Supreme Court wrestles with US agency's nuclear waste storage licensing power

By Blake Brittain and John Kruzel

March 5, 2025

The logo of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission is shown on the podium during a public meeting in Carlsbad, California September 26, 2013

WASHINGTON, March 5 (Reuters) - The U.S. Supreme Court grappled on Wednesday over whether the Nuclear Regulatory Commission has the authority to license certain nuclear waste storage facilities amid objections brought by the state of Texas as well as oil industry interests.

The justices heard arguments in an appeal by the U.S. government and a company that was awarded a license by the NRC to operate a facility in western Texas of a lower court's ruling declaring the storage arrangement unlawful. The NRC is the federal agency regulating nuclear energy in the United States.

Some of the conservative justices indicated skepticism toward the NRC's claim that Congress gave it the authority to license temporary off-site nuclear waste storage facilities. Some of the liberal justices, for their part, questioned whether the plaintiffs should be allowed to challenge the license after it was awarded.

The Supreme Court, which has a 6-3 conservative majority, has showed skepticism toward the authority of federal regulatory agencies in several major rulings in recent years. The NRC case is being argued at a time when President Donald Trump's administration has taken aim at various agencies in his campaign to downsize and overhaul the U.S. government and fire thousands of federal workers.

The NRC issued a license in 2021 to Interim Storage Partners to build a nuclear waste storage facility in Andrews County in Texas, near the New Mexico border.

"Since 1980, the NRC's regulations have provided for both onsite and offsite storage. That system allows a substantial role for private market responses to the country's nuclear waste storage issues, subject to commission oversight to ensure that storage is safe and consistent with statutory requirements," Malcolm Stewart, an attorney for the U.S. government, told the justices.

The Interim Storage Partners license was challenged by Fasken Land and Minerals, a Texas-based oil and gas extraction organization, and the nonprofit Permian Basin Coalition of Land and Royalty Owners and Operators.

Texas and New Mexico later joined the challenge, arguing the facility posed environmental risks to the states. New Mexico, whose own case was dismissed, filed a brief in support of Texas.

Some conservative justices seemed wary of the NRC's claim that the licensing arrangements at issue would be temporary. The license issued to Interim Storage Partners was set to last for 40 years, with the possibility of being renewed.

"If it is decided that material can be stored off site temporarily - and temporary means more than 40 years, maybe more than 80 years, maybe it means 250 years, maybe it means 500 years - where is the incentive to go forward to do what Congress wanted to have done, which is to establish a permanent facility?" conservative Justice Samuel Alito asked the lawyer for the storage company.

Read More

Previous
Previous

High Court to Weigh Future of Nuclear Waste, Licensing Policy

Next
Next

Supreme Court steps into debate over where to store nuclear waste