ASN Annual report 2024

1.1.1 Management of radioactive waste in Basic Nuclear Installations Two economic sectors are the major contributors to the production of radioactive waste in BNIs. The nuclear power sector for its part comprises the 18 Nuclear Power Plants (NPPs) operated by EDF, and the plants dedicated to the fabrication and reprocessing of nuclear fuel operated by Orano and Framatome. Operation of the NPPs generates spent fuel, part of which is reprocessed to separate the recyclable substances from the fission products or minor actinides which are waste. Radioactive waste is also produced during the operational and maintenance activities in the NPPs and the fuel reprocessing plants, like the structural waste, the hulls and end-pieces constituting the nuclear fuel cladding, the technological waste, and the waste from the treatment of effluents such as bituminised sludge. Furthermore, decommissioning of the facilities produces a large volume of radioactive waste. The research sector for its part includes civil nuclear research, in particular the laboratory and reactor research activities of the Alternative Energies and Atomic Energy Commission (CEA), but also other research organisations. Radioactive waste is produced during the operation, maintenance and decommissioning of these facilities. 1. Appendix 1 of the Order of 9 October 2008 amended relative to the nature of the information that the entities responsible for nuclear activities and the companies mentioned in Article L. 1333-10 of the Public Health Code are obliged to establish, keep up to date and periodically communicate to Andra. 2. Source for which the presentation and the normal conditions of use are unable to prevent all dispersion of the radioactive substance. 3. Source for which the structure or packaging prevents all dispersion of radioactive substances into the ambient environment, in normal use. This radioactive waste is managed in accordance with specific provisions which take into account its radiological nature and are proportionate to the potential danger it represents. 1.1.2 Management of waste from small-scale nuclear activities governed by the Public Health Code(1) The issues and challenges The use of unsealed sources(2) in nuclear medicine, biomedical or industrial research creates solid and liquid waste: small laboratory items used to prepare sources, medical equipment used to administer injections for diagnostic or therapeutic purposes, etc. Radioactive liquid effluents also come from source preparation as well as from patients who eliminate the administered radio- activity by natural routes. The diversity of waste from small-scale nuclear activities, the large number of establishments producing it and the radiation protection issues involved, have led the public authorities to plan for specific provisions for managing the waste produced by these activities. Management of disused sealed sources considered as waste Sealed radioactive sources(3) are used for medical, industrial, research and veterinary applications (see chapters 7 and 8). Once they have been used, and if their suppliers do not envisage their reuse in any way, they are considered to be radioactive waste and must be managed as such. The management of sealed sources considered as waste, and their disposal in particular, must take into consideration both their concentrated activity and their potential attractiveness in the event of human intrusion after loss of the memory of a disposal facility at the end of its monitoring and surveillance phase after closure. These two factors therefore limit the types of sources that can be accepted in disposal facilities, especially surface facilities. 1.1.3 Management of waste containing natural radioactivity Some professional activities using raw materials which naturally contain radionuclides, but which are not used for their radioactive properties, may lead to an increase in specific activity in the products, residues or waste they produce. The term “Naturally Occurring Radioactive Material” (NORM) is used when its activity exceeds the exemption thresholds figuring in Table 1 of Appendix 13-8 of the Public Health Code (for example the treatment of rare earths, the production of phosphate fertilizers and phosphoric acid, the combustion of coal in thermal power plants, etc.). NORM waste, for which there is no planned or envisaged use, is therefore considered to be radioactive waste within the meaning of Article L. 542‑1‑1 of the Environment Code. Waste containing radioactive substances of natural origin but which do not exceed the abovementioned exemption thresholds is directed to conventional waste management routes. NORM waste can be stored in two types of facility depending on its specific activity: ∙in a waste disposal facility authorised by Prefectural Order, if the acceptance TABLE 1 Classification of radioactive waste(1) Very short lived waste, containing radionuclides with a half-life < 100 days Short lived waste, in which the radioactivity comes mainly from radionuclides with a half-life ≤ 31 years Long lived waste, containing mainly radionuclides with a half‑life > 31 years 0 Bq/g (*) Very low‑level (VLL) Management by radioactive decay on production site then disposal via disposal routes dedicated to conventional waste Recycling or dedicated above-ground disposal (disposal facility of the industrial centre for collection, storage and disposal – Cires – in the Aube département) HUNDREDS Bq/g (*) Low-level (LL) Surface disposal (Aube waste disposal repository) Near-surface disposal (being studied pursuant to the Act of 28 June 2006) MILLIONS Bq/g (*) Intermediatelevel (IL) BILLIONS Bq/g (*) High‑level (HL) Not applicable (**) Deep geological disposal (planned pursuant to the Act of 28 June 2006) * Becquerel per gram (Bq/g). ** There is no such thing as high level, very short-lived waste. 376 ASN Report on the state of nuclear safety and radiation protection in France in 2024 Radioactive waste and contaminated sites and soils

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