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The Trump administration plans to reclassify nuclear waste, arguing it could save billions. Critics say that's because much of the waste could be left in the ground

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Donald Trump Rick Perry

  • The US Department of Energy wants a change in its legal definition of high-level radioactive waste stored at places such as Hanford Nuclear Reservation in Washington state.
  • Reclassifying waste as low-level could save the agency billions of dollars and decades of cleanup work.
  • Critics say that's because much of the waste essentially could be left in the ground.

SPOKANE, Wash. (AP) — The Trump administration has proposed reclassifying some radioactive waste left from the production of nuclear weapons to make disposal cheaper and easier.

The US Department of Energy wants a change in its legal definition of high-level radioactive waste stored at places such as Hanford Nuclear Reservation in Washington state — the most contaminated nuclear site in the country.

Read more: San Francisco's planned $8 billion neighborhood has a radioactive past, and it may put people at a higher risk of cancer than experts thought

Reclassifying waste as low-level could save the agency billions of dollars and decades of cleanup work. Critics say that's because much of the waste essentially could be left in the ground.

Tom Carpenter of Hanford Challenge, a nuclear watchdog group, said it wants a thorough cleanup of the site, which is half the size of Rhode Island.

That includes building a national repository somewhere else to bury the waste once it has been stabilized.

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