Weapons Complex Monitor Vol. 29 No. 11
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Weapons Complex Monitor
Article 11 of 12
March 16, 2018

Mid-America Takes Home $1.1 Million in DUF6 Scorecard

By Staff Reports

Mid-America Conversion Services earned just under $1.1 million in award fees for eight months of work on depleted uranium hexafluoride (DUF6) conversion at the Energy Department’s Portsmouth Site in Ohio and Paducah Site in Kentucky, according to the contractor’s recently released performance scorecard. That was just under half of the $2.3 million available for fiscal 2017.

Mid-America earned $468,261, or about 70 percent of a potential $676,189 for its subjective performance categories from Feb. 1 through Sept. 30, 2017. It took home $629,986, or roughly 40 percent of a potential $1.58 million in performance-based incentives for the period.

On the subjective performance categories, Mid-America rated “satisfactory” for schedule and cost control, “good” on quality and regulatory compliance, “very good” in management, and “excellent” for utilization of small businesses.

“MCS’s ability to estimate the time needed to complete work, schedule the work and then manage to the established schedule is a weakness,” DOE said in the scorecard. “During the last quarter of this fiscal year, at best, only three out of the four lines were operating at any given time.”

Also, MCS’s actual costs in fiscal 2017 exceeded the spending plan, although the scorecard did not say by how much. MCS did achieve $1 million in belt-tightening through use of “e-sourcing,” price negotiations, and certain tax exemptions.

On the performance-based incentives, the contractor only partially met its goals for production and line restart, DOE said. The report card did not offer details on these two items.

Mid-America Conversion Services is a joint venture led by SNC-Lavalin subsidiary Atkins, with partners Westinghouse and Fluor. It won a five-year, $318 million DOE contract in September 2016 to take over management the DUF6 conversion facilities at the former gaseous diffusion plants at Portsmouth and Paducah.

The DUF6 at the sites is a byproduct of Cold War-era uranium enrichment at the sites. The Energy Department plans by 2032 to convert the material into hydrofluoric acid and uranium oxide for reuse or disposal.

DOE has converted roughly 60,000 metric tons of depleted uranium hexafluoride out of the total estimated 815,000 metric tons stored at the Portsmouth and Paducah sites. About 755,000 metric tons remain to be converted, a DOE spokesperson said Friday.

The DUF6 contract was previously held by BWXT Conversion Services. DUF6 conversion began in 2010 at Portsmouth and the following year at Paducah.

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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.

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

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