Examples of Yucca Mountain site in a sentence
If an offering is terminated without a closing, or if a prospective investor’s subscription is not accepted or is cut back due to oversubscription or otherwise, such amounts placed into escrow by prospective investors will be returned promptly to them without interest or deductions.
Concern about spent fuel storage safety has been heightened by the March 2011 disaster at Japan’s Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant.Under current law, the federal government’s nuclear waste disposal policy is focused on the Yucca Mountain site.
Any such site characteriza- tion activities shall be conducted in accordance with section 10133 of this title, except that ref- erences in such section to the Yucca Mountain site and the State of Nevada shall be deemed to refer to the site that is the subject of the agree- ment and the State or Indian tribe entering into the agreement.
The Secretary shall provide for an orderly phase-out of site specific activities at all can- didate sites other than the Yucca Mountain site.
Despite the Department’s opposition to the EPA standards, DOE’s site suitability evaluation determined that the Yucca Mountain site would be able to meet them.
A description of work conducted to characterize the Yucca Mountain site.
As noted previously, President Bush recommended the Yucca Mountain site to Congress the day after the Secretary’s recommendation, and Nevada Governor Guinn subsequently submitted a notice of disapproval, or “state veto,” as allowed by NWPA.
The Record of Decision on the waste transportation mode was published in the Federal Register along with the selection of a corridor in Nevada for a 300-mile rail spur to the Yucca Mountain site.
Before the decision on the construction authorization, DOE could conduct “infrastructure activities” at the Yucca Mountain site, such as site preparation and the construction of a rail line.DOE would be prohibited from planning or developing a separate repository for defense-related high level waste and spent fuel until NRC reaches a final decision on issuing a construction authorization for the Yucca Mountain repository.
President Bush had recommended the Yucca Mountain site to Congress on February 15, 2002, and Nevada Governor Guinn submitted a notice of disapproval, or “state veto,” April 8, 2002, as allowed by NWPA.