requirement. The public sets the policy (darn public!) and the public wants an extremely high level of risk-avoidance and an extremely low level of cost of disruption to its everyday activities. Considering the economic cost of disruption of commerce and travel (huge) and the economic cost of a radioactive waste spill (billions of dollars for a single spill is not out of the realm of possibility), the public is not necessarily wrong. Policy is ALWAYS the last word, and since this is a democracy where we all get to vote and majority wins, if we don't like this very much there's always self-exile to consider if the rant-and-rave method doesn't pan out.
RWM
Well....I'm not ranting and raving ....yet. I attribute that, to the fact that I don't watch television..
I was curious how a rail line and a highway stacked up in this situation, knowing full well, that people a lot smarter than me had checked over the situation before making their conclussions that a railroad was the way to go. Thanks for the overview.
Is there a nuclear storage facility already in place somewhere? Is the cask the final home for the waste, or just a conatainer to haul it in?
The casks would be shipped one at a time in individual trains with escort and spacer cars.
The material (spent nuclear fuel) could be used for a dirty bomb, but whether a dirty bomb is actually technically feasible is a matter of considerable debate - what isn't a matter of debate is that spent nuclear fuel can be reprocessed and if reprocessed you will get weapons grade Plutonium. Hence, the material in the wrong hands could potentially be turned into a geniune nuclear device. In fact, most people with knowledge in the field think that the risk that the spent nuclear fuel will be reprocessed to be much greater than the risk of a dirty bomb.
Part of the problem with the Department of Energy and Nevada of course, is that Nevada and Utah just do not trust the Department of Energy's assurances of safety due to the record of its predecessor organization the Atomic Energy Commission's record in Nevada . The Prelinger Archives provide lots of evidence why people there don't trust the DOE's promises that storing nuclear waste there is safe - after all, these are the same people (well, as I said, it was the AEC) that told them that they had nothing to fear from open air tests of nuclear warheads. I think the record of the downwinders and the government's lies and denial for years of the downwind problem is going to make it unlikely that Nevada will ever accept the Yucca Mountain site.
The transit issue could turn into a moot point - it is far from assured that the Yucca Mountain site will ever open.
Moving the stuff from California via Donner Pass is as nonsensical as failing to build on the short ex-LV&T route from the existing UP main line into the storage area, but this may well be what happens.
All of this is probably the political price of getting Nevada to go along with the whole storage project.
By the way, I don't know why Las Vegas has such a generally bad relationship with Union Pacific. An "anything goes, wink wink" place like Sin City shouldn't have a lot of trouble with a company that just runs freight trains, should it? Oh, well.
Those casks are VERY VERY heavy. They are made of lead to shield from radiation, then a steel liner then a reinforced concrete outer shell. They have been blown up, dropped, run into by locomotives (which they distroyed) and only had minor dents put in them. They need special cars which the government has to cary them. The routing is based upon topogrophy. There are the Yucca and and other mountian ranges to go around in south west Nevada. It is NOT all flat desert country. As for going through big cities, no they will probably be routed away from cities. There is no rush to gett the casks to Yucca Mountain.
Check out the routing of the old Las Vegas & Tonopah RR, taken up right after World War One. (Railroads of Nevada and Eastern California, Vol. 2, by David Myrick, is about 45 years old now, but still the standard reference work on this region.)
Today, U.S. 95 occupies a lot of that old right-of-way, from Las Vegas pretty straight up through Beatty and beyond. I'm not sure of the gradient from Beatty into the nearby Yucca Mtn. area, but eliminating maybe a hundred roundabout miles of brand-new rail construction would pay for some nice grading on the last few miles of the run to the storage facility.
Regardless, this all just speculation we're doing. The local politics dictate that those casks won't pass through Las Vegas, and probably not through Reno. So, now that I think of it, the loads from the West Coast aren't likely to be going over Donner Pass either, but through Feather River Canyon (even longer).
Those loads will run through the L.A. basin, or Sacramento, or Bakersfield, (or Salt Lake City), but when they do, the locals will know that they're headed to ANOTHER STATE. If they care at all, they'll probably be relieved to see the things go.
If Nevadans see one run through Las Vegas or Reno, they'll be reminded that the things are ARRIVING IN THEIR STATE. Lots of people there are still on the warpath about this whole waste-storage plan, and running these things only through back country will get fewer people agitated. To some degree, it's "out of sight, out of mind."
It's not really that complicated.
If anybody has a second theory on why the government is building more than 100 extra miles of rail line to get from an existing main to Yucca Mountain, please share it. I'm interested.
As a resident of Sin City, I can assure you that the locals will be up in arms about:
As for (1) above, a few months back there was a plan to set off a large bunker-busting blast of conventional explosive on the test range. The PR type made the mistake of saying, "Mushroom cloud." Instant pandemonium!!! Everybody from the technologically challenged reporters at the news conference to Senator Reed had their moment of fame. (When the blast was set off, on schedule, no one was aware that it had happened...)
My stand? I spent part of my Air Force career up close and personal with the contents of some rather sophisticated holes in the ground. I'd be more concerned about being struck by a falling meteor than about being harmed in any way by transporting hot waste to Yucca Mountain and storing it there. Sometime in the future, when somebody comes up with some as-yet-unknown use for the stuff, we'll be glad we put it in a place where we can get at it...
The only problem, as I see it, is that railfans will NOT be welcome along the new route.
Chuck
First off, thanks to Kathy Kube and Trains for the article, it answered a lot of questions I had .
Second, I am also a Nevada resident these days, and I have heard people complain that "Nevada is not our country's waste dump", But I don't agree. There are a lot of wide open spaces here where that nasty stuff can be moved to that are very much safer due to being so isolated then anywhere else (mabee Alaska excepted ). It's also nice to see a project of such magnatude, unseen in decades, happening in my home state.
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