Morning Briefing - December 20, 2022
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December 20, 2022

Defense nuclear budgets up all round in full-year omnibus spending bill

By ExchangeMonitor

Civilian nuclear weapons programs at the National Nuclear Security Administration will almost all get year-over-year raises in excess of what the White House requested under an omnibus 2023 spending proposal released early Tuesday morning.

The semiautonomous Department of Energy nuclear-weapons agency would get about $22.2 billion under the bill: some $750 million more than requested and $1.5 billion more than the 2022 appropriation. 

Driving the increase in large part, Congress has approved spending some $500 million more than requested on construction of the Savannah River Plutonium Processing Facility in South Carolina: the larger of the National Nuclear Security Administration’s (NNSA) two planned plutonium pit factories. 

The South Carolina pit plant would get $1.2 billion for 2023 under the omnibus, which is $500 million more than requested and $725 million more than the 2022 appropriation. NNSA has told Congress that the plant could open by 2036.

The omnibus also funds two weapon programs the Joe Biden administration wanted to cancel: maintenance of the B83 nuclear gravity bomb and development of a sea-launched variant of the W80-4 cruise-missile warhead.

Through a series of short-term stopgap budgets that expire Friday, agencies have been running on the equivalent of their 2022 budgets since Oct. 1. The House and Senate had not scheduled votes on the omnibus as of Monday morning.

Elsewhere in the omnibus, the Department of Energy’s Office of Environmental Management would get about $8.3 billion for fiscal year 2023, a raise overall of about $359 million compared with the 2022 appropriation. A year-over-year increase of more than $300 million for Defense Environmental Cleanup, the office’s largest account, was mostly responsible.

Civilian nuclear programs at DOE’s Office of Nuclear Energy would get about $1.5 billion in the omnibus, plus another $300 million in emergency funding, according to a summary of the bill written by the House Appropriations Committee.

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NEW: Via public records request, I’ve been able to confirm reporting today that a warrant has been issued for DOE deputy asst. secretary of spent fuel and waste disposition Sam Brinton for another luggage theft, this time at Las Vegas’s Harry Reid airport. (cc: @EMPublications)

DOE spent fuel lead Brinton accused of second luggage theft.



by @BenjaminSWeiss, confirming today's reports with warrant from Las Vegas Metro PD.

Waste has been Emplaced! 🚮

We have finally begun emplacing defense-related transuranic (TRU) waste in Panel 8 of #WIPP.

Read more about the waste emplacement here: https://wipp.energy.gov/wipp_news_20221123-2.asp

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