Long surface storage concepts
Long-term surface and subsurface storage
Research into very long-term storage is a matter for the engineering sciences. To extend the life of existing industrial facilities, two solutions have been put forward: facilities built on the surface or dug into a hillside, and facilities at a depth of a few dozen metres.
Surface storage facilities can use the principles of existing installations. For subsurface storage facilities a site has to be defined.
Subsurface storage is better in the event of a plane crash or earthquake. Putting the storage facility into a hillside offers horizontal access, making the handling of the waste easier. Lorries can also access the storage site easily. The protection afforded by a rock formation would partly make up for the extra excavation costs. By choosing a hard rock such as granite or limestone, it would be possible to avoid putting in roof supports for the drifts.
For the periods envisaged, dry storage would be used. The storage facilities would take high-level waste packages (vitrified waste or fuel assemblies) and packages of low- and intermediate-level long-lived waste (ILW-LL). Only high-level waste packages release very large amounts of heat (around 700 watts for a 35-year old package).
Separate solutions need to be considered for hot waste packages and intermediate-level waste packages, some of which can produce gases through radiolysis, dissociation of molecules by nuclear radiation (NB : radiolysis can generate release of hydrogen from organic materials). Removing the heat produced by hot waste packages is one of the issues to be resolved. Cooling is performed by means of natural convection due to the circulation of air. The effectiveness and reliability of this cooling mechanism must be guaranteed.
Further developments are needed as regards the durability of the materials, particularly concrete, the behaviour of the rocks at higher temperatures, ventilation and heat removal. On a different level, the maintenance and monitoring workload for future generations must be kept to a minimum to limit the consequences of losing control of the facilities. During the storage period the containment of the radioactive atoms must be guaranteed, and at the end of this period the packages must be removed. The longer the storage period, the more difficult it becomes to fulfil these imperatives. The designs produced by CEA’s engineers and researchers take these requirements into account.
The long-term storage of high-level waste packages is based on three principles: that the packages are placed in metal containers, that the containers are cooled by natural convection, and that there is no humidity. The circulation of hot air, which removes any water vapour present, slows down the corrosion of the containers and extends their integrity.
In the view of France’s National Assessment Board, there is no justification for the extended storage of intermediate-level packages because they can be safely disposed of as soon as a deep geological repository is available. Even if the reliability of very long-term storage facilities were demonstrated, studies confirm that this kind of storage would continue to be an interim solution and that waste packages could not remain there indefinitely. The facilities have a limited life and require monitoring and maintenance. Even if this were minimal it would place a burden on future generations.
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