One of "the most contaminated places on Earth" will only  get dirtier if the US government doesn't get its act together - clean-up plans  are already 19 years behind schedule and not due for completion until  2050.
 More than 210 million litres of radioactive and chemical  waste are stored in 177 underground tanks at Hanford in Washington State. Most  are over 50 years old. Already 67 of the tanks have failed, leaking almost 4  million litres of waste into the ground.
 There are now "serious questions about the tanks'  long-term viability," says a Government Accountability Office report, which  strongly criticises the US Department of Energy for delaying an $8 billion  programme to empty the tanks and treat the waste. The DoE says the clean-up is  "technically challenging" and argues that it is making progress in such a way as  to protect human health and the environment.
 The DoE's plan, however, is "faith-based", says Robert  Alvarez, an authority on Hanford at the Institute for Policy Studies in  Washington DC. "The risk of catastrophic tank failure will sharply increase as  each year goes by," he says, "and one of the nation's largest rivers, the  Columbia, will be in jeopardy."
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