The National Nuclear Security Administration’s weapons program received a funding bump in Fiscal Year 2013 that many agencies might envy, but the $7.58 billion requested by President Obama isn’t likely to appease some Congressional lawmakers that had expected the Administration to request even more as part of a plan to modernize the nation’s nuclear weapons complex and arsenal. The $7.58 billion represents a $363.2 million increase over the amount Congress appropriated in FY2012, but it was well short of the $7.95 billion the agency had said it thought it needed just a year ago. The request reflects two years of funding cuts from Congress, and NNSA Administrator Tom D’Agostino said there should be no doubt about President Obama’s commitment to modernization. “The bottom line is the President continues his commitment, we have taken a look at what Congress has done and authorized and appropriated, we’ve made our adjustments, and we’ve focused on what’s important in the program and that’s what we’re asking for,” D’Agostino said yesterday.
Thus, the agency moved to defer construction of the Chemistry and Metallurgy Research Replacement-Nuclear Facility slated for Los Alamos National Laboratory in favor of accelerating work on another multi-billion-dollar construction project, the Uranium Processing Facility planned for the Y-12 National Security Complex. The agency also cut its request for physical security by $52.4 million, and shifted money to boost work on the B61 life extension program while scaling back production of the refurbished W76 warhead. The changes are likely to draw criticism, particularly from Republicans that want to hold the President to modernization promises made during Senate debate on the New START Treaty. For more analysis of the FY13 budget request, see the special issue of NW&M Monitor that will be published later today.
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