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There are three levels of waste at
Koeberg – low level waste, intermediate level waste and
spent fuel.
Low Level Waste
This comprises of refuse which may or may not be contaminated
with minute quantities of radioactive material. This waste is
usually in the form of clothing, plastics, insulation material,
paper and coveralls. This waste is generated in the controlled
radiological areas of the power station. These items are sealed
in clearly marked drums and stored on site until they are moved
in one of the truck trips to Vaalputs. On average 475 steel drums
and 158 concrete drums are shipped to Vaalputs every year.
Vaalputs is the national repository for low and intermediate
level waste some 500 km north of Koeberg.

Yellow drums in front are low level waste drums.
Intermediate Level Waste
Intermediate level waste consists of
purification sludges, spent resins, filter cartridges and
irradiated scrap metal. This waste is more radioactive than the
refuse but less radioactive than spent fuel. It is mixed in a
very specific way with concrete and sealed into appropriately
marked concrete drums. These drums also go to Vaalputs.
The concrete is constituted in
such a way that even if a drum fell off a truck or broke open the
radioactive materials inside could not harm the public because it
has been sealed inside the concrete and cannot escape.

Intermediate
level waste drum cut open to show what it looks like once it has
been sealed.
Spent Fuel
High
Level Waste (HLW) comprises the metal and mineral waste
left over once spent fuel has been reprocessed to extract
any re-usable uranium or plutonium. Alternatively, if a
decision is taken not to reprocess, then spent fuel is
itself considered HLW.
HLW has been
around since mankind started its large-scale nuclear
activities - 55 years ago. The volume of high level waste
is small by industrial standards and it is housed safely.
It constitutes no health risk to humanity.
So
governments have no need to rush their decision about
what they will do with HLW in the long term. They are in
a position to weigh all the options on behalf of their
citizens. As a result, very few governments in the world
have committed themselves to a final disposal strategy
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Fuel Pool
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What is High Level Waste ?
High level waste is fuel that has
been used in the fission process. It is radioactively extremely
dangerous. When it is removed from the reactor vessel it is
stored in special "fuel pools".
After ten years in a fuel pool it
is "cool" enough to be moved into thick-walled casks
which can be stored above ground for up to 40 years. Ten years
has been chosen because in that period the bulk of the
radioactivity from the short lived nuclides has decayed. This is
known as dry storage and also interim storage.
A two-reactor pressure water
reactor power station like Koeberg generates approximately 32
tons of spent fuel each year. Over a 40-year lifetime that would
add up to 1 280 tons.
Each spent fuel assembly contains
radioactive materials which fall into three categories.
The first category contains the
fission products (such as caesium, iodine, stroulium, and xenon)
which are created when uranium or plutonium nuclei are split.
They are the most radioactive components of spent fuel when it
leaves the reactor vessel for the fuel pool but they decay to low
levels relatively quickly and after 1 000 years only about 400
GBq (10 curies) of the longest-lived fission products such as
iodine 129, remain.
In the second category are the
actinides, which are isotopes of uranium and heavier metals
including plutonium. These are long-lived materials which take 10
000 years to decay to about 800 GBq (200 curies)
The last category contains the
structural materials of the fuel assemblies which become
radioactive through irradiation by neutrons. They only add a
small amount of radiation to the whole spent fuel assembly total
and decay in about 500 years to less than 200 GBq (5 curie)
How Quickly does the Radioactivity Decay ?
A remarkable feature of spent fuel
is that after one year of storage only 0.92% of the radioactivity
remains in the assembly because the radioactive nuclides in the
material decay so quickly.
After 10 years, which is the
earliest time at which the assemblies would be taken out of the
fuel pool, only 1% of the original radioactivity remains.
What is left after 10 000 years of
storage is about 0,0002% of the radioactive content and most of
that would be plutonium and others actinides. After this period
the radioactivity has decayed to below what would have been there
had the uranium been left undisturbed in the ground.
Radioactivity decays until it is
harmless. In other words, spent fuel eventually gets rid of its
own toxicity - unlike chemical toxic waste, which must be
pro-actively treated to make it harmless.
Decommissioning
Power station operators have a choice regarding the
decommissioning costs they incur. They can decommission the
entire station soon after shut down and accept the cost of
dealing with highly radioactive material. Or they can dismantle
the non-radioactive parts of the site buildings immediately and
leave the central block around the reactor itself for perhaps 50
years – and accept the cost of maintaining it for that
period.
There are nuclear stations that
have been shut down and decommissioned throughout the world . All
decommissioning activities are supervised by independent nuclear
safety authorities. In South Africa’s case this authority
would be the National Nuclear Regulator . They establish safety
requirements for the decommissioning workers and the public and
ensure that they are adhered to. Great care is taken to prevent
the spread of possible radioactive dust and liquid effluents
All organisation operating nuclear
stations including Eskom are obliged to set aside funds to cover
even tual decommissioning. These funds are set aside from the
profit generated by the power station itself.
The options for Koeberg as far as
decommissioning is concerned are:
- It can
be shut down, sealed and left under close security for as long as its reactor
systems inside the containment buildings are radioactive
- It can
be shut down and the containment buildings filled with concrete to prevent any
radioactivity present in the buildings from escaping
- Under
the Greenfield Option the Koeberg site can be rehabilitated to be left exactly
as it was before the power station was built. This could only be done if the
two radioactive cores and containment buildings were cut up and put into
containers and buried, along with the waste and spent
fuel.
- After
removal of the radioactive components the site could be used for another
nuclear power station or a conventional power station.
- It could
be used as an industrial complex as it has all the
infrastructure.
- All the equipment within the
containment buildings could be stripped of radioactive materials,
and the buildings then used again.
Re-Racking
Eskom has, since it began operating,
looked at various options for storing it’s spent fuel.
The station is an exact copy of
a French Pressurised Water Reactor (PWR). As such the station
was originally designed to store spent fuel on site for only 5
years whereafter the fuel would be sent off for reprocessing.
This process was and remains a very expensive option. During the
late 1980’s the fuel pools were re-racked in order to store
fuel for a 10 - 15 year period. This was state of the art
technology at the time.
The fuel pools at Koeberg have now
reached capacity and they will no longer be able to take any more
spent fuel.
In 1996 after looking at options
such as reprocessing, buying special storage casks and building a
facility in which to house these casks or putting high density
racks into the fuel pools a decision was taken to go for the high
density racks. New technology now enables us to pack more spent
fuel into racks making it possible to store all the spent fuel
that will be generated over the lifetime of the station
(approximately 40 years). These would number 11 000 for both
units.
New Racks
Two different storage regions will be
created in the spent fuel pools. The first region will have 210
positions in three racks and will store the most reactive fuel.
This is the fuel that has spent the least amount of time in the
reactor and therefore contains relatively large amounts of U235
which could still undergo fission.
In this region the fuel assemblies
are further apart so that there is no chance that they may start
a spontaneous fission reaction. Criticality (the start of the
fission process) is further controlled by using neutron absorbing
materials in the construction so that the number of thermal
neutrons in the region is always below that required to get a
chain reaction. The racks are made up of stainless steel with
plates of borated steel attached to the outside surface of each
stainless steel storage channel.
Borated stainless steel is a
stainless steel which contains as part of its chemical
composition 1.7% boron. Boron is a very good neutron absorbing
material.
The second region will contain the
bulk of the spent fuel. The assemblies will be closer together
since this will be fuel that has spent a longer period in the
reactor and hence will have a lower residual amount of fissile
uranium.
The racks in this region are
constructed of the same materials as those in region one.
Interim Measures
Due to delays in the re-racking
project a decision was taken to use certain interim measures
during the refueling outage in April 2000 and January 2001. Four
spent fuel casks will each temporarily store 28 spent fuel
assemblies. These casks were bought in 1996 and are specially
designed to shield radioactivity. The casks were bought to
provide Koeberg with flexibility in decision making should the
occasion arise.
The Casks
The casks weigh 97 740 kgs and are
made of Ductile Cast Iron. The cast iron walls are 358mm thick.
This thickness is optimal for three safety requirements
- Providing strength needed for
the cask wall
- Providing shielding from the
radiation emitted by the spent fuel and
- Being manageable for
transportation.
A layer of polyethylene rods has
been built into the inside wall of the cask to provide a shield
against the neutrons emitted by the fuel.
The cask is also designed so that
the remaining thermal heat in the fuel assemblies is dissipated
naturally. The advantage of this is that no heat removal systems
which will require monitoring or maintenance are necessary. The
heat losses occurs in the same way as it does when a cup of tea
is allowed to cool down.
The casks are tested to cover
three areas:
- The structural ability of the
cask to withstand strains caised by the use for which it
is intended
- The durability of the
materials
- The performance of the cask
under unexpected or accident conditions
Prototypes of the Eskom casks have
been dropped at various angles from a height of nine metres to
see whether they broke or developed cracks through which fuel or
radioactivity could escape. They remained sound.
They have been smashed into by a
train locomotive traveling at a speed of 100kms/hr.
The re-racking project will
continue and once all the racks have being installed the spent
fuel in the casks will be moved back into the fuel pools and will
remain there for the lifetime of the station.
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