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Aug 27, 2025 Energy Department orders "special" investigation of plutonium pit problems Colin Demarest The U.S. has for almost a decade been on a cross-country nuclear weapons odyssey known as plutonium pit production.
Why it matters: A memo this month from Energy Department leadership reignites questions about the future of the effort, which has become a punching bag for critics and a pea among the mattresses of nuclear modernization. Driving the news: Deputy Energy Secretary James Danly earlier this month ordered a 120-day "special study" of the pit production endeavor overseen by the National Nuclear Security Administration.
Threat level: Danly said he is "increasingly concerned" about NNSA's "ability to consistently deliver on nuclear weapons production capabilities."
Between the lines: This is a marked departure in tone from the top.
The intrigue: To run the investigation,Danly tapped the Office of Enterprise Assessments, an internal oversight group that typically probes cyber, site security and environmental concerns. That choice has drawn the curiosity of experts.
Flashback: A two-pronged production plan was greenlit during the first Trump administration by Ellen Lord and Lisa Gordon-Hagerty, at the time the Pentagon's chief weapons buyer and the NNSA administrator, respectively.
What they're saying: "The current plan for pit production is one of the most expensive endeavors that the U.S. has ever undertaken in its nuclear complex," Dylan Spaulding, also with the Union of Concerned Scientists, told Axios.
The other side: The Energy Department did not respond to questions about the selection of the Office of Enterprise Assessments, the potential repercussions of its findings and the overall timing of the deep dive. Zoom out: The combined 2025-34 nuke plans of the Defense and Energy departments amount to $946 billion, according to the Congressional Budget Office.
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