Odpady jądrowe – globalny raport Focus Europe

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WNWR 2019  — 7. COUNTRY STUDIES

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clay. RAWRA virtually ignored the concerns of the selected municipalities and their inhabitants, thus creating ongoing conflicts between local governments and central authorities. The Platform Against Deep Repository, whose members include thirty-two towns and villages and fourteen associations, opposes the plans.298 Consequently, geological planning is years behind schedule. New sites are being considered, ones with less likely public resistance but possibly inferior geological conditions. As of 2019, RAWRA is considering nine potential sites.299 The suitability of the chosen site is to be confirmed by 2025, which seems optimistic. In 2030, construction of an underground laboratory should begin, and then after 2050 work on the repository should commence. The goal is to start operation by 2065. COSTS AND FINANCING The first Atomic Act stipulated the establishment of a state “nuclear account” administered by the Ministry of Finance. The funds it contains are earmarked for nuclear waste management, including the development, operation, and closure of a deep geological repository in the future. The main source of income comes from fees paid by nuclear waste producers. Thus, the polluter-pays-principle is applied. By 2018, the account held CZK26.9 billion (US$1.24 billion).300 The Act sets a fee of CZK55 (around US$2.53) for every MWh of electricity generated at a nuclear power plant and CZK30 (around US$1.38) for every MWh of thermal energy produced by a research reactor. Other producers of nuclear waste must pay a one-time fee covering costs. 301 The Czech government calculated the costs of storing low- and intermediate-level waste at CZK4.57 billion (US$210 million) and the costs for storing spent nuclear fuel and high-level waste at CZK111.4 billion (US$5.13 billion); storage is paid by ČEZ from operational expenditure. According to an analysis from the Czech Technical University, these fees will not be sufficient to cover actual future costs. 302 Another financial mechanism addresses the decommissioning of nuclear facilities in the future. Those licensed to operate nuclear facilities must build up financial reserves for decommissioning and draft a schedule, both of which must be approved at least every five years by the State Office for Nuclear Safety. RAWRA must confirm that operators possess these reserves in a special segregated account. Each year, ČEZ sets aside CZK209 million (US$9.6 million) for decommissioning the Dukovany plant. As of 31 December 2016, CZK6 billion (US$276 million) had been reserved; by the time the plant is shut down, this figure should be CZK22.4 billion (US$1 billion). The total reserve fund for decommissioning the Temelín plant should amount to CZK18.4 billion (US$847 million). As of December 31, 2016, ČEZ had reserved CZK2.8 billion (US$129 million) and annually sets aside CZK198.5 million (US$9.1 million). 303

298 List of members of Platform Against Deep Repository: http://www.platformaprotiulozisti.cz/cs/clenove-platformy/ 299 Czech Radioactive Waste Repository Authority (RAWRA) Website, “DGR in Czech Republic”, viewed 29 May 2019,

https://www.surao.cz/en/public/deep-geological-repository/dgr-in-czech-republic/ 300 RAWRA 2018, Annual Report on the Activities of Radioactive Waste Repository Authority in 2017 301 Government of the Czech Republic 2017, Decree No. 35/2017 Coll. 302 Knápek, J.,et al. 2017, “Updated Economic Model and Fee Calculation for the Nuclear Account for LLW/ILW

and HLW/SNF”, Technical University study 303 Czech State Office for Nuclear Safety 2018, National Report of The Czech Republic under Article 14.1 of the Council

Directive 2011/70/EURATOM of 19 July 2011 establishing a Community framework for the responsible and safe management of spent fuel and radioactive waste, viewed 29 May 2019, https://www.sujb.cz/fileadmin/sujb/docs/zpravy/narodni_zpravy/EuroNZ_VP_RAO_2_1A.pdf


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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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