Despite the cabinet agreeing that the residue from the Lynas Advanced
Materials Plant (Lamp) should be shipped out of Malaysia, the Atomic
Energy Licensing Board (AELB) said it could not confirm this.
“I
cannot confirm yet because Lynas has not submitted (its disposal plans)
actually, because they are not required to do so until the temporary
operating license (TOL) has been issued,” said the AELB
director-general’s special officer Noor Hasnah Khairullah at a press
conference today.
“They must do that within ten months of the issuance of the TOL.”
Sin Chew Daily
had quoted Health Minister Liow Tiong Lai as saying last Friday as
saying that the residue should be shipped out because Lynas is unlikely
to find a suitable location in Malaysia for its permanent disposal
facility (PDF).
“Lynas Corp has given a letter of undertaking to ship the waste out of the country, so it is not an issue now.
“Although
the conditions say it needs to do this only if it can’t find a suitable
site for a PDF, but we (the cabinet) think there is no such place in
Malaysia,” he had reportedly said.
Noor
Hasnah reiterated that once the two-year TOL has been issued, Lynas has
ten months to use Lamp’s residue to prove that it can be processed into
a commercial product and that its PDF proposal would be suitable to
store the residue.
“They have not done this on a commercial
scale. They had done this on their lab or pilot scale, so now they have
to run it on their commercial facillity,” she said, adding that the
residue would need to be re-characterised to help prove that its
proposed PDF is suited for the residue.
If that fails, Lynas would need to ship it out of the country, she said.
Fulfilled four out of seven conditions
She also told reporters that Lynas has already fulfilled four out if seven conditions needed for the TOL to be issued.
The
remaining conditions to be fulfilled are to appoint an independent
consultant to ensure compliance with regulations, to propose plans to
immobilise radioactive elements in the waste, and an emergency response
plan to prevent it from spreading to surrounding areas.
The first condition is part of the five original conditions imposed when the TOL was approved, while the latter two are new conditions imposed by Science Minister Maximus Ongkili after hearing an appeal by Kuantan residents to overturn the licence.
Noor Hasnah also said that the parliamentary select committee (PSC) on Lynas’ 31 recommendations do not directly affect issuance of the licence.
“The
PSC’s findings only reaffirmed what was already decided by the board,”
she said, adding that monitoring of Lamp would be intensified as a
result.
However, she denied that the PSC was a waste of time because no one knew its recommendations until its report was tabled.
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