The industrial facility for Grouping, Storage and Disposal
Transcription
The industrial facility for Grouping, Storage and Disposal
The industrial facility for Grouping, Storage and Disposal cires_juillet2013.indd 1 28/08/2013 16:10:37 Contents Andra in the Aube département: an exemplary industrial operator The industrial facility for grouping, storage and disposal (called Cires in French) 04/05 Disposal of very-low-level waste (VLLW) 06/07 The journey taken by VLL waste 08/09 Grouping of non-nuclear-power waste 10 Storage of non-nuclear-power waste 11 The journey taken by non-nuclear-power waste 12/13 Protecting present and future generations 14/15 The Cires Facility Storm water basin and settling basin Earth stockpile area Storage building Processing building Administrative building Logistics building Collection building Disposal area First tranche of the final cover cires_juillet2013.indd 2 Mobile shelter 28/08/2013 16:10:44 Cires facility The industrial facility for grouping, storage and disposal (called Cires in French), in the Aube département, is run by Andra. The facility is licensed to dispose of very-low-level waste, to collect non-nuclear-power radioactive waste and to provide storage for some of the waste for which a final management solution has not yet been found. The Cires facility is located a few kilometres from the Aube disposal facility (CSA), another of Andra's waste disposal facilities, currently dealing with low- and intermediate-level, short-lived waste. For more than 20 years, Andra has been open about developing its industrial activity in the Aube in an exemplary fashion, in accordance with strict rules and procedures, with the constant aim of protecting man and the environment. To find out all about the centres and understand how radioactive waste is managed, you can visit Andra's facilities in the Aube free of charge and go right into the heart of the centres as they work. Patrice Torres Director of Andra waste disposal facilities in the Aube ing So what is Andra? The French national agency for radioactive waste management is a publicly-owned industrial and commercial body. It is under the supervision of the ministries responsible for energy, the environment and research, and its role is to find, implement and guarantee safe management solutions for all French radioactive waste, in order to protect present and future generations from the hazard constituted by this waste. 03 cires_juillet2013.indd 3 28/08/2013 16:10:45 The industrial facility for Grouping, Storage and Disposal (Cires) Located in the Aube département in the towns of Morvilliers and La Chaise, the Cires facility has three activities: storage, collection and disposal WHAT DOES CIRES DO? Andra has been taking and disposing of very low level waste (VLLW) in its Cires facility since2003. Since autumn 2012, the Cires facility has been performing two new functions: collection and temporary storage of non-nuclear-power waste. 1 The collection building is like a routing centre. The waste packages are sorted and grouped together by category before being sent on to the processing, storage or disposal facilities. The storage building takes in temporarily certain packages for which disposal solutions are currently being studied. KEY FIGURES •4 6 hectares in area for the Cires facility •2 8.5 hectares dedicated to the disposal area •5 50 m2 for the collection building •2 ,000 m2 for the storage building 2 04 cires_juillet2013.indd 4 28/08/2013 16:10:48 Cires Facility WHAT IS RADIOACTIVE WASTE? Radioactive waste is a substance for which no further use is planned. The radioactive waste produced in France comes from numerous economic sectors that use the properties of radioactivity. There are specific procedures for dealing with it. Origin by economic sector of existing radioactive waste in France: Nuclear power 59% Research 26% Defence 11% Non nuclear power industry 3% Healthcare 1% (Source: National inventory of radioactive materials and waste 2012: Synthesis report ) Did you know? 3 Radioactivity is a phenomenon that has occurred naturally in the environment since the Earth was first created. It is present in water, air, rock and even the human body. It decreases naturally over time, more or less quickly depending on the type of radionuclides. The time taken for a quantity of a radionuclide to be divided by two is called its half life. 5 waste categories There are many criteria for differentiating between various types of radioactive waste: source, physical and chemical properties, level and type of radioactivity, half life, and so on. For their management, in France they are classified according to numerous criteria, in particular: - T heir radioactivity level expressed in becquerels per gramme. The level of radioactivity or "activity" may be very low, low, intermediate or high. 1 Laboratory waste 2 Radium lightning conductors 3 Examples of VLLW - T heir lifetime depends on the half life of each radionuclide they contain. Waste whose radioactivity mainly comes from short-lived radionuclides (half life up to and including 31 years) is called “short-lived” waste, whereas the opposite applies to waste containing a significant quantity of long-lived radionuclides (half life greater than 31 years). There are 5 categories of radioactive waste: • Very-low-level waste (VLLW) • Low- and intermediate-level, short-lived waste (LILW-SL) • Low-level, long-lived waste (LLW-LL) • Intermediate-level, long-lived waste (ILW-LL) • High-level waste (HLW) Some waste, mainly from hospitals, has a half live of less than 100 days. Because of its very short half life, this waste is put into temporary storage on site, for a few days or a few months, which is long enough for its radioactivity to disappear naturally. 05 cires_juillet2013.indd 5 28/08/2013 16:10:51 Disposal of very-low-level waste (VLLW) Radioactive-waste management has developed over time. Over 40 years ago, France opted for disposal in industrial facilities as the solution for managing waste in a safe, durable way. The disposal for very-low-level waste started in the Aube in 2003. A SPECIFIC SOLUTION FOR VLL WASTE VLL waste is disposed of in a dedicated facility, the first disposal facility in the world designed for this type of radioactive waste. Approximately 30,000 m3 of radioactive waste are processed every year. Waste is disposed of above ground in structures 176 metres long and 25 metres wide dug down to a depth of a few metres in the clay layer. Once filled, these structures are closed by caps consisting of a layer of sand several tens of centimetres thick, a geomembrane to ensure that the disposal structure is waterproof, and a protective UVresistant geotextile. A layer of clay is then placed over the structures to guarantee long-term containment. WHERE DOES VLL WASTE COME FROM? VLL waste consists mainly of very slightly contaminated earth, rubble, scrap metal, etc., from the decommissioning or operation of nuclear facilities or from conventional industries using naturally radioactive materials. VLL waste can also come from clean-up and remediation of legacy sites polluted by radioactivity, and for which Andra has decontamination responsibility as part of its public service role. Its level of radioactivity is usually less than 100 becquerels per gramme, which is less than natural radioactivity. According to the National inventory of radioactive materials and waste 2012, Synthesis report : VLL waste identified since it was first produced, constituted in December 2010, 27% of the total volume of radioactive waste produced in France, i.e. 360,000 m3 and less than 0.01% of the total radioactivity of French radioactive waste. By the end of 2012, 227,448 m3 of VLL waste had been disposed of in the Cires facility. KEY FIGURES 06 cires_juillet2013.indd 6 •6 50,000 m3 of total disposal capacity according to the licence •2 27,448 m3 of waste in the disposal facility at the end of 2012, i.e. 35% of total capacity •1 2 cells filled as at end of 2012 2 28/08/2013 16:10:53 Cires Facility WHY IS DISPOSAL NECESSARY? Radioactivity is a phenomenon which decreases naturally with time. In order to isolate radioactive waste for as long as it constitutes a hazard for man and the environment, France, like many other countries, opted, over 40 years ago, for disposal in facilities appropriate for each type of waste. Radioactive waste is classified into 5 categories according to its level of radioactivity and half life. The way each type of waste is managed depends on its category. The principle underlying disposal consists in isolating the waste long enough for the radioactivity no longer to constitute a hazard for the people with whom it could be in contact, due to its natural decay. In France today, three disposal solutions are planned for dealing with all the radioactive waste produced: a Above-ground or "surface" disposal b Near-surface or "shallow" land disposal (currently being studied) c Deep geological disposal (currently being studied) 1 The French and Spanish exception a b Because of the very low level of activity of this type of waste, most countries consider it as conventional waste. France, followed by Spain, has decided to deal with it in dedicated facilities. c 3 1 Three types of disposal are planned in France 2 helter structure protecting the disposal cell from rain S during operation 3 Disposal cell being filled 07 cires_juillet2013.indd 7 28/08/2013 16:10:56 The journey taken by VLL waste The waste circuit, from production to disposal, comprises a number of steps, all of which are subject to strict, rigorous checks. Package preparation Before being sent to the Cires facility, the waste is prepared by the producers and most of it is packaged in metal containers or in plastic-lined big bags. ➡ ➡ ➡ Package being delivered to the facility Virtually all the VLL waste packages are transported from the producers to the disposal facility by road, in compliance with strict international regulations (producers are responsible for transport). On average every year: 10 trucks per working day. 08 cires_juillet2013.indd 8 28/08/2013 16:11:00 ➡ ➡➡ ➡➡ ➡ Most VLL waste comes from the decommissioning or operation of nuclear facilities, conventional industry using radioactivity, clean-up operations and remediation of legacy polluted sites. ➡ Production ➡ ➡ ➡ ➡ ➡ ➡ ➡ ➡ ➡ ➡ Cires facility 1 2 3 1 Compacted waste 2 Radiological inspection of a container on arrival at the disposal facility Processing and repackaging of certain packages before disposal 3 Containers stored in the logistics building • Some plastic waste or scrap metal is compacted in order to reduce its volume. • Sludge and liquid waste are solidified. Arriving at the Cires facility Checks are carried out to verify the level of radioactivity of the transport containers and the radiological characteristics of the waste or the waste packages. ➡ ➡➡ ➡ ➡➡➡ ➡ ➡ ➡ ➡ ➡ ➡ ➡ ➡ ➡ ➡➡ ➡ ➡ ➡ ➡➡ ➡➡➡➡➡➡ Disposal 85% of the waste received has already been processed and packaged and can be put straight into the disposal system. Every year, approximately 30,000 m3 of waste is put into disposal in the structures dug out of the clay. 09 cires_juillet2013.indd 9 28/08/2013 16:11:14 Grouping of non-nuclear-power waste Since the autumn of 2012, Andra has had a grouping building for non-nuclear-power radioactive waste. Until then, most waste was grouped in a building on the CEA site in Saclay near Paris. WHAT ARE THE FUNCTIONS OF THE GROUPING BUILDING? It is a transit building, where non-nuclear-power radioactive waste from various sites in France is grouped before being oriented to specialised facilities for: • processing; • conditioning; • disposal: for very low level waste (VLLW) in the Cires facility and for low- and intermediate-level short-lived waste (LILW-SL) in the CSA; or • storage for long-lived waste in the Cires facility since 2012 until a final management system can be implemented. WHAT TYPES OF WASTE ARE COVERED? The grouping building takes in various types of nonnuclear-power waste: • Gloves, plastic items, vials, overalls, etc., from hospitals, research, pharmaceutical laboratories or other sectors of industry; • Lightning conductors, smoke detectors, and other radioactive objects owned by private individuals. KEY FIGURES • 4,000 to 5,000 packages in transit per year •2 ,600 m3 of waste collected every year by Andra The grouping building has 5 main functions: • r eception of non-nuclear-power waste; 1 • interim storage of waste packages; • c onditioning for some waste packages; • shipping waste to elimination installations (incineration) or processing facilities before it is put into storage or disposal depending on its half life; • management of empty collection packages. 10 cires_juillet2013.indd 10 28/08/2013 16:11:17 Cires facility Storage of non-nuclear-power waste Long-lived non-nuclear-power radioactive waste does not yet have a dedicated repository in France. It has been put into storage until facilities adapted to its specific characteristics have been opened. Since 2012, the Cires facility has had a building for storage of this type of waste. WHAT ARE THE FUNCTIONS OF THE STORAGE BUILDING? This building's main function is to take in temporarily non-nuclear-power radioactive waste which does not currently have a disposal solution. Until 2012, this waste was kept in storage by Socatri in Bollène in the south of France, or in CEA facilities. There is not enough room in some of these premises, and some are due for demolition. The waste involved is long-lived non-nuclear-power waste which does not currently have a disposal solution: • r adioactive lightning conductors; • r adioactive objects owned by private individuals: radium fountains, luminous objects, etc.; • r adioactive medical material that became collectors' items between the wars: radium needles, tubes and compresses; • s ome long-lived waste from historic sites polluted by radioactivity that Andra is due to clean up: earth, rubble, etc. KEY FIGURES •5 00 to 1,000 m3 of waste packages per year delivered during the first two years, corresponding to the period during which the waste is transferred from the existing storage facilities •2 50 m3 of waste packages per year on average delivered during the following years 1 Collection of non-nuclear-power waste before sorting, processing and disposal or storage. WHAT TYPES OF WASTE ARE COVERED? 2 2 Decontaminating a polluted site in Gif-sur-Yvette, near Paris. 11 cires_juillet2013.indd 11 28/08/2013 16:11:20 The journey taken by non-nuclear-power waste CENTRE DE REGROUPEMENT The types of waste covered Radioactive waste from hospitals, research laboratories, pharmaceutical laboratories or other non-nuclear-power industries (100 m3 per year). Sorting Grouping As soon as radioactive waste is produced, it is sorted by its producers according to its radioactive half life and type. Andra collects radioactive waste directly from the producers and sends it to its grouping building, where it is sorted by family before being sent to the facilities corresponding to its specific characteristics. Radioactive lightning conductors (600 per year on average). Radioactive objects owned by private individuals (about a hundred per year). Waste generated from the clean-up of polluted sites (2,500 m3 per year). Historic radioactive objects containing radium used in healthcare (a few per year) 12 cires_juillet2013.indd 12 28/08/2013 16:11:26 Cires facility Every year Andra collects almost 2,600 m3 of non-nuclear-power radioactive waste Because there are a great many types of non-nuclear-power waste, and because it is spread all over France, it requires specific procedures, with major milestones, from the time it is collected until it is put into a repository or into storage. RADIOACTIVE RADIOACTIVE RADIOACTIVE ENTREPOSAGE RADIOACTIVE Processing Storage Disposal Radioactive waste is solidified and/ or reduced in volume before being put into disposal packages. Some waste has to be put into interim storage as there is no operational disposal facility for it. This is applicable to low-level long-lived waste (LLW-LL) Depending on their radioactivity level, waste packages are oriented to the Cires or CSA facility for disposal. 13 cires_juillet2013.indd 13 28/08/2013 16:11:43 Protecting present and future generations To check that the Cires facility's impact remains as low as possible, the facility and its environment are very closely monitored. MONITORING THE ENVIRONMENT According to regulations, the annual dose of radioactivity from industrial activities must be as low as possible and cannot exceed 1 milliSievert (mSv) for the public. To ensure that the impact of its activities remains as low as possible, the Cires facility carries out over 1,500 radiological and physical/chemical analyses every year both inside the facility and in the environment. The purpose is mainly to check: SURVEILLANCE OF THE DISPOSAL AREA AFTER CLOSURE The disposal facility will continue being monitored for 30 years after being closed, i.e. a period equivalent to that applied for final-industrial-waste disposal facilities. • water in the streams; • s ediments; • discharge into the atmosphere. The various surveillance points are defined by the bylaw regulating the disposal facility's activities. Every year, Andra issues a report giving its results in the fields of safety, radiation protection and environmental surveillance. The reports can be consulted on the Andra website and they are available on request. 2 In addition, every quarter since 2009, Andra as an active member of the "National Network for the Measurement of Environmental Radioactivity" sends in about 100 measurements, which are then published on the national website www.mesure-radioactivite.fr. 14 cires_juillet2013.indd 14 28/08/2013 16:11:47 Cires facility Did you know? 1 mSv is the maximum allowable annual dose for the public. This corresponds to: 1 • 3 chest X-rays • 9 months spent in a granite region • 1 year at an altitude of 1,500 metres • 17 months in the Paris area • 7 Paris-San Francisco round-trips by air An installation classified on environmental protection grounds The industrial facility for Grouping, Storage and Disposal (Centre industriel de regroupement, d’entreposage et de stockage Cires) is an Installation Classified for Environmental Protection (Installation Classée pour la Protection de l’Environnement ICPE). The Regional Directorate for the Environment, Development and Housing (Direction Régionale de l’Environnement, de l’Aménagement et du Logement - DREAL) ensures compliance with the operating and surveillance rules set by by-laws. Every year, Andra submits an annual report to the members of the Local Information and Surveillance Committee (Commission Locale d’Information et de Surveillance CLIS). 1 Installing new filter for checking air quality 2 Apparatus capable of trapping tritium or carbon 14 present in the air 3 Water samples collected for analysis 3 15 cires_juillet2013.indd 15 28/08/2013 16:11:52 Information IS AVAILABLE ON AGENCE AGENCE NATIONALE NATIONALE POUR POUR LA LA GESTION GESTION DES DES DÉCHETS DÉCHETS RADIOACTIFS RADIOACTIFS Centres Andra's industriels industrial facilities de l’Andra in dans the Aube l’Aube BP BP 77 •10200 •10200 Soulaines-Dhuys Soulaines-Dhuys -- France France www.andra.fr www.andra.fr cires_juillet2013.indd 16 ©Andra • 380E-VA • DCOM-13-0268 • July 2013 • 500 copies• Graphic design and publishing: Ping-Pong Graphique • Photo and illustration credits: A. de Henning - F. Dano - V. Duterme - P. Demail - G. Engel - E. Le Marchand - P. Maurein - L. Mignaux (MEDDTL) - Rouge Vif - Samarkand - Okénite• Green "Imprim’Vert " certified printing method, vegetable based ink on partially recycled paper, FSC certified • Free - Not for sale. Guided tours of Andra's industrial facilities in the Aube are organised, Mondays to Fridays, excluding public holidays. Prior booking is required. 28/08/2013 16:11:53
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