ROANOKE TIMES

                         Roanoke Times
                 Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: MONDAY, June 5, 1995                   TAG: 9506050056
SECTION: VIRGINIA                    PAGE: C-4   EDITION: METRO 
SOURCE: Associated Press
DATELINE: PORTSMOUTH                                LENGTH: Medium


PORTSMOUTH CHOSEN AS STORAGE SITE FOR RADIOACTIVE ACID

The U.S. Department of Energy has chosen Portsmouth as the temporary storage site for 183,000 gallons of radioactive nitric acid that once helped make nuclear weapons.

Two shipments of the material already have reached Sea-Land Services, an international shipping company accepting the acid at its Portsmouth Marine Terminal facility, Larry D. Romine, a DOE program manager, said Friday.

The material, mixed with 7,500 kilograms of uranium, comes from the environmentally troubled Hanford nuclear weapons plant in Washington state. As part of a massive cleanup there, the U.S. government is getting rid of 52 truckloads of the low-level radioactive acid.

Portsmouth is serving as a way station for the material en route to Great Britain for recycling. Arriving by truck at the rate of two loads per week, the material will stay at Sea-Land for a few days before being placed on a cargo ship, Romine said.

Baltimore and Port Elizabeth, N.J., also may receive some of the acid, but Sea-Land currently is handling the job, Romaine said.

State and international environmental groups have opposed the move since it was proposed almost two years ago. A local Sierra Club expert said Friday that he has "mixed feelings'' about the government choosing Portsmouth.

``I wish they would have taken this to a less-populated facility,'' said Robert Deegan, a Virginia Beach nuclear-issues expert for the Sierra Club.

Portsmouth officials have not opposed the storage, saying they are confident with the safety measures included in the move.

The material arrives in specially constructed steel casks, each containing less than 4,000 gallons of acid. They are driven by closely monitored trucks, Romine said.

At Hanford, the acid was spread over nuclear fuel rods, stripping away unwanted substances and metals until only plutonium was left. The plutonium was then used to manufacture nuclear weapons.

The government is paying British Nuclear Fuels Ltd. to take the acid. The company gets to keep the acid it recycles but must return any uranium gleaned during the reprocessing.

Uranium is expected to be shipped back to the United States in 1996 or 1997, probably through Hampton Roads, Romine said.



 by CNB