The Evidence

Radioactive, hazardous and toxic waste from LANL continues to enter the waters of the Rio Grande watershed which include streams and tributaries to the Rio Grande. These include:

  • PCBs (Polychlorinated Biphenlys) – industrial chemicals banned in 1977 that are known to cause cancer, damage to the thyroid, liver, and stomach, impair reproduction, cause birth defects, change the immune system, and alter behavior in animals.

Evidence that LANL toxins are polluting community waters includes:

Methods to Monitor Toxic Threats at Los Alamos National Labs Are Fatally Flawed

LANL’s current program for monitoring groundwater pollution is fatally flawed and has failed to provide reliable data on the scope of toxic pollution in the regional drinking water aquifer—a claim supported by a 2007 National Academy of Sciences report.

According to the report:

The [LANL groundwater monitoring] plan is not adequate to provide early identification of potential contaminant migration with high confidence, because LANL’s understanding of pathways for contaminant transport, especially inter-watershed pathways, is not yet adequate to support such confidence.

Furthermore, the NAS report notes that the wells used to test for toxins in the regional aquifer “appear to be compromised in their ability to produce water samples that are representative of ambient groundwater for the purpose of monitoring.”

Inadequate monitoring of surface water and groundwater has been a major hurdle to enforcing LANL’s compliance to federal and state regulations. CCW maintains that independent monitoring of toxic pollution entering water is vital to ensuring that the full scope of the contamination problem is understood and that LANL remains accountable to the public.