Current temperature: 39°F |
|
|||
|
||||
|
Friday, February 4, 2005
Lab organizations earn seven NNSA Pollution Prevention AwardsLaboratory organizations received seven, or more than half of the 2005 Pollution Prevention (P2) Environmental Stewardship Awards given nationally by the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA). The awards are based on a Department of Energy complexwide competition that acknowledges pollution prevention, recycling and affirmative procurement accomplishments. "These projects represent another example of the commitment of Lab staff to eliminate waste and invoke cost-effective process improvements," said Denny Hjeresen of Pollution Prevention/Sustainability (ENV-PP). The seven Lab projects receiving Pollution Prevention (P2) Environmental Stewardship Awards are 1) Reusable Containment Structures, Nuclear Materials Technology (NMT); Facilities Management (FM); Health, Safety and Radiation Protection (HSR) divisions and Site Support Services This project involved replacing custom-built wood and plastic sheet structures in the Plutonium Facility with reusable plastic tents with aluminum-pole frames. The tent structures prevent the generation of approximately 200 cubic meters of low-level waste annually, and they can be assembled and taken down in about 90 percent less time than the wood structures. 2) Radioactive Liquid Waste Generator Set-Aside Fund Program, Environmental Stewardship (ENV), Nuclear Waste & Infrastructure Services (NWIS) divisions and Shaw Environmental By collecting a small tax on the quantity of liquid radioactive waste produced by generators, this program is expected to collect approximately $528,000 in funds during the first year that will be invested in upstream process improvements to reduce the amount of liquid radioactive waste that must be treated. 3) Los Alamos National Laboratory Integrated Work Management Process and Job Hazard Analysis Tool implementation, ENV and HSR divisions The Lab is the first site in the weapons complex to integrate safety, security and environment at the work activity level. Tools developed to support the system will save approximately $500,000 per year in avoided subject matter expert review time. The system also ensures that environmental and pollution prevention measures are in place at the work planning stage. 4) Redesigning a Weapons Component to Eliminate Beryllium Use, Engineering Sciences and Applications (ESA) Division Gas Transfer Sytstems (ESA-GTS) successfully redesigned a weapons component to eliminate beryllium. Estimated cost savings are $850,000 a year for a total project savings of $3.2 million through 2007. This is the first time NNSA issued an award to a classified project where the nature of the work could not be fully described in the application but the safety, environmental benefits and cost savings could be illustrated. 5) Oil-Free Vacuum Pumps, Applied Theoretical and Computational Physics (X) , Chemistry (C) and Los Alamos Neutron Science Center (LANSCE) divisions The Lab has switched to oil-free vacuum pumps for many applications. Using oil-free vacuum pumps saves time because employees do not need to change the oil in the pumps, ship any waste, or complete any disposal paperwork. Each oil-free vacuum pump in use saves thousands of dollars annually on labor, sample analysis, and waste disposal. 6) Radioactive Liquid Waste Treatment Facility (RLWTF) Effluent Reuse/Recycle, NWIS Division Personnel at the RLWTF recognized that some of the industrial water supplied by the Lab's potable water system could be replaced with recycled effluent. This project reduced industrial water use by approximately 550,000 gallons annually. 7) Oversized Transuranic (TRU) Waste Volume Reductions at DVRS, NWIS, HSR, ESA divisions and Shaw Environmental The Lab reduced oversized legacy TRU waste in storage by 39 percent through sorting, segregation and volume reduction. Approximately 22 cubic meters of waste were removed from the TRU inventory, reducing the overall TRU waste management lifecycle cost by roughly $500,000. "In addition to the estimated savings of approximately $2.7 million this year, most of these projects will continue to generate savings well into the future," Hjeresen said. "For example, the Radioactive Liquid Waste Generator Set-aside Fund Program sets a small fee per unit of liquid radioactive waste to provide funds for future waste elimination projects that will prevent waste and save time and money." Additionally, NNSA submitted four of the seven Lab projects to the White House Closing the Circle P2 Awards Program, a national pollution prevention competition among all federal agencies.
Other Headlines Speaker: Ports may be vulnerable to terrorists more... Briefing on July 2004 CREM security incident is Wednesday more... Applications accepted for Summer Science Program more... Nomination deadline for DAAB, diversity working groups is today more... Lab organizations earn seven NNSA Pollution Prevention Awards more... UC, California State system work to improve access to online legal entertainment services more... |
||||
Questions? Contact the Newsbulletin at newsbulletin@lanl.gov or 667-6103.
|
|
Operated by the Los Alamos National
Security, LLC for the U.S. Department
of Energy's NNSA Inside | © Copyright 2007-8 Los Alamos National Security, LLC All rights reserved | Disclaimer/Privacy |