There's 90,000 tons of nuclear waste in the US. How and where is it stored?

The decades-long struggle to find a permanent place to dispose of nuclear waste will continue, probably for many years to come.

Radiation Detection Manager Jeff Carey, with Southern California Edison, takes a radiation reading at the dry storage area during a tour of the shuttered San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station south of San Clemente, CA
A Southern California Edison employee measures radiation at the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station on March 10, 2020. 
(Image credit: MediaNews Group/Orange County Register via Getty Images via Getty Images)

Around the U.S., about 90,000 tons of nuclear waste is stored at over 100 sites in 39 states, in a range of different structures and containers.

For decades, the nation has been trying to send it all to one secure location.

Gerald Frankel
Distinguished Professor of Materials Science and Engineering, The Ohio State University

Gerald S. Frankel is Distinguished Professor of Engineering, Professor of Materials Science and Engineering, and Director of the Fontana Corrosion Center at The Ohio State University. He has been a member of the faculty at Ohio State since 1995. Prior to joining Ohio State in 1995, he was a post-doctoral researcher at the Swiss Federal Technical Institute in Zurich, then a Research Staff Member at the IBM Watson Research Center in Yorktown Heights, NY.

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