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Allison Macfarlane

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President
  
Barack Obama

Preceded by
  
Gregory Jaczko


Succeeded by
  
Stephen G. Burns

Name
  
Allison Macfarlane

Allison Macfarlane NRC rejects effort to move radwaste from pools Macfarlane

Alma mater
  
University of Rochester Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Education
  
University of Rochester, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Nrc chair allison macfarlane speaks at the national press club nov 17 2014


Allison M. Macfarlane directs the Center for International Science and Technology Policy at George Washington University, where she is Professor of Public Policy and International Affairs. She was the chairman of the United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) from July 9, 2012, to December 31, 2014.

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Allison macfarlane talks nuclear storage


Education and career

Allison Macfarlane httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Macfarlane was educated at the University of Rochester, where she earned B.Sc. in Geological Sciences in 1987, and at Massachusetts Institute of Technology with a Ph.D. in Geology in 1992. She held fellowships at Radcliffe College, Harvard University, Stanford University, and MIT. She was also assistant professor of earth science and international affairs at Georgia Tech from 2003-4. Prior to taking the top position at the NRC, Dr. Macfarlane was an associate professor of environmental science and policy at George Mason University.

Allison Macfarlane Allison Macfarlane NRC Hearing May Focus on Waste The

While at GMU, MacFarlane was a member of the Blue Ribbon Commission on America's Nuclear Future from 2010 to 2012. The panel was charged by the Secretary of Energy to examine the issues associated with nuclear waste disposal in the United States.

When NSC commission chair Gregory Jaczko was forced to step down before the end of his term in May 2012, Macfarlane was appointed to complete the term. She was then reconfirmed for a full five-year term by the United States Senate on July 1, 2013.

As Chairman of the NRC, Dr. Macfarlane prioritized the geological and operational lessons learned from the North Anna and Fukushima, as well as improving the NRC's communication with public stakeholders and paying more attention to the back end of the fuel cycle in an era when more U.S. nuclear power plants were being decommissioned than built. She also pushed to make the NRC a more family-friendly workplace. Given that she had raised questions a decade earlier about the suitability of the Yucca Mountain site for long-term geologic disposal of high-level nuclear waste, supporters of Yucca Mountain expected her to stall NRC licensing of Yucca Mountain, but she complied with a court order that ruled her predecessor's actions illegal and directed the NRC to continue its licensing review until it had spent down the funds made available for this purpose by Congress.

Macfarlane departed from the position at NRC before the completion of her full term to take the GWU professorship in December 2014.

Views

In her 2006 book Uncertainty Underground Macfarlane critiqued plans to store spent nuclear fuel in a mountain near Las Vegas called Yucca Mountain. She said the seismic and volcanic activity as well as oxidizing in the environment would make the nuclear waste unstable. MacFarlane has supported storing nuclear waste at reactor sites in dry casks and the allocation of billions to find a suitable geologic repository for storage over the next few decades.

Personal life

Macfarlane is married to Hugh Gusterson, a professor of anthropology and author of works on nuclear culture, with whom she has two children.

References

Allison Macfarlane Wikipedia