Odpady jądrowe – globalny raport Focus Europe

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WNWR 2019  — 3. QUANTITIES OF WASTE

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The IAEA estimates that reprocessing would convert this 30 to 50 tons of SNF into 15 m³ of vitrified HLW. 35 This conservative estimate of course does not include the vast amounts of reprocessed uranium, plutonium, intermediate-level waste, and spent mixed oxide fuel (MOX) that require extensive additional intermediate storage periods. 36 In Europe, reprocessing is still part of the waste management concept in some countries (France, the Netherlands, Russia), while most countries have suspended or stopped it for mainly economic reasons (Belgium, Bulgaria, Germany, Hungary, Sweden, Switzerland, and most recently the UK). The latest European country to show interest in reprocessing is Ukraine, which signed a contract for a feasibility study with France’s Orano (formerly Areva). The initiative is part of Ukraine’s effort to diversify its nuclear fuel chain. An additional spent fuel interim storage facility is being constructed, and the country is cooperating with Westinghouse on fuel supply. 37 DECOMMISSIONING WASTE Once a nuclear power plant is closed, the spent fuel has to be removed, cooling systems and moderators drained. The process of defueling, deconstruction, and dismantling of a nuclear power plant is called decommissioning. 38 The IAEA estimates the mass (rather than volume) of the decommissioning waste: a light-water reactor with 1 GW can be expected to produce 5,000 to 6,000 tons of LILW and 1,000 tons of long-lived LILW and HLW. 39 This estimate has to be taken with caution as only one reactor as big as 1 GW has been decommissioned worldwide yet but this reactor (Trojan in the US) was only operational for 17 years. As of 2018, only 19 (smaller) nuclear power plants or about 6 GW have been decommissioned worldwide (see Table 1).40 Similar to operational waste, the quantity of decommissioning waste depends on various factors, such as the clearance level of waste, the decommissioning strategy (immediate dismantling or long-term enclosure), the operating time, and the specific reactor technology. The waste produced in the initial stages of decommissioning has the same characteristics as operational waste and can be characterized using the same approach, with one exception: it is generated in much larger quantities in a shorter period of time.41

35 IAEA 2019 36 Over 100 years compared to uranium fuels or much greater volume in disposal sites (about a factor of 3). For a detailed

37 38 39 40 41

discussion of comparative volumes see Mycle Schneider and Yves Marignac, “Spent Nuclear Fuel Reprocessing in France”, IPFM, April 2008. International Panel on Fissile Materials 2018, “Ukraine to explore reprocessing its spent fuel in France”, 3 May, viewed 12 June 2019, http://fissilematerials.org/blog/2018/05/ukraine_to_explore_reproc.html Schneider et al. 2018, World Nuclear Industry Status Report 2018. IAEA, Estimation of Global Inventories of Radioactive Waste and Other Radioactive Materials, pp.16. Schneider et al. 2018, World Nuclear Industry Status Report 2018. IAEA, 2007


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Articles inside

Quantities of waste

2hr
pages 97-148

Summary

1min
page 94

Costs and financing

2min
page 93

Waste management policies and facilities

2min
page 92

Financing schemes for interim storage

2min
page 84

Integrated financing schemes

2min
page 87

6.4 Summary

5min
pages 88-89

Financing schemes for disposal

6min
pages 85-86

Quantities of waste

2min
page 91

Decommissioning costs

6min
pages 80-81

Accumulation of the funds

3min
page 78

Overview and nature of the funds

2min
page 77

5.5 Summary

2min
page 75

Extended storage

4min
pages 73-74

Deep borehole disposal

3min
page 70

LILW-repositories

3min
page 67

Host rocks

2min
page 66

5.1 Historical background

16min
pages 58-62

5.2 The context of nuclear waste management

5min
pages 63-64

4.7 Summary

2min
page 57

4.5 Risks from the reprocessing of spent nuclear fuel

5min
pages 53-54

Risks to nuclear workers

3min
page 51

Uranium mine tailings

3min
page 49

Health risks from exposures to uranium

3min
page 47

4.1 Radiation risks of nuclear waste

2min
page 45

Uranium mining

3min
page 48

4.2 Risks from uranium mining, mine tailings, enrichment, and fuel fabrication

2min
page 46

3.4 Summary

4min
pages 43-44

Decommissioning waste

2min
page 34

Uranium mining, milling, processing and fuel fabrication

1min
page 22

Executive summary

28min
pages 11-20

Operational waste

2min
page 32

2.4 Summary

2min
page 30

2.3.1 The IAEA classification

5min
pages 25-26

2.1 Types of waste: the nuclear fuel chain

2min
page 21

Foreword

5min
pages 3-4

Key Insights

2min
pages 9-10
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