July 2000
Za
Zemiata
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RADIOACTIVE
WASTE MANAGEMENT POLICY IN GERMANY AND THE USA
Germany
USA
Conclusion
Germany
reprocessing
of spent fuel
In
the past nearly all the spent fuel in Germany went to the reprocessing
plants in France (La Hague, approximately 80%) and Sellafield (approximately
20%). The waste from reprocessing was supposed to be transported back to
Germany and put into interim storages, awaiting its final disposal. A salt
dome near Gorleben is under investigation for a final disposal site.
The
current policy of reprocessing will be phased out by 2005, because:
-
reprocessing
is not economically viable;
-
it does
not decrease the level of radioactivity of the waste;
-
the volume
of waste for later disposal becomes even greater after the reprocessing;
-
the stockpiles
of already extracted and unused Plutonium would increase.
Long-term
dry storages at each reactor site are under licensing procedure. The dry
storage containers allow for a unmaintained storage time of some decades
and are protected against external events such as airplane crashes etc.
Long-term storage at the reactor site does not require any transporting
of the fuel except for its final conditioning and disposal. It is
expected that these dry storages will require up to five years to begin
operating.
final
disposal of high-level radioactive waste
The
only site under investigation was the salt dome of Gorleben. The site assessment
started in 1978 and was planned to end in 2003. The aim was to licence
that site as a final disposal site for spent fuel and high-level waste.
There has been much opposition against Gorleben due to its unfavourable
geological conditions. The current position policy is to freeze the
site characterisation of that salt dome at least until 2010 and to investigate
a number of unresolved issues in final disposal instead. It is clear
that a final disposal site in every case will be necessary, but it requires
about 30 years of investigation and should reside in the geologically most
favourable site and host rock.
Plutonium
disposal
Approximately
40 tons of civil plutonium were separated by reprocessing the german spent
fuel and most of it is stored at La Hague and Sellafield. It is clear that
this Plutonium has to be treated later for final disposal, because there
is no economic incentive to reuse this as a reactor fuel. A new method
of treatment has been proposed by ?ko-Institut and is currently favoured
by the German government, the so-called storage-rod method. The plutonium
is fabricated into fuel rods that will not be used in reactors, but mixed
in interim and final storage together with regular spent fuel. The method
allows a quicker, cheaper, safer and less waste-producing treatment of
the German plutonium than with other methods.
General
trends in waste management in Germany
- Putting
an end to reprocessing;
-
Reducing the unnecessary transport of waste;
-
Developing of solutions for less dangerous ways for handling the remaining
legacy of the slowly dying nuclear industry.
United
States of America
final
disposal of high-level radioactive waste
The
proposed final disposal site for high-level radioactive waste in the US
is situated in Yucca Mountain, southern Nevada, about 160 km northwest
of Las Vegas. It is adjacent to the southwest corner of the Nevada Test
Site. The proposed Yucca Mountain repository site is about 20 km
north of U.S. Highway 95, the major north-south highway for western Nevada.
The
latest geological researches of the site at Yucca Mountain reveal that
the site is situated in a geologically unstable formation. The earth’s
crust at Yucca is less stable than scientists previously had believed and
is stretching some ten times faster than expected. In addition the
groundwater there moves faster than previously realized, thus ensuring
faster migration of radioactive materials.
If
a repository were to be built at Yucca Mountain in Nevada, the earliest
date that waste could be accepted is the year 2010. If an interim
storage facility is built at the Nevada test site, as is proposed in current
legislation, thousands of truck and train shipments would move dangerous
radioactive waste across the country.
Transportation
routes would go through as many as 43 states. There is considerable
pressure in Nevada to prohibit transportation of irradiated fuel through
the Las Vegas Valley, with a current population of about 1.3 million people,
and is the fastest growing population center in the U.S. Las Vegas
is also the center of Nevada’s tourism industry, with more than 40 million
visitors each year. This could force transportation into rural areas
of Nevada where the highways generally run through the center of small
cities and towns, very close to schools, hospitals, businesses, and homes.
The rural highways also cross steep mountain passes that are particularly
dangerous during winter snowstorms.
Various
estimates are available for the costs of cleaning up accidents when irradiated
fuel escapes damaged transport casks. In rural areas the costs are
on the order of tens of millions of dollars. In Las Vegas it would
be in the tens of billions of dollars.
Conclusion
Nuclear
power was a technology borne out of the cold war. Machines designed
to build bombs and propel submarines were converted to produce electricity.
As we leave the 20th century and the second millennium, nuclear power is
slowly but surely dying out. The inability of nuclear power to survive
the market test has become, along with its environmental and social impacts,
another reason for its global rejection. However, there are regions in
the world where nuclear power plants are still being built, regions where
democratic structures are weaker and ideology still takes precedence over
the rights of citizens and the market. In these regions, like Central
an Eastern Europe and the Newly Independent States, the Western industry
is desperate to sell its technologies, knowing that these orders may offer
a lifeline in an otherwise bleak future. The public and the politicians
in these regions would be well advised to take note of the nuclear industry’s
failures in their home markets, reject this third rate technology and concentrate
their efforts and investments on energy efficiency and renewable energy
sources.
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