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Publicatie Laka-bibliotheek:
Drum breach: Operational temporalities, error politics and WIPP’s kitty litter nuclear waste accident (2021)

AuteurVincent Ialenti
3-01-4-20-02.pdf
Datumjanuari 2021
Classificatie 3.01.4.20/02 (VS - AFVAL - WIPP)
Voorkant

Uit de publicatie:

Drum breach: Operational temporalities, error politics
and WIPP’s kitty litter nuclear waste accident
Vincent Ialenti
2021

Abstract
In February 2014 at the WIPP transuranic waste repository in New Mexico, a drum 
erupted in fire. It exposed 22 people to radiation, shut down the underground 
facility for 35 months and cost the United States over a billion dollars. Heat and 
pressure had built up in the drum due to chemical reactions with an organic kitty 
litter, Swheat Scoop, which had been mistakenly added to it at Los Alamos National 
Laboratory, the birthplace of the atomic bomb. This article disrupts two prominent 
narratives: (a) that the accident was induced by a typographical error made after a 
waste packaging operations supervisor misheard ‘inorganic kitty litter’ as ‘an 
organic kitty litter’ during a meeting, and (b) that it was induced primarily by 
‘mismanagement’ at WIPP, Los Alamos and the DOE’s New Mexico field offices. It does 
so by exploring how a series of overambitious political initiatives, fraught labor 
relationships, financialized subcontracting arrangements and US Department of Energy 
(DOE) performance incentives set the stage for Los Alamos’s notorious error by 
accelerating US waste packaging, shipping and repository emplacement rates beyond 
systemic capacity. Attention to operational temporalities shows how an often-
overlooked nexus of schedule pressures, political-economic imperatives and regulatory 
breakdowns converged to modulate nuclear waste management workflows and, ultimately, 
trigger a radiological accident.