|
1
|
|
|
2
|
|
|
3
|
|
|
4
|
- Radioactive Isotope of Tritium
- Forms Radioactive Water - HTO (one of the hydrogen atoms in the water
molecule is radioactive)
- It is not dissolved in the water; it is the water.
- Can’t be filtered out.
|
|
5
|
- Moves faster than any other radionuclide in water
- Generally the leading edge of a contaminant plume
- 12.3 year half life (dangerous ~250 years)
- Permissible level in drinking water: 20,000 pico-Curies per liter
(pCi/L)
- Background tritium levels are ~10 pCi/L
|
|
6
|
- >20 wells have had statistically significant levels of tritium in
groundwater samples, exceeding background
- Tritium levels are currently as high as 119,000 pCi/L
- More than 110 samples have tested positive for elevated tritium
|
|
7
|
- “It is evident from these sampling results that tritium is present
at elevated concentrations in groundwater….”
- “Tritium concentrations in some wells not identified as containing
statistically significant tritium concentrations are likely elevated
also….”
|
|
8
|
- “The wells containing the highest concentrations are located down
gradient from the former test reactor locations in SSFL Area IV.”
|
|
9
|
- Tritium found now at 119,000 pCi/L is SIX times the permissible level
and 20,000 times background
- If the spill occurred~1957, when reactor activity really got going at
SSFL, 4 half lives of tritium have passed (49 years/12.3=4)
- So tritium concentrations originally would have been 1,900,000 pCi/L
- That is 95 times the Safe Drinking Water level
|
|
10
|
- But that assumes there has been no dilution or migration in half a century
- Infiltrating rainwater dilutes tritium in groundwater
- Migration of groundwater dilutes it as well
- So the true peak concentrations could have been far higher than 95 times
“safe” levels
|
|
11
|
- Because tritium can’t be filtered, if there were a mix of
radionuclides in water, it is tritium you would expect to find in
filtered samples
|
|
12
|
|
|
13
|
|
|
14
|
- DOE & Rocketdyne failed to measure for tritium for decades
- Only when EPA’s Gregg Dempsey did his inspection in 1989 did the
issue arise
- He was told they had no tritium measurements, so he took samples from a
french drain
- HE FOUND TRITIUM
|
|
15
|
- Subsequent additional measurements found more tritium
- But matter was dropped, not pursued
- A couple of years ago DHS identified the T contamination as an
unresolved issue, recommended more wells.
- The new wells found very high tritium
|
|
16
|
- Extent and source of tritium contamination still unknown
- No plans for cleaning it uip
- Very difficult to remediate
- Can’t filter it out of the water because it is part of the water -
HTO
- Raises serious questions about adequacy of monitoring
|
|
17
|
- Because Boeing’s practice of
filtering water samples wouldn’t filter out the tritium,
but would remove/reduce most other radionuclides, finding tritium raises
questions about what other radionuclides would be found if the samples
weren’t filtered and the filters discarded.
|
|
18
|
|
|
19
|
|
|
20
|
- In 2002 -- the year DHS reviewed --
15 wells exceeded the drinking water standard of 15 pCi/L
- These wells are RS-18, RS-54, RD-07, RD-18, RD-19, RD-21, RD-24, RDE-27,
RD-28,
RD-29, RD-34A, RD-35B, RD-50, RD-54A, and RD-63
|
|
21
|
- It’s all coming from natural radioactivity, not from us.
|
|
22
|
- All but one of wells that exceeded permissible levels for gross alpha
were in Area IV, the nuclear area.
- ~85 wells tested below permissible gross alpha levels, most of those in
the non-nuclear part of SSFL.
- How could high “natural radioactivity” by chance end up only
in Area IV, the nuclear site?
|
|
23
|
- Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment has concluded current
gross alpha/beta limits are very much too high to protect public health
- Measurements are far too infrequent -- often just one sample per year
- Very rarely is there measurement for specific radionuclides
|
|
24
|
- 11.4 pCi/L Strontium-90 (unfiltered) found leaving Outfall 3 on April
28, 2005
- 10.8 pCi/L filtered
- Maximum Concentration Limit is 8 pCi/L
- Source: 2nd Qtr 2005 NPDES
Monitoring Report, August12, 2005
|
|
25
|
- “a surface water sample was collected during the 2nd Quarter 2005
from Outfall 003 and analyzed for Strontium-90. This sample result exceeded the permit
limit of 8.0 picocuries per liter (pCi/L).”
- “follow-up samples were collected…during the 4th Quarter.
Appendix F includes the results of the sample analysis. Results did not exceed permit
limits.” (emphasis added)
- quoted from: Boeing ltr from Steve Lafflam to
RWQCB February 15, 2006
|
|
26
|
- No strontium data in Appendix F
- BUT, in Appendix E, strontium-90 reported at 8.44 pCi/L on October 18,
2005, again leaking from Outfall 003
- 8.44 is GREATER than 8.0
|
|
27
|
- Outfall 003 is from the Radioactive Materials Handling Facility, a
seriously contaminated area
- Surface water releases from Outfall 003 flow towards Simi Valley via
Brandeis
- Strontium-90 has previously been at Brandeis and the RMDF watershed
|
|
28
|
- Water Board has issued NO notices of violation for these strontium-90
exceedances of Boeing’s pollution permit limits
|