Mother Nature is wreaking havoc around nuclear sites in two states, but authorities dismiss any risk of a radiation release.
In northern New Mexico, as the Associated Press reports, firefighters are battling a wildfire in the mountains above Los Alamos, home to the government nuclear laboratory that produced the first atomic bomb. As of this morning, 30 structures south and west of Los Alamos were destroyed, homes in the area may be in danger, and the lab has been closed.
Lab officials, however, say radioactive materials stored around the sprawling 36-square-mile site are safe.
An anti-nuclear watchdog group, Concerned Citizens for Nuclear Safety, said the fire appeared to be about 3.5 miles from a site where as many as 30,000 55-gallon drums of plutonium-contaminated waste are stored in fabric tents above ground. A lab spokeswoman confirms that drums with Cold War-area wastes are on the grounds, awaiting shipment to a dump site, but they are situated miles from the flames on a paved area with few trees nearby, and would be safe even if a fire reached the area.
“These drums are designed to a safety standard that would withstand a wildland fire worse than this one,” the spokeswoman said.
Separately, the AP reports that officials say they are sure that Nebraska’s Fort Calhoun and Cooper nuclear power plants are safe even though floodwaters from the Missouri River have surrounded one plant and are encroaching on another.
Fort Calhoun, operated by the Omaha Public Power District, has been the subject of more public concern because it is surrounded by floodwaters that have forced workers to use raised catwalks to access the plant.
Rumors have persisted on the Internet about a possible meltdown like the one at Japan’s Fukushima Daiichi plant, which was sparked in March when a massive earthquake and tsunami destroyed the plant’s power and cooling systems. But officials in Omaha and with the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission say the speculation is off-base.
“There is no possibility of a meltdown,” said Gary Gates, chief executive of the Omaha Public Power District. “The floodwaters are outside of Fort Calhoun, not inside.”


