1 / 14

What Is To Be Done With Nuclear Waste?

What Is To Be Done With Nuclear Waste?. The problem of importing radioactive waste to the Russian Federation IDL-102 Yulia Kharchenko. Main Procedures. Storage - the placement of waste in a facility with an intent that waste will retrieved at a later time.

zoltin
Download Presentation

What Is To Be Done With Nuclear Waste?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. What Is To Be Done With Nuclear Waste? The problem of importing radioactive waste to the Russian Federation IDL-102 Yulia Kharchenko

  2. Main Procedures • Storage - the placement of waste in a facility with an intent that waste will retrieved at a later time. • Disposal - the emplacement of waste in an approved, specified facility without the intention of retrieval. • Processing- reducing the waste volume for storage or disposal; converting waste to a more «stable» form.

  3. Reasons to recover unused uranium and plutonium in the spent fuel elements; to reduce the volume of material to be disposed of as high-level waste. Uranium + Plutonium mixed oxide fuel (MOX fuel) compact insoluble radioactive solids storage and disposal Reprocessing Spent Nuclear Fuel

  4. Reprocessing In Different Countries • United Kingdom Sellafield - 1500 t/yr; THORP comissioned in 1994, MOX fuel plant comissioned in 2001. • United States No civil reprocessing plants now operating; three have been closed. • France Marcoule - 400 t/yr; La Hague - two plants 800 t/yr each. • India Tarapur - 100 t/yr; also in Kalpakkam and Trombay. • Japan One 100 t/yr plant operating; most spent fuel reprocessed in Europe; a plant in Rokkasho is being built. • Russia Ozersk (Chelyabinsk) - 400 t/yr; a larger plant is being built in Krasnoyarsk.

  5. Supporters Renewal of nuclear industry with the money received; Eliminating the consequences of nuclear catastrophes; Preventing future catastrophes; Stimulating Russian economy. Opponents Technical difficulties for reprocessing foreign spent fuel; Old age and bad condition of Russian reprocessing facilities; Possibility for corruptionamong politicians and nuclear authorities; Danger of terrorist acts. Importing Nuclear Waste to Russia

  6. Minatom - the Russian Ministry on Nuclear Energy • One of the primary officially stated functions - “to ensure nuclear and radiation safety of plants and environmental protection”; • “The International Atomic Energy Agency recommendations and forecasts are taken into consideration”; • “The present-day Russian procedures and techniques for spent nuclear fuel management are quite competitive with the world’s best similar techniques and procedures”; • “Economic examination and public consideration are applied widely”; • “Half a century experience in spent nuclear fuel management confirms high level of safety”. www.minatom.ru

  7. Nuclear Waste reprocessing and Storage Program 14 European and Asian countries 21 tons of SNF within 10 years Russian Federation 50years later + US $20 Billion

  8. Signing the Billallowing the import of foreing spentnuclear fuel to Russia • Autumn 2000 - call for a national referendum to block the proposal to import foreign SNF to the country; 2.5 million signatures submitted; • The Central Election Comission turns down the petition; 600 000 signatures claimed to be invalid; • December 20th, 2000 - Russian Duma approves first reading of the amendment to Law on Environmental Protection; • December 21st, 2000 - Greenpeace anf Ecodefense condemn Russian deputies for voting in favor of a project opposed by 93.5% of population; • July 11th, 2001 - President’s signing the bill allowing import of SNF to the Russian Federation

  9. Public Reaction • Minatom refuses to accept the cornerstone of non-proliferation policy: commercial spent nuclear fuel must never be reprocessed; • Yabloko party: “Russia has opted for the same path as third world countries”; • President Putin’s “political mistake”; • Negative consequences for Russia’s security and long-term economic development prospects; • Minatom contradicts to one of its basic principles: ensuring nuclear and environmental safety; • Russia is being turned into “world’s nuclear dump site”.

  10. Mayak Nuclear Reprocessing Plant • Built more than half a century ago; • The most radioactively contaminated place on Earth; • Equipment restructuring and cleaning up the area is needed; • Previous catastrophes: 1957 - explosion of a storage tank; 1967 - Lake Karachay drying up, transport of radioactive sediments with the wind; • Present storage facilities filled to capacity.

  11. Minatom does not return wastes Legislation Reprocessing at Mayak Violations Violation Since 1995 wastes from reprocessing SNF are to be returned to the country - supplier Wastes from reprocessing are discharged into water objects (River Techa, lake Karachay) Water Code and Law on Environment Protection forbid discharging radioactive waste to water objects

  12. April 26th, 200216 years after Chernobyl “Radioactive waste - No, thank you” “Motherland is against import of nuclear waste” “Danger! Do not import”

  13. Conclusions • Nuclear authorities prevent the public from inspecting their activities; • SNF is not being returned. The problem of utilization of radioactive waste is shifted to next generations; • The safety of citizens and the environment is sacrificed, economic profit becomes a proirity; • Russian government risks to turn Russia into a nuclear waste site.

  14. THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION

More Related