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West Texas nuclear waste plan remains blocked after federal appeals court ruling

A view of an existing nuclear waste storage site in rural Andrews County, Texas. The site鈥檚 owners want to expand the facility to house more radioactive types of radioactive waste.
Waste Control Specialists
A view of an existing nuclear waste storage site in rural Andrews County, Texas. The site鈥檚 owners want to expand the facility to house more radioactive types of radioactive waste.

A years-long plan to ship some of the nation鈥檚 most radioactive types of nuclear waste to rural West Texas remains blocked after a ruling from the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals.

The court on Thursday to revisit its throwing out a company鈥檚 federal license to ship 鈥渉igh-level鈥 nuclear waste to a storage site in Andrews County, Texas.

That decision in August 2023 effectively killed the by Interim Storage Partners to house used nuclear fuel from power plants across the U.S. at the existing Andrews County waste facility, on the Texas-New Mexico border.

The Nuclear Regulatory Commission appealed the ruling, but the appeals court on Thursday rejected that appeal.

Texas officials have opposed the plan in court and at the state legislature, arguing in part that housing highly radioactive waste in the heart of the state鈥檚 Permian Basin oil field would threaten that industry and the nation鈥檚 energy security. Thursday鈥檚 ruling was the result of a lawsuit brought by the state, and state lawmakers blocking the plan in 2021.

Asked whether the NRC would appeal Thursday鈥檚 decision to the Supreme Court, a spokesperson said the commission is 鈥渞eviewing the decision and will consider its options going forward.鈥

Interim Storage Partners did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

In a statement, the advocacy group Beyond Nuclear praised the ruling, but noted that legal battles continue over a from an energy technology company called Holtec that would involve shipping the waste to a site in southeastern New Mexico, just over the border from the West Texas site.

鈥淭he two dumps are very similar, and located only 40-some miles apart across the Texas/New Mexico border,鈥 said Beyond Nuclear advocate Kevin Kamps. 鈥淗ow one could be legal, and the other illegal, is hard to reconcile.鈥

Federal regulators a license for the New Mexico plan in 2023. Beyond Nuclear and other groups have sued in an attempt to get that license thrown at as well, but the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals has yet to issue a ruling in the case.