Senate Passes Medical Isotope Production Bill
Approximately 41,000 medical diagnostic imaging procedures are performed every day in the United States using a radioisotope produced by reactors in Canada and the Netherlands. Recent Senate passage of a bill has moved the U.S. a step closer to the domestic production of this vital material.
On November 17 the Senate quickly passed S. 99, The American Medical Isotopes Production Act of 2011. The House approved a similar measure two years ago. S. 99 requires the Secretary of Energy to “establish a technology-neutral program . . . to evaluate and support projects for the production in the United States, without the use of highly enriched uranium, of significant quantities of molybdenum-99 for medical purposes.”
Rep. Edward Markey (D-MA) introduced H.R. 3276 in July 2009. The bill
In January, Senator Jeff Bingaman (D-NM), chairman of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee, introduced S. 99, which was identical to the bill passed by the House. Committee Ranking Member Lisa Murkowski (R-AK) was an original cosponsor. Before the committee approved the bill in April several changes were made to its provisions, including several new definitions, restrictions on reactor exemptions, clarification of a uranium lease and take-back program, and a requirement for environmental reviews by the Department of Energy and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
S. 99 and H.R. 3276 authorize a new Department of Energy program to support the domestic production of molybdenium-99, and seek to phase out DOE’s exportation of proliferation-sensitive HEU to foreign reactors used in the production of this isotope. S. 99 requires that DOE “provide assistance for . . . the development of fuels, targets, and processes for domestic molybdenum-99 production that do not use highly enriched uranium” and commercial operations using these fuels, targets, and processes. The DOE program is to be technology-neutral in the evaluation of a production process that is to be judged on timeliness, production capacity, and cost. The Senate bill authorizes $150 million in appropriations for this program in Fiscal Years 2012 through 2016; note that actual funding is contingent on annual appropriations measures.
Further information on S. 99 is available in Senate Report 112-17
In a related development, the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) announced earlier this month that it had signed a fourth domestic commercial cooperative agreement “to further the development of accelerator-based technology to produce molybdenum (Mo-99) in the United States.” This technology will not use highly enriched uranium. Last December, the first shipment