Deep Geologic Repositories
Deep Geologic Repositories reviews the success stories of underground waste isolation. It focuses on repositories that did, do, and will permanently and safely isolate dangerous materials from the near-surface biosphere. Complementary topics address the isolation capability of average crustal rock, investigations at one representative underground research laboratory, and the geologic preservation of fission products from Precambrian nuclear reactors. An international cast of contributors presents proven practical solutions to a formerly confounding issue in environmental and engineering geology: What do we do with wastes that retain their dangerous characteristics in human terms forever? The principal answer: Recycling into the lithosphere by “reverse” mining.
Repositories for low- and intermediate-level radioactive wastes in Finland
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Published:January 01, 2008
Abstract
The Finnish power companies TVO and FPH currently operate four nuclear reactors, two each at the Olkiluoto and Loviisa sites. Both companies are responsible for the safe management of nuclear wastes. The underground repository program for low- and intermediate-level waste was commissioned in the late 1970s. From the start, the design basis has been geological disposal, the safety of which rests on natural and engineered barriers. The disposal system should isolate the waste for a few hundred years. During this time, the radiotoxicity of the waste will decline significantly. The critical radionuclides are 14C, 239Pu/240Pu, 59Ni, 90Sr, and 137Cs. The Olkiluoto site consists mainly of micaceous gneiss intercalated with sparsely fractured tonalite. A tonalitic portion of the site was chosen for more detailed characterization. The Loviisa site consists entirely of Rapakivi granite, which is coarse grained and porphyritic. The repository layout was in both cases constrained by the local geology. At Olkiluoto, the shape of the tonalitic body bounded by fracture zones led to a vertical silo-type concept 60–100 m below the surface. At Loviisa, the subhorizontal fracture zones above the planned disposal depth favored horizontal drifts 120 m below the surface. Thorough safety assessments were conducted during the licensing process. The Olkiluoto repository was built between 1988 and 1992, and the Loviisa repository was built between 1993 and 1997. Operation of Olkiluoto was commissioned in 1992, and Loviisa was commissioned in 1998. In the future, the repositories will also be used for disposal of waste when the nuclear power plants are decommissioned.
- boreholes
- consolidation
- depth
- engineering properties
- environmental analysis
- Europe
- Finland
- fracture zones
- gneisses
- isotopes
- metamorphic rocks
- Olkiluoto
- power plants
- radioactive isotopes
- radioactive waste
- rock mechanics
- safety
- Scandinavia
- site exploration
- underground installations
- underground storage
- waste disposal
- Western Europe
- Loviisa Finland