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Groundwater at the Hanford Site

In general, groundwater is a supply of fresh water found in layers beneath the earth's surface. Because groundwater can be a source of drinking water, contamination is a concern. Contamination can occur from agricultural and industrial activities. At Hanford, past industrial activities have impacted the groundwater.

Fifty years of nuclear weapons production resulted in approximately 1.7 trillion liters (450 billion gallons) of liquid waste being released to the ground at the Hanford Site. Some of the associated contaminants have reached the groundwater. Hazardous chemical contaminants include carbon tetrachloride, chromium, and nitrates. Radioactive contaminants include iodine-129, strontium-90, technetium-99, tritium, and uranium. Commonly sought Hanford Environmental Information System (HEIS) well-monitoring data, tracking contaminants from about 1950 to the present, can be accessed via a user-friendly web-based tool.

Currently, about 14% or 207 square kilometers (80 square miles) of the Hanford Site has groundwater contaminant levels greater than drinking water standards. This is down from 17.5% just a few years ago.

Hanford groundwater is not a source of drinking water and does not affect offsite drinking water sources, such as the Columbia River and municipal and private wells. There are, however, possible near shore impacts where Hanford groundwater flows into the Columbia River.

The Groundwater Remediation Project

The U.S. Department of Energy, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, and the Washington State Department of Ecology have developed a remediation plan for protecting the Columbia River Corridor. The Groundwater Remediation Project is largely responsible for ensuring the plan is implemented.

Waste Disposal/Groundwater Remediation Project contractor Fluor Hanford manages the Groundwater Remediation Project for the U.S. Department of Energy. The program's primary goals are to aggressively clean up groundwater contaminants, avoid future groundwater contamination, and prevent groundwater contaminants from migrating to the Columbia River. Accelerated cleanup is designed to return groundwater to beneficial use, where possible, or at least prevent further degradation.

Key Functional Areas

Groundwater Remediation
Project Mission:

Columbia RiverTo protect the Columbia River from contaminated groundwater resulting from past, present, and future operations at the Hanford Site and to protect and restore groundwater.
The Groundwater Remediation Project is focused on the following five functional areas and will:

  • Remediate High-Risk Waste Sites - Clean up waste sites that pose the highest risk to groundwater
  • Shrink the Contaminated Area - Reduce the contaminated surface area, so as many areas as possible will no longer pose a threat to groundwater
  • Reduce Recharge - Reduce the transport of contaminants to groundwater from water released onto the soil
  • Remediate Groundwater - Complete remedial actions at pump-and-treat sites
  • Monitor Groundwater - Determine the groundwater monitoring needs for long-term stewardship of the Central Plateau and evaluate new technologies that may be more effective


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