[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 155 (2009), Part 9]
[Senate]
[Page 11920]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




                             NUCLEAR ENERGY

  Mr. CHAMBLISS. Madam President, I rise this afternoon to discuss the 
benefits of nuclear power to our Nation.
  Last week, I was fortunate enough to visit the Savannah River Site, 
along with three of our colleagues, Senator Isakson and our two South 
Carolina colleagues, Senator Graham and Senator DeMint, to watch the 
Department of Energy employees at the Savannah River Site carry out 
their mission.
  This site has been safely operating since the 1950s refining 
materials for nuclear weapons. In more than fifty years, there has not 
been a single nuclear incident at the Savannah River Site, proving that 
it is possible to safely operate and maintain our nuclear facilities. 
But in the past decade, the place that has helped bolster America's 
standing in the atomic age and has been a watchword for America's 
nuclear might has also begun to harness spent forces for peaceful 
purposes--to bring light and heat into American homes.
  The Savannah River Site has helped lead the way in disposing of 
nuclear material. For more than 6 years, the facility has blended 
weapons-grade, highly enriched uranium to make low-enriched uranium 
that is being converted into commercial reactor fuel. It recently 
expanded its mission to include converting excess weapons-grade 
plutonium from decommissioned nuclear weapons and will become a 
consolidation point for all weapons-grade plutonium in the United 
States. This will result in more fuel for commercial power reactors.
  Materials that once tipped our arsenal of nuclear warheads are now 
being used to provide the light by which Georgians eat dinner, do their 
homework, and the power with which they heat their homes in winter and 
cool them in our hot summers. In fact, one-fifth of Georgia's total 
generating capacity comes from nuclear power--second only to coal.
  The two nuclear plants in Georgia provide some of the lowest cost 
electricity in our State. The power they generate is safe, reliable, 
and, most significant in the midst of this national debate on climate 
change--emissions free and environmentally responsible.
  Despite those clear advantages, in America at large, nuclear power 
produces some 20 percent of the Nation's energy. Compare that to 
France, where nuclear power sources provide nearly 80 percent of that 
country's power.
  Intriguingly, in terms of national security, the Savannah River Site 
is playing a key role in America's nuclear nonproliferation efforts. 
The nuclear power generated from reducing our nuclear weapons stockpile 
at the Savannah River Site is coming full circle: In its conversion 
from weapons to commercial nuclear fuel, it is helping reduce America's 
dependance on foreign energy sources, often from countries that do not 
like us and do not have our best interests at heart.
  Additionally, the work conducted at the Savannah River Site helps 
maintain America's technical and scientific nuclear base, preserving 
the expertise to expand commercial nuclear energy as well as the 
expertise to modernize our existing nuclear weapons arsenal.
  I was impressed by the talent and expertise of Savannah River Site 
employees I met who are some of the leading nuclear experts in the 
world. However, they are an endangered breed and will continue to be 
unless America commits to expanded nuclear energy and research and 
development.
  We know America's energy consumption will increase. We know the 
increased demand will drive the need for more base-load capacity. 
Demographers predict that 40 percent of the total U.S. population will 
live in the Southeast by 2030. Georgia alone is slated to add 4 million 
new residents during that time frame. If we are to meet the growing 
energy needs of Georgia and of our Nation in keeping with America's 
national security interests, the ingenuity of employees at the Savannah 
River Site and other such facilities is key to such efforts. I applaud 
their great work. I look forward to many more years of expansion of the 
technology that is being developed to dispose of our nuclear waste as 
well as recycle our nuclear waste and to reuse that waste.

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