Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. GPS News .




CIVIL NUCLEAR
France debates nuke waste facility
by Staff Writers
Bure, France (UPI) Feb 8, 2013


disclaimer: image is for illustration purposes only

A public debate on whether to build a mammoth underground nuclear waste facility in northeastern France began this week amid praise and skepticism.

France's National Commission for Public Debate launched the proceedings Wednesday as French Minister of Ecology, Sustainable Development and Energy Delphine Batho visited the proposed site at the Meuse/Haute Marne Underground Research Laboratory in Bure, France.

Opponents contend the debate is rigged in favor of the building the $20 billion-$45 billion facility and, in any event, is premature because the country is debating whether France should transition from its dependence on nuclear power.

French President Francoise Hollande has pledged to reduce nuclear power's 75 percent share of the energy mix to 50 percent by 2025.

But Batho said the safe disposal of the country's nuclear waste is necessary no matter how that issue is decided.

"We must ensure its safe storage conditions, regardless of the evolution of our energy mix and the nuclear share that is now the subject of the national debate on energy transition," she told the daily L'est Republicain.

The deep burial of nuclear waste was decided by a 2006 law after an earlier debate and during the past eight years research has been conducted at the underground lab to determine if it could be expanded to serve as a repository.

The debate launched Wednesday is a legally binding procedure expected to last four months, after which the agency charged with waste disposal is to begin the long process of securing planning permissions to construct the repository, known by the French acronym Cigeo.

The government hopes to break ground on the effort by 2019, with a commissioning in 2025.

The facility would be built in a 160 million-year-old layer of clay about 1,650 feet beneath the surface and designed to accept long-lived, high- and intermediate-level nuclear waste, whose lethality to human health extends over tens of thousands of years.

Batho said the facility would be constructed with "reversibility" for its first 100 years, meaning future generations would be able to remove the waste if a more satisfactory way to store highly radioactive materials is found.

The Cigeo effort is opposed by the French Green Party -- part of Hollande's governing center-left coalition -- and other nuclear power opponents, led by the Collective Against the Burial of Nuclear Waste, CEDRA.

CEDRA leader Michel Gueritte participated in a Wednesday session of a high-level policy committee including Batho, French nuclear power company EDF, local officials and other stakeholders in the process, and afterwards said he remained unconvinced Cigeo is a good idea.

"We are told that it is better to trust in geology than in man," he told the daily L'est-Eclair. "In fact, there are only geologists, and some of them are opposed to the landfill."

He dismissed the national debate on Cigeo as nothing more than public relations exercise to lend legitimacy to a decision that's already been made, the newspaper reported.

Batho, however, defended the process and said it should be held this year despite the concurrent debate on transitioning away from nuclear energy.

"The National Commission for Public Debate is independent," she said. "This is a guarantee that everyone can give their opinion and to express his point of view."

.


Related Links
Nuclear Power News - Nuclear Science, Nuclear Technology
Powering The World in the 21st Century at Energy-Daily.com






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








CIVIL NUCLEAR
Fukushima survivors to sue Japan government
Tokyo (AFP) Feb 8, 2013
People whose homes or farms were hit by radiation from the stricken Fukushima nuclear plant will file class-action lawsuits next month to seek damages from the Japanese government, lawyers said Friday. At least 350 residents are to file a case with Fukushima District Court on March 11, the second anniversary of the disaster, the lawyers said, describing it as the largest class-action on the ... read more


CIVIL NUCLEAR
Can plants be altruistic?

Investors who trample land rights risk bottom line: experts

Ethiopians 'driven out in land grabs'

How plant communities endure stress

CIVIL NUCLEAR
A review of the rapidly evolving field of topological insulator hybrid structures

Biological circuits with memory created

Rutgers Physics Professors Find New Order in Quantum Electronic Material

3D microchip created

CIVIL NUCLEAR
Northrop Grumman Signs Airport Realtime Collaboration Passenger Flow Contract With East Midlands Airport

Taylor Retires As Strain Takes Lead At Ball Aerospace

Twenty NASA Balloons Studying the Radiation Belts

China attends India air show amid warming ties

CIVIL NUCLEAR
Nissan profit tumbles on China, Europe woes

Japan's Suzuki sees April-December net profit rise 19%

Japan's Mazda swings back to profit

China auto sales hit record in January: industry group

CIVIL NUCLEAR
Mercosur seeks Canada deal, but Cuba looms

Tech giants summoned by Australia pricing inquiry

China's trade surplus surges in January

China, India tourists triple Australian visits

CIVIL NUCLEAR
Mixed forest provides beneficial effects

Paper giant APP promises no deforestation in Indonesia

Asian paper giant to halt deforestation

Measuring the consequence of forest fires on public health

CIVIL NUCLEAR
NightPod Images Bring Earth to Light From Space Station

Landsat Data Continuity Mission Awaits Liftoff

Ball Supplies Advanced Imaging Instrument For Landsat 8

Avoiding a cartography catastrophe

CIVIL NUCLEAR
Using single quantum dots to probe nanowires

A new genre of 'intelligent' micro- and nanomotors

Flat boron by the numbers

Notre Dame studies benefits and threats of nanotechnology research




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement