EXECUTIVE
SUMMARY
Background
Scope of This Technical Report
Findings
Conclusions
Background
In response to a Congressional request, the Army Environmental Policy
Institute (AEPI), acting under the direction of Office of the Assistant
Secretary of the Army (Installations, Logistics & Environment), conducted
a study to determine:
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The health and environmental consequences of using depleted uranium (DU)
on the battlefield.
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Remediation technologies that exist or might be developed to clean up DU
contamination.
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Ways to reduce DU toxicity.
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How to best protect the environment from the long-term consequences of
DU use.
In response to this request, AEPI assembled a team of health, environmental,
legal and systems professionals. These experts conducted a literature review
of scientific studies concerning depleted uranium. They also interviewed
scientists, engineers and military officials, as well as soldiers involved
in Operation Desert Shield/Desert Storm. Their purpose was not to verify
the technical performance of DU weapon systems but to assess the health
and environmental consequences associated with the use of DU. A summary
report of the findings of this study, Summary Report to Congress (Appendix
A), was prepared for Congress and made available in June 1994.
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Scope of This
Technical Report
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This technical report, intended for scientific experts and advisors,
is being published to document the sources used in preparing the Summary
Report to Congress and to provide more detail regarding some of the physical,
chemical and radiological health and environmental effects of the DU used
in Army weapon systems. This technical report repeats (and in some cases,
embellishes) the findings and conclusions presented in the Summary Report
to Congress; no new findings are introduced here.Ý
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Findings
After an exhaustive review of weapon systems containing DU, AEPI concluded
that the Army has done an excellent job attending to the environmental
and health impacts of these systems. The following findings were first
published in the Summary Report to Congress in a con densed form. They
specifically address the four areas of concern raised in the original congressional
tasking.
Health and Environmental Consequences of Battlefield
Use
A battlefield may be contaminated with many dangerous substances. The
impact of DU contamination on the battlefield is a new issue and is not
well-defined. Relative to many other hazards, such as unexploded ordnance,
the hazards from DU contamination are small.
Remediation Technologies to Clean Up DU Contamination
DU remediation technologies may involve one or more of the following
processes: excavation and earth moving, physical separation, chemical separation
and in-place stabilization. Very few remediation technologies have actually
been used to clean up DU-contaminated sites. The Army continues to identify
and evaluate alternative remediation technologies.
Ways to Reduce DU Toxicity
No available technology can significantly change the inherent chemical
and radiological toxicity of DU. These are intrinsic properties of uranium.
Protecting the Environment from Long-Term Consequences
The Army has implemented range management and DU recovery systems and
is improving these systems. The Army is also developing models to better
describe the environmental fate and effects of DU. DU migration on test
ranges in the United States appears to be insignificant because the soil
and water conditions on the ranges tend to prevent the formation of soluble
DU.Ý
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Conclusions
The following conclusions, reported in the summary document and expanded
in this technical report, describe additional efforts that would lead to
an even higher level of health and environmental security relative to DU.
However, Army environmental goals must support the Army mission, contribute
to readiness and serve the collective national best interests. Thus, investment
in DU management is tempered by resource realities among competing needs.
The conclusions fall into the following categories: general recommendations,
those relating to test ranges and battlefields, and those relating to environmental
policy.
General Conclusions
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The Army or DoD should designate a single office, independent of DU systems
development or use, to improve management and control of DU health, environmental
and regulatory issues.
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The Army should revise its regulations and policy documents to explicitly
link DU acquisition, use, safety and health, disposal, demilitarization,
and environmental management.
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The Army should determine the full life-cycle cost of DU weapon systems.
This analysis must take into account not only production costs, but also
demilitarization, disposal and recycling costs; facility decontamination
costs; test range remediation costs; and long-term health and environmental
costs.
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An Environmental Assessment (EA) is normally used to assess the incremental
impact of systems at a specific site; however, within the DoD acquisition
process, an EA can also be item-specific (pertaining to a specific weapon
system). Use of the same term for two entirely different types of assessments
could lead to an inappropriate conclusion that the requisite environmental
documentation has been prepared.
Test Ranges and Battlefields
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The Army should continue to improve training programs for the wide variety
of soldiers and support personnel who may come in contact with DU or DU-contaminated
equipment. At a minimum, the Army should include armor, infantry, engineer,
ordnance, transportation and medical personnel in this training.
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Before Desert Storm, the probability of human survival in a vehicle hit
by a DU penetrator was estimated to be quite low, but fortunately, the
actual survival rate for U.S. soldiers in vehicles that sustained friendly
fire DU strikes was 80 to 90 percent. For this reason, in future conflicts
where either side uses DU weapons, the Army should anticipate managing
patients with DU-contaminated wounds.
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The Army should continue to investigate equipment modifications and procedures
that will minimize exposure to the chemical and radiological hazards of
DU, including the development of: a combat-oriented document that would
define protective techniques for medical and maintenance personnel; standard
markings for all weapon systems containing DU; experiments and analyses
to better define the risks of DU internalization to recovery and maintenance
personnel; and continue to evaluate potential DU contamination in gun tubes
and crew compartments from gun bore gases or flashback incidents.
Environmental Policy
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The Army should review all current environmental documentation on DU and
consider preparing a programmatic Life-Cycle Environmental Document.
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The Army should encourage Congress to revise the Low-Level Radioactive
Waste Policy Act allowing allocation of waste according to the value added
in each phase of development, testing and fielding a weapon system. Under
this approach, a proportional share of the waste generated during testing
would be charged against the waste disposal capacity of the states that
receive economic benefit from the process.
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The only systematic DU contamination of Army land occurs during the research,
development, testing, and evaluation (RDT&E) cycle for DU ammunition.
The following actions could help the Army better manage DU contamination
of test ranges:
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Plan site remediation activities on Army installations to be consistent
with long-term land-use goals. Develop a strategy to address the long-term
liabilities from DU contamination.
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Fund recovery, recycling and waste disposal programs.
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Develop waste disposal options, including volume reduction, waste minimization,
waste form modification and waste disposal facilities.
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Separate high-explosives ranges from new DU ranges.
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Require catch boxes on all DU ranges; maximize recovery of DU penetrators
at test ranges; maximize DU recycling within the Army ( DU testing will
always produce wastes).
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Provide a means to ensure timely disposal of DU waste from test ranges.
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Environmentally and financially sound remediation of DU contamination on
Army test ranges requires tools to conduct site assessments, apply fate
and effect models, and estimate environmental risks and costs. The Army
needs to:
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Expand funding of site investigations.
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Evaluate the effectiveness and cost of remediation technologies (proposed
and existing).
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Evaluate the environmental fate and effects of DU on U.S. test ranges.
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Review environmental and health hazard data obtained to date to ensure
that they are consistent and scientifically defensible.
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Review DU particle data from Army studies and elsewhere to determine data
gaps and conduct experiments to generate the requisite data to fill these
gaps.
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Develop a better understanding of DU particles generated from impacts or
burning.
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Develop environmental fate and effect models to determine relative risk
as a function of migration.
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The Army should be prepared to provide guidance to other governments on
the health and safety risks associated with DU for affected battlefields.
This guidance may include information on environmental measurement, monitoring,
migration and remediation techniques.
Actions to implement the policies suggested by the findings and conclusions
in this report should be weighed against the costs associated with the
environmental safety and health issues presented. Decisions must be framed
in the broadest context to consider whether the studies proposed have the
potential to mitigate the real costs of remediation and health management
as related to Army DU weapon systems.Ý
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