02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 AP conditions stipulated in the Circular of 25 July 2006(4) relative to waste disposal facilities, coming under sections 2760 of the ICPE classification are satisfied; ∙in Cires(5) (Industrial centre for grouping, storage and disposal) intended for the disposal of very low-level radioactive waste (VLLW). Some of this waste is however stored while waiting for a disposal route, in particular the commissioning of a disposal centre for low-level long-lived waste (LLW-LL). Four hazardous waste disposal facilities are authorised by Prefectural Order to receive waste containing NORMs. Furthermore, following the entry into effect on 1 July 2018 of Decree 2018-434 of 4 June 2018 introducing various provisions with regard to nuclear activities, the provisions of the Labour Code relative to the protection of workers against ionising radiation also apply to professional activities involving materials that naturally contain radioactive substances, which include the NORMs. 1.2 Legal framework for radioactive waste management The management of radioactive waste comes under the general waste management framework defined in Chapter I or Title IV of Book V of the Environment Code and by its implementation decrees. Particular provisions relative to radioactive waste were introduced first by Act 91-1381 of 30 December 1991 on research into the management of radioactive waste, then by Planning Act 2006-739 of 28 June 2006 on the sustainable management of radioactive materials and waste called the “Waste Act”, which gives a legislative framework for the management of all radioactive materials and waste. A large proportion of the provisions of these Acts are codified in Chapter II of Title IV of Book V of the Environment Code. The Act of 28 June 2006 more specifically sets a calendar for research into HLW and ILW-LL waste and a clear legal framework for ring-fencing the funds needed for decommissioning and for the management of radioactive waste. It also provides for the development of a National Radioactive Materials and Waste Management Plan (PNGMDR), which aims to conduct periodic situation assessments and define the perspectives of the radioactive waste and materials management policy. It also reinforces the duties of Andra, notably by entrusting it with a public service duty for managing the waste arising from small-scale nuclear activities. Finally, it 4. Circular of 25 July 2006 relative to classified installations – Acceptance of technologically enhanced or concentrated natural radioactivity in the waste disposal centres. 5. French acronym standing for «Industrial centre for grouping, storage and disposal», name given in October 2012. It was originally commissioned in 2003 under the name CSTFA, standing for “Very low level waste disposal facility”. Installation subject to licensing under the System of section 2797 of the ICPEs. prohibits the disposal in France of foreign waste by providing for the adoption of rules specifying the conditions for the return of waste resulting from the reprocessing in France of spent fuel and waste from abroad. These rules provide for the returned reprocessed waste to be allocated according to the activity and mass of spent fuel introduced into France. However, subject to certain conditions and the opinion of ASN, regulatory provisions introduced in 2017 and 2021 allow waiving of the conditions of allocation of the waste returned to the originating foreign countries by carrying out waste exchanges applying a system of equivalence. Recourse to a system of equivalence (by weight and radiological activity of the waste) was thus authorised by the Minister responsible for energy for the waste intended to be returned to Germany (Metall+ operation) in 2021 and for waste intended to be returned to Japan (CREATES Alternative operation) in 2024. This framework was amended in 2016 with the publication of Ordinance 2016-128 of 10 February 2016 introducing various provisions with regard to nuclear activities which made it possible to: ∙transpose Council Directive 2011/70/ Euratom of 19 July 2011 establishing a European community framework for the responsible and safe management of spent fuel and radioactive waste, while reasserting the prohibition on the disposal in France of radioactive waste from foreign countries and of radioactive waste resulting from the reprocessing of spent fuel and the treatment of radioactive waste from abroad, and detailing the conditions of application of this prohibition; ∙define a procedure for the administrative authority to requalify materials as radioactive waste; ∙reinforce the existing administrative and penal enforcement actions and provide for new enforcement actions in the event of failure to comply with the provisions applicable to the management of radio- active waste and spent fuel. The conditions for creating a reversible deep geological repository for HLW and ILW-LL radioactive waste are detailed in Act 2016-1015 of 25 July 2016. 1.2.1 Legal framework for the management of radioactive waste produced in Basic Nuclear Installations In France, the management of radioactive waste in BNIs is governed in particular by the Order of 7 February 2012 setting the general rules relative to BNIs, of which Title VI concerns waste management. BNI licensees establish a waste zoning plan which identifies the zones in which the waste produced is or could be contaminated or activated. As a protective measure, the waste produced in these zones is managed as if it was radioactive and must be directed to dedicated routes. This absence of release thresholds for waste coming from a zone in which the waste is or could be contaminated or activated, constitutes a particularity of the French regulations. The “release thresholds” applied in some foreign countries determine the contamination levels below which the materials can be exempted from any form of control and used without any restrictions. Waste from other areas, once confirmed as being free of radioactivity, is sent to authorised routes for the management of hazardous, non-hazardous or inert waste, depending on its properties. The French regulations also oblige nuclear licensees to present, in the General Operating Rules (RGEs) and the environmental impact assessment of their facility, the wastes produced by the facility, whether radioactive or not, indicating the volumes, types, harmfulness and the envisaged disposal routes. The measures adopted by the licensees must consist in reducing, through recycling and treatment processes, the volume and the radiological, chemical or biological toxicity of the waste produced so that only the ultimate waste has to go to final disposal. ASN resolution 2015-DC-0508 of 21 April 2015 details the provisions of the Order of 7 February 2012, particularly concerning: ∙the procedures for drawing up and managing the waste zoning plan; ∙the content of the annual waste management assessment each BNI must transmit to ASN. ASN Guide No. 23 presents the conditions of application of this resolution with regard to the drawing up and modification of the waste zoning plan. Further to a modification of the regulatory requirements of the Environment Code in 2019, the waste management study is no longer required as a specific document. The provisions it contained must now be carried over to the environmental impact assessment and the BNI RGEs. ASN resolution 2022-DC-0749 of 29 November 2022, approved on 16 February 2023, amended ASN resolution 2015-DC-0508 of 21 April 2015 to take into account this regulatory change. ASN Report on the state of nuclear safety and radiation protection in France in 2024 377 01 Radioactive waste and contaminated sites and soils 15
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