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GAO-09-697R: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
Washington, DC 20548: 

June 2, 2009: 

Congressional Committees: 

Subject: Nuclear Waste: DOE's Environmental Management Initiatives 
Report Is Incomplete: 

The Department of Energy (DOE) spends billions of dollars annually to 
clean up nuclear waste at sites across the nation that produced nuclear 
weapons from the 1940s through the end of the Cold War. This waste can 
threaten public health and the environment. For example, contaminants 
at DOE's Hanford site in Washington have migrated through the soil into 
the groundwater, which generally flows toward the Columbia River. The 
river is a source of irrigation for agriculture and drinking water for 
downstream communities as well as a major route for migrating salmon. 
Cleanup projects decontaminate and demolish buildings, remove and 
dispose of contaminated soil, treat contaminated groundwater, and 
stabilize and dispose of solid and liquid radioactive wastes, among 
other things. DOE's Office of Environmental Management currently 
oversees more than 80 of these cleanup projects, primarily at 
government-owned, contractor-operated sites throughout the nation. Some 
of these highly complex projects have completion dates beyond 2050. 

We have issued numerous reports on DOE's management of its cleanup 
projects. For example, since 2006 we have issued 12 reports examining 
DOE's contract and project management. In March 2009, we testified that 
9 of the 10 major cleanup projects that we reviewed had experienced 
cost increases--in total, DOE estimated that it needed an additional 
$25 billion to $42 billion to complete these cleanup projects.[Footnote 
1] We also reported in September 2008 that these major cleanup projects 
had experienced delays from 2 to 15 years.[Footnote 2] These problems 
were the result of inconsistent application of project management tools 
and techniques on the part of DOE and its contractors. Furthermore, 
since 1990, we have designated DOE's contract management as a high-risk 
area for fraud, waste, abuse, and mismanagement because of the 
department's record of inadequate management and oversight of its 
projects. In January 2009, we narrowed the scope of this high-risk area 
to focus on the two major offices remaining within DOE that continue to 
experience significant problems--the Office of Environmental Management 
and the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA).[Footnote 3] 
Together, these two program offices account for about 60 percent of the 
department's annual budget. 

Under Section 3130 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2008 (the Act),[Footnote 4] DOE was required to report to the 
congressional defense committees and to the Comptroller General of the 
United States by September 30, 2008, on the status of the environmental 
management initiatives that it has undertaken to more rapidly reduce 
the environmental risks and challenges resulting from the legacy of the 
Cold War. In particular, the Act required DOE to include five elements 
in its report, (1) a discussion and assessment of progress made in 
reducing environmental risks and challenges; (2) an assessment of 
whether legislative changes or clarifications would improve or 
accelerate environmental management activities; (3) a listing of major 
mandatory milestones and commitments DOE faces; (4) an estimate of the 
life-cycle cost of DOE's current environmental management program; and 
(5) a description of the process DOE follows for nominating and 
accepting new work scope into the environmental management program, and 
schedules to address new work. DOE's Office of Environmental Management 
issued the required report in January 2009.[Footnote 5] 

Section 3130 of the Act also required GAO to review DOE's report and 
report to the congressional defense committees. As agreed with your 
staffs, this report addresses the extent to which the report that DOE 
prepared discusses the five elements called for under the Act. 

To determine the extent to which the DOE report contains all of the 
elements required by the Act, we reviewed the report and compared it 
with the Act's requirements. We also reviewed prior GAO work on DOE's 
management of its cleanup projects. In addition, we interviewed DOE 
Office of Environmental Management officials at DOE headquarters in 
Washington, D.C. We conducted this performance audit from January 
through June 2009 in accordance with generally accepted government 
auditing standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform 
the audit to obtain sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a 
reasonable basis for our findings based on our audit objectives. We 
believe that the evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for our 
findings. 

DOE's Report Fully Discusses One Element, Partially Discusses Three 
Elements, and Does Not Discuss One Element: 

DOE's report only partially addresses the five elements required by the 
Act. Specifically, only one element--an estimate of the life-cycle cost 
of DOE's current environmental management program--was fully discussed. 
Three elements--discussing progress in reducing environmental risks and 
challenges, listing major mandatory milestones, and describing new work 
scope processes--were partially discussed. For example, in discussing 
progress in reducing environmental risks and challenges, DOE did not 
always clearly connect progress in environmental cleanup with 
environmental risk reduction. The remaining element--an assessment of 
whether legislative changes or clarifications would improve or 
accelerate environmental management activities--was not discussed in 
the report. DOE officials told us that certain elements were only 
partially discussed or were not discussed for several reasons, 
including, in the case of suggested legislative changes, because the 
department did not want to preempt any nuclear cleanup policy changes 
the new presidential administration might announce. 

Element One--Environmental Risk Reduction: DOE's Report Discusses 
Cleanup Progress at Its Sites, but in Some Cases Does Not Explain How 
This Progress Reduced Environmental Risks: 

Section 3130(b)(1) of the Act required DOE's report to include "a 
discussion and assessment of the progress made in reducing the 
environmental risks and challenges" in the following areas: 

* acquisition strategy and contract management; 

* regulatory agreements; 

* interim storage and final disposal of high-level waste, spent nuclear 
fuel, transuranic waste, and low-level waste; 

* closure and transfer of environmental remediation sites; 

* achievements in innovation by contractors of the department with 
respect to accelerated risk reduction and cleanup; and: 

* consolidation of special nuclear materials and improvements in 
safeguards and security. 

DOE's report discusses progress in each of these areas. For example, 
the report has significant detail on improvements that the department 
has made in acquisition, contract, and project management. These 
improvements include, among other things, transitioning to performance- 
based contracts, standardizing the acquisition process, and enhancing 
personnel capabilities as well as applying project management 
principles and monitoring project performance. In addition, in its 
discussion of regulatory agreements, DOE's report notes that the 
department is working with its regulators to identify actions that can 
accelerate cleanup, because setting cleanup priorities solely on the 
basis of achieving compliance milestones would not necessarily support 
the greatest risk reduction. Furthermore, the report discusses many 
examples of cleanup progress, such as the disposal of approximately 9 
million cubic meters of low-level waste and mixed low-level waste; the 
removal of all spent nuclear fuel from basins at Hanford; and the 
removal of transuranic waste from 14 sites.[Footnote 6] DOE also 
discusses innovations in cleanup technologies, including, for example, 
a technology to reduce the amount of strontium--a metal found in 
nuclear waste--that can contaminate groundwater. 

Nevertheless, in some cases, DOE's report does not sufficiently assess 
the progress made in reducing environmental risks as required. For 
example, the report cites 1,000 acres of soil remediated at DOE's Oak 
Ridge Reservation in Tennessee as evidence of its progress. However, 
the report does not note whether these 1,000 acres were of high, 
medium, or low environmental risk, nor does it describe the potential 
environmental consequences of failing to remediate this soil. 
Similarly, DOE's report notes that the department has deactivated 112 
buildings and structures totaling 1.3 million square feet at DOE's 
Idaho National Laboratory since May 2005. However, the report does not 
assess how deactivating these buildings--some of which may have housed 
offices and other nonhazardous operations--reduced environmental risks 
at the site. 

Element Two--Legislative Changes: DOE's Report Does Not Assess 
Potential Legislative Changes to Improve or Accelerate Environmental 
Management Activities: 

Section 3130(b)(2) of the Act required DOE's report to include an 
assessment of whether legislative changes or clarifications would 
improve or accelerate environmental management activities. Despite this 
requirement, DOE's report does not contain such an assessment. 

DOE officials told us that the department did not want to suggest 
legislative changes for nuclear cleanup in advance of decisions the new 
presidential administration might issue, nor did the department want to 
be perceived as dictating policy changes. These officials also said 
that DOE could provide suggested new legislation upon congressional 
request. 

Element Three--Major Mandatory Milestones: DOE's Report Lists Major 
Mandatory Milestones as Required, but Does Not Include Categories for 
Noncompliance: 

Section 3130(b)(3) of the Act required DOE's report to list the major 
mandatory milestones and commitments, by site, type of agreement, and 
year, to the extent that they are currently identified. The report is 
also required to contain a summary of the major mandatory milestones, 
by site, that are projected to be missed or are in jeopardy of being 
missed, along with categories to explain the reason for noncompliance. 

For 12 DOE cleanup sites, the department lists 345 mandatory milestones 
as well as identifies 47 of these milestones at 4 sites that are at 
risk of not meeting commitment dates. However, DOE does not provide 
categories of reasons for noncompliance as required by the Act. 
Instead, DOE states that certain circumstances, such as unanticipated 
obstacles that affected the original scope of work, explain the 
majority of at-risk milestones. According to DOE officials, the 
department did not include categories of reasons for noncompliance 
because the list would not provide a clear picture of reasons for 
noncompliance. Specifically, 23 of 47 milestones had noncompliance 
reasons that fell into two or more of the four categories--funding, 
technical difficulty, project performance, and unrealized assumptions. 
DOE officials provided us with the list of milestones and categories 
for noncompliance that had been created for an earlier draft of their 
report. In commenting on a draft of our report, DOE officials told us 
that site-specific reasons for noncompliance were not included in their 
report because they believed a higher-level summary would be more 
useful to the reader. They also noted that the specific reasons for 
noncompliance are reported to the appropriate states and are available 
to the public. 

Element Four--Life-Cycle Costs: DOE's Report Discusses Cleanup 
Projects' Life-Cycle Costs: 

Section 3130(b)(4) required DOE's report to include an estimate of the 
life-cycle cost of the current scope of the environmental management 
program by project baseline summary, and summarized by site. The Act 
states that this discussion should include the assumptions impacting 
cost projections and descriptions of the work to be done at each site. 

As required, DOE discusses life-cycle cost estimates for the current 
scope of the environmental management program from 1997 to 2008 by 
project baseline summary, provides a list of work to be done, and 
describes assumptions affecting cost projections for the program. DOE's 
report estimates the current life-cycle cost of the environmental 
management program to be from $274 billion to $330 billion. In 
addition, the department provides an estimated cost range of $205 
billion to $261 billion and planned completion dates for 25 sites 
through 2062. The report also describes the remaining work at each of 
these sites. 

Element Five--New Work Scope: DOE's Report Discusses the Process for 
Adding New Work Scope to the Environmental Management Program, but Does 
Not Include a Schedule for Addressing This Work: 

For environmental cleanup liabilities and excess facilities projected 
to be transferred to the environmental management program, Section 
3130(b)(5) of the Act required DOE's report to include a description of 
the process for nomination and acceptance of new work scope into the 
program, a listing of pending nominations, and life-cycle cost 
estimates and schedules to address them. 

To comply with this section, DOE provides a list of pending nominations 
and life-cycle cost estimates for cleanup activities that may be 
transferred to the environmental management program from other DOE 
entities, such as NNSA and DOE's Office of Science. Specifically, the 
department reports that approximately 5.8 million square feet of excess 
facilities have been proposed for transfer to the environmental 
management program, and that these facilities would add approximately 
$3.7 billion to $9.1 billion of life-cycle cleanup costs to current DOE 
estimates. DOE's report notes that the environmental management program 
requests other DOE offices to nominate cleanup activities annually. The 
program then consolidates this information and formalizes it with 
agreements between the environmental management program and the other 
DOE offices concerning the proposed transfer period and budget 
responsibilities.[Footnote 7] 

However, DOE's report does not include schedules for addressing new 
work scope as required by the Act. DOE officials told us that the 
report does not include schedules because the program cannot accept 
additions to its current scope of work until 2017, and, thus, it would 
be unreasonable to develop schedules for cleanup that cannot occur 
until then. In commenting on a draft of this report, DOE officials told 
us the department was able to accept additional work scope into the 
environmental management program using funding received as a result of 
the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act.[Footnote 8] 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

We provided a draft of this report to DOE for its review and comment. 
On May 15, 2009, we met with DOE officials, including DOE's Acting 
Assistant Secretary of Environmental Management, to obtain oral 
comments on our draft report. DOE officials generally agreed with our 
findings that the report the department prepared to comply with the Act 
does not discuss legislative changes to improve or accelerate 
environmental management activities, and that DOE's report lacks 
schedules for addressing excess facilities that could be transferred 
into the program. These officials noted that additional cleanup work 
associated with excess facilities will be transferred to the 
environmental management program and will be addressed using funding 
obtained as a result of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. 
However, DOE officials disagreed with our assessment of this element as 
"partially discussed" because, according to these officials, "the Act 
required numerous data points regarding excess facilities" and "only 
one specific data point was not fully addressed." Nevertheless, the Act 
specifically required DOE's report to contain a discussion of the 
schedules to address additional cleanup work. This discussion, as DOE 
officials conceded, is not included. Therefore, we maintain that our 
assessment of this element as partially discussed is appropriate. 

DOE officials also agreed that the department's report lacks the 
linkage of specific reasons for noncompliance to at-risk milestones 
identified in the report, but disagreed that this omission was the 
result of a desire to protect DOE from legal action as our draft report 
stated. These officials explained that numerous factors affect the 
ability to meet compliance milestones, and that DOE could not always 
link at-risk milestones to one specific category. Instead, DOE 
officials said that categories for noncompliance with major mandatory 
milestones were omitted because they believed a higher-level summary 
would be more helpful to the reader. We modified our report 
accordingly. DOE officials again disagreed with our assessment of this 
element as "partially discussed" because they believed this assessment 
does not fully indicate the quantity of information DOE's report 
includes in this element. Nevertheless, the Act specifically required 
DOE's report to contain a "summary of the major mandatory milestones by 
site that are projected to be missed or are in jeopardy of being missed 
along with categories to explain the reason for noncompliance." 
Notwithstanding DOE officials' belief that a higher-level summary would 
be more helpful to the reader, DOE's failure to include categories to 
explain the reason for noncompliance as required by the Act justifies 
our assessment of this element as partially discussed. 

DOE officials also disagreed with our finding that the department's 
report only partially discussed the first element required by the Act-
-a discussion and assessment of the progress made in reducing 
environmental risks and challenges. Again, DOE officials felt that our 
assessment of this element as "partially discussed" insufficiently 
captured the extensive amount of information DOE included in its report 
to demonstrate its progress in reducing environmental risk. We agree 
that DOE's report contains extensive discussion of the department's 
cleanup progress to date, and we have modified our report to include 
several more examples that DOE cited in its report. However, we 
maintain that, in some cases, the examples that DOE's report uses as 
evidence of the progress it has made do not clearly demonstrate a 
reduction in environmental risk. For example, the report's discussion 
of the number of buildings that DOE has demolished at several of its 
sites does not clearly indicate a corresponding reduction in 
environmental risk. This is because these demolished buildings may have 
consisted of offices or contained other nonhazardous activities. 
Without a clear explanation of the relative environmental risks posed 
by specific buildings, we maintain that an aggregated measure of 
demolished buildings does little to demonstrate a reduction in 
environmental risk. 

Finally, given our report's objective of addressing the extent to which 
the report that DOE prepared discusses the five elements called for 
under the Act, DOE officials questioned the relevance of our discussion 
in our draft report's introduction of the cost increases and schedule 
delays experienced by DOE cleanup projects. These officials also 
questioned the relevance of our discussion of DOE's contract management 
as a high-risk area for fraud, waste, abuse, and mismanagement. We 
disagree. In our view, the discussion of the significant cost increases 
and schedule delays experienced by major cleanup projects managed by 
the DOE's Office of Environmental Management provides important context 
to understand the challenges that the department faces in completing 
this cleanup work. Furthermore, the first element of the Act requires a 
discussion of the progress that DOE has made in addressing the 
department's contract management challenges. Therefore, our discussion 
of DOE contract management as a high-risk area is appropriate, given 
the objective of our report. We made no changes to our report as a 
result of this comment. 

DOE officials also provided technical comments that we have 
incorporated throughout the report, as appropriate. 

We are sending copies of this report to the Secretary of Energy, the 
appropriate congressional committees, and other interested parties. 
This report will be available at no charge on the GAO Web site at 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov]. 

If you or your staffs have any questions about this report, please 
contact me at (202) 512-3841 or aloisee@gao.gov. Contact points for our 
Offices of Congressional Relations and Public Affairs may be found on 
the last page of this report. Key contributors to this report include 
Ryan T. Coles, Assistant Director; Sandra Kerr; and Michelle K. 
Treistman. Omari Norman and Cheryl Peterson also contributed to this 
report. 

Signed by: 

Gene Aloise: 
Director, Natural Resources and Environment: 

List of Committees: 

The Honorable Carl Levin:
Chairman:
The Honorable John McCain:
Ranking Member:
Committee on Armed Services:
United States Senate: 

The Honorable Daniel K. Inouye: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable Thad Cochran: 
Ranking Member: 
Subcommittee on Defense: 
Committee on Appropriations: 
United States Senate: 

The Honorable Ike Skelton:
Chairman:
The Honorable John M. McHugh:
Ranking Member:
Committee on Armed Services:
House of Representatives: 

The Honorable John P. Murtha: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable C.W. Bill Young: 
Ranking Member: 
Subcommittee on Defense: 
Committee on Appropriations: 
House of Representatives: 

[End of section] 

Footnotes: 

[1] GAO, Department of Energy: Contract and Project Management Concerns 
at the National Nuclear Security Administration and Office of 
Environmental Management, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-406T] (Washington, D.C.: Mar. 4, 
2009). 

[2] GAO, Nuclear Waste: Action Needed to Improve Accountability and 
Management of DOE's Major Cleanup Projects, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-1081] (Washington, D.C.: Sept. 26, 
2008). 

[3] GAO, High-Risk Series: An Update, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-271] (Washington, D.C.: January 
2009). 

[4] Pub. L. No. 110-181 (2008). 

[5] DOE, Status of Environmental Management Initiatives to Accelerate 
the Reduction of Environmental Risks and Challenges Posed by the Legacy 
of the Cold War (Washington, D.C.: Jan. 16, 2009). 

[6] Low-level waste includes items that have become contaminated with 
radioactive material or have become radioactive through exposure to 
neutron radiation, and mixed low-level waste is low-level waste that 
also contains a hazardous chemical. Spent nuclear fuel is generated 
from research associated with nuclear power, and production of nuclear 
materials for use in nuclear weapons, scientific research, and 
medicine. Transuranic waste is a type of radioactive waste that 
contains elements with atomic numbers greater than uranium, which has 
an atomic number of 92. 

[7] Detailed information on the process that DOE uses to nominate and 
accept additional cleanup work is available in DOE Guide 430.1-5, 
Transition Implementation Guide. 

[8] The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act is Pub. L. No. 111-5 
(2009). 

[End of section] 

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