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France grapples with the eternal unsolved problem of nuclear wastes

A pyramid to warn of a French nuclear waste site?, By Muriel Boselli, PARIS | Tue Nov 8, 2011  (Reuters) – How can mankind signal to future generations thousands of years from now that hazardous radioactive waste is buried deep underground in eastern France — by building a giant pyramid, a museum or a site for art projects or by employing geology?

 Patrick Charton, who is in charge of a memory project at France’s radioactive waste agency Andra, has been grappling with this philosophical question for the past 16 years.

France, the world’s most nuclear-dependent country dotted with 58 reactors, has so far stored the radioactive waste produced in the past three decades in above-ground facilities at a nuclear fuel reprocessing plant in La Hague on the coast of Normandy.

But this site is vulnerable to a potential terror attack or a plane crash, so the agency is studying the possibility of permanently storing its most highly radioactive waste 500 meters below ground near Bure in eastern France.

The Andra already operates an underground laboratory in Bure, and if the storage project goes ahead, operations would start in 2025 and end around 2175.

The highly radioactive waste, enough to fill a football pitch, takes at least 100,000 years to cease being hazardous.

But how does one keep the memory of the burial site alive years after it is permanently shut?….

Proposals for the site include building a museum on radioactive waste, a giant pyramid, or an artist house or betting on long-term digital filing.

Charton’s favorite option is what he calls landscape geology to tip off archaeologists, generations from now, that there is something buried below their feet.

Once the tunnels are filled with canned radioactive waste, they will then be packed with earth, but it will have a different density than in the surrounding area, which may lead to a different type of vegetation growing on the surface.

“This could attract the curiosity of a geologist or of a landscape archeologist of the future,” he said, adding that one idea was to engrave warning information about the site on copper where gallery holes have been filled.

This leads to another area of research that the Andra is working on: languages and symbols to ensure that future generations can still understand a warning message.

“What can happen once the French language will have disappeared? … And can the meaning of symbols remain the same over big lapses of time?” asks Charton, who is also the deputy head of the Andra.

All these questions remain open to discussion as Andra researchers still have plenty of time to make a decision, given that the Bure site, if it goes ahead, will not be permanently shut for at least another 250 years…..

http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/11/08/us-france-radiactive-memory-idUSTRE7A735G20111108

November 13, 2011 - Posted by | France, wastes

2 Comments »

  1. The fact that they have to think ahead 100,000 years regarding nuclear waste is the biggest indicator that nuclear energy is not meant to be.

    There’s a lot of ‘abnormal thinking’ in the rationalization of its continued use.

    Just admit that nuclear energy was a mistake and begin investing in truly clean renewables.

    Stop wasting any more $$$ on the failed fallacy –> nuclear energy.

    Guest's avatar Comment by Guest | November 13, 2011 | Reply

  2. […] France grapples with the eternal unsolved problem of nuclear wastes […]

    Unknown's avatar Pingback by lisää marraskuun otsikoita « Olkiluotoblockade 2011 | November 16, 2011 | Reply


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