Date: Nov. 14, 2005
Contacts: Patrice Pages, Media Relations Officer
Michelle Strikowsky, Media Relations Assistant
Office of News and Public Information
202-334-2138; e-mail <news@nas.edu>
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Kentucky Pilot Plant for Destruction of Chemical Weapons
Safely Designed, But More Tests Needed
WASHINGTON -- The design of a pilot plant that will destroy
chemical weapons at the Blue Grass Army Depot in Richmond, Ky., includes all
the steps required for safe and effective destruction of the weapons, but
these steps have yet to be integrated and tested, says a new report from the
National Academies' National Research Council. Some operational issues also
need to be addressed, said the committee that wrote the report. And to save
time and money, large amounts of wastes that are uncontaminated by chemical
agents should be disposed of off-site at qualified waste-disposal facilities.
"With the current design at Blue Grass, we anticipate
that the chemical agents can be safely and effectively destroyed," said Robert
A. Beaudet, committee chair and professor of chemistry, University of Southern
California, Los Angeles. "But the contractor still must integrate the individual
treatment steps into a total process. Also, the methods designed to treat
secondary wastes are immature and untested, for the most part."
The U.S. Army asked the Bechtel Parsons Blue Grass team
-- a joint venture of Bechtel National Inc. and Parsons Infrastructure and
Technology Group -- to devise a plan for a pilot plant capable of safely and
effectively destroying the stored chemical munitions. The design plan was
submitted to the Army in July 2004, and operations at the plant are expected
to start in 2008. The chemical munitions stored at the Blue Grass Army Depot
will be destroyed by "neutralization" -- a process using a sodium hydroxide
solution -- followed by oxidation in water under very high temperature and
pressure.
Individual plant operations have never been deployed
together as a single, integrated process, increasing the likelihood of unexpected
complications during the plant's start-up, the committee said. The Army and
its contracting team should be prepared to modify the operations as design,
testing, and construction proceed, the committee added, and assumptions about
the availability of first-of-its-kind equipment should be reviewed given the
possibility of failures.
Some of the techniques that will be used to destroy the
rockets containing the chemical agents must be improved, the report says.
For example, the machine that will be used to initially cut each rocket should
be altered to avoid the possibility of igniting the propellant inside.
After the chemical agents and various rocket segments
are treated with neutralizing solutions, the material that remains, called
hydrolysate, is treated by oxygen in "supercritical" water -- water at temperatures
greater than 705 degrees Fahrenheit and pressures about 220 times the atmospheric
pressure -- and thereby transformed into an environmentally benign substance.
But this process is very corrosive to the walls of the supercritical water
reactors into which the hydrolysate is placed and can cause solid materials
to form and plug the reactors. Although methods have been developed to mitigate
these problems, additional testing is needed to confirm that these remedies
are adequate, the report says.
The supercritical water reactors that the Army plans
to use have not been tested on contaminated secondary wastes, which include
storage and packing materials, pallets, and the protective suits workers wear
when handling the rockets. The large quantities of uncontaminated secondary
wastes that have never been in contact with the chemical agent should be sent
off-site for destruction by qualified waste-disposal facilities, the committee
said. The Army should consider treating contaminated secondary wastes with
alternative approaches, including one that decontaminates materials by heating
them to 1,000 degrees Fahrenheit, the committee added.
While working with the Bechtel Parsons Blue Grass team
on the design of the pilot plant, the Army has provided the local community
with up-to-date information on the plant and the techniques that will be used,
the committee noted. The Army and its contractor should continue to pursue
and support public involvement and make the safety of workers and the public
a foremost consideration, the report says. The Bechtel Parsons Blue Grass
team also should consider inviting input from the general public on risks
associated with operations at the plant.
The study was sponsored by the U.S. Department of the
Army. The National Research Council is the principal operating arm of the
National Academy of Sciences and the National Academy of Engineering. It
is a private, nonprofit institution that provide science and technology advice
under a congressional charter. A committee roster follows.
Copies of Interim Design Assessment for the Blue Grass Chemical Agent
Destruction Pilot Plant are available from the National Academies Press; tel. 202-334-3313
or 1-800-624-6242 or on the Internet at http://www.nap.edu. The cost of the report is $18.00 (prepaid) plus shipping
charges of $4.50 for the first copy and $.95 for each additional copy. Reporters
may obtain a copy from the Office of News and Public Information (contacts
listed above).