S-3016-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Energy and Natural Resources.
Sponsored by Ted Cruz (R-TX)
What it does
This bill would require the Secretary of Energy to conduct a comprehensive study — within 90 days of enactment — on the practicability, costs, benefits, and risks of recycling spent nuclear fuel. The study would examine multiple recycling technologies, facility siting options, isotope extraction for medical and industrial uses, regulatory gaps, and proliferation risks. Within one year of enactment, the Secretary would be required to submit a publicly released report of no more than 120 pages to four congressional committees, including policy recommendations.
Who benefits
Nuclear energy companies and advanced reactor developers who would gain a government-backed feasibility roadmap. Communities currently hosting temporary spent fuel storage sites, who may benefit from analysis of removal options. Medical and industrial isotope users who depend on radioactive materials for cancer treatment, diagnostics, and industrial applications. Tribal governments and local communities near storage sites who would be specifically assessed for health, safety, and economic impacts. Domestic nuclear fuel manufacturers who could gain new feedstock sources. Taxpayers broadly, if recycling reduces long-term nuclear waste storage costs.
Who is hurt
Permanent nuclear waste repository advocates and contractors who may see their preferred disposal approach deprioritized if recycling is found feasible. Competing energy sectors (natural gas, renewables) that could face a more competitive nuclear industry if recycling lowers fuel costs. Organizations opposed to nuclear reprocessing on nonproliferation grounds, whose policy position could be undermined by a favorable study. Federal agency staff at the Department of Energy who would bear the implementation burden of a 90-day study timeline, which some experts may consider compressed for a topic of this complexity.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the United States currently stores over 90,000 metric tons of spent nuclear fuel at more than 70 temporary sites across the country, with no permanent repository in operation, creating indefinite safety and security risks for host communities. They contend that recycling — practiced commercially in France, Japan, and Russia — could recover up to 96% of the energy value in spent fuel, dramatically reducing waste volume and long-term storage requirements. A rigorous, publicly available government study, they argue, is a low-cost, bipartisan first step toward evidence-based policy on one of the most persistent challenges in U.S. energy infrastructure.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that nuclear fuel reprocessing was effectively banned in the United States in 1977 over proliferation concerns — separated plutonium from reprocessing can be diverted to weapons programs — and that a government study framed around the benefits of recycling could build political momentum toward reversing that policy without adequate nonproliferation safeguards. They contend that the 90-day study timeline is unrealistically short for a technically complex topic, raising concerns that the resulting report may be superficial or predetermined. Critics also note that previous DOE analyses have found reprocessing to be significantly more expensive than direct disposal, and that a study without independent peer review may not produce reliable cost-benefit conclusions.