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Nuclear Weapons Plant Forced To Shut Down Over Texas Wildfires

A wildfire burns in Kihei, Hawaii late Wednesday, Aug. 9, 2023. Thousands of residents raced to escape homes on Maui as blazes swept across the island, destroying parts of a centuries-old town in one of the deadliest U.S. wildfires in recent years. (AP Photo/Ty O'Neil)

Massive wildfires sweeping across Texas forced a major U.S. nuclear weapons plant to briefly shut down Tuesday night, the plant said in a statement on social media.

Texas Governor Greg Abbott issued an emergency declaration on Tuesday for 60 counties in the Texas Panhandle as the Smokehouse Creek Fire grew to encompass 470 square miles, The Associated Press reported, citing the Texas A&M Forest Service. As the blaze traveled south toward the Pantex Plant, the primary U.S. facility tasked with nuclear weapons disassembly paused operations and began evacuating personnel from the site as wildfires emerged north of the facility.

“A fire is north of Pantex. Out of an abundance of caution, nonessential personnel at the site including swing shift are instructed to evacuate the site at 6:30 PM today, February 27,” Pantex said in a statement on X.

Two hours later, the plant confirmed that “operations … have paused until further notice” and that all nuclear weapons and special materials had been secured from the fire.

Located just north of Amarillo, the Pantex Plant has for decades served as the main site for assembling and disassembling America’s massive nuclear arsenal under the oversight of the National Nuclear Security Administration, according to its website. It built its last bomb in 1991 but has dismantled thousands of retired weapons in the years since, the site states.

Pantex also conducts tests on active U.S. nuclear bombs to ensure their continued effectiveness, according to the website.

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