National Academies Radioactive Waste Update - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 19
About This Presentation
Title:

National Academies Radioactive Waste Update

Description:

Title: What s New at the Board on Radioactive Waste Management? Author: KCrowley Last modified by: Ross User Created Date: 7/3/2003 11:43:39 AM Document ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:149
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 20
Provided by: KCr64
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: National Academies Radioactive Waste Update


1
National Academies Radioactive Waste Update
  • Kevin D. Crowley, Director
  • Nuclear and Radiation Studies Board

2
Who We Are
  • The National Academies
  • National Academy of Sciences (NAS)
  • National Academy of Engineering (NAE)
  • Institute of Medicine (IOM)
  • National Research Council (NRC)
  • BRWM (1958), NRSB (2005)
  • Private, nonprofit, Congressionally chartered to
    provide scientific and technological advice to
    the nation

3
Topics to be Discussed
  • Three studies of potential interest
  • Management of Certain Radioactive Waste Streams
    Stored in Tanks at Three Department of Energy
    Sites
  • Risk and Decisions about Disposition of
    Transuranic and High-Level Radioactive Waste
  • Improving the Characterization and Treatment of
    Radioactive Wastes for the Department of Energys
    Accelerated Site Cleanup Program
  • Organizational change

4
Certain Tank Wastes
  • Congressional request
  • Section 3146 of the Ronald Reagan National
    Defense Authorization Act of 2005
  • Evaluate and make recommendations to improve
    DOEs plans for disposing of certain radioactive
    wastes at Savannah River Site (SRS), Hanford, and
    Idaho National Laboratory (INL)
  • Interim report on SRS in July 2005
  • Final report on all sites in January 2006

5
Congressional Charge
  • Waste streams addressed in study
  • Stored in tanks at Hanford, INL, SRS
  • Exceed Class C concentration limits (10 CFR 61)
  • To be disposed of onsite

6
Congressional Charge
  • Study to evaluate
  • DOEs understanding of waste characteristics
  • Additional actions needed by DOE to comply with
    10 CFR 61 performance objectives
  • Adequacy of monitoring plans for disposal sites
  • Technology alternatives for managing wastes
  • Technology gaps
  • Any other matters directly related to the subject
    matter of the study

7
Committee Roster
  • Frank L. Parker, CHAIR, Vanderbilt Univ.
  • Hadi Abu-Akeel, AMTENG Corp
  • John S. Applegate, Indiana Univ. School of Law
  • Howie Choset, Carnegie Mellon Univ.
  • Paul P. Craig, Univ. of California, Davis
    (emeritus)
  • Allen G. Croff, Oak Ridge National Laboratory
    (retired)
  • Patricia J. Culligan, Columbia Univ.
  • Ken Czerwinski, Univ. of Nevada, Las Vegas
  • Rachel Detwiler, Braun Intertec Corp
  • Edwin E. Herricks, Univ. of Illinois at
    Urbana-Champaign
  • Tissa Illangasekare, Colorado School of Mines
  • Milton Levenson, Bechtel International (retired)
  • Paul A. Locke, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of
    Public Health
  • Michael H. Mobley, Mobley Radiation Consulting
  • Dianne R. Nielson, Utah Dept. of Environmental
    Quality
  • Ken E. Philipose, AECL Chalk River
  • Alfred P. Sattelberger, Los Alamos National
    Laboratory
  • Anne E. Smith, Charles River Associates
  • Leslie Smith, Univ. of British Columbia
  • Don Steeples, University of Kansas

8
Risk and Decisions
  • Requested and sponsored by DOE-EM
  • Focus on approaches for incorporating risk into
    DOE decision making for disposition of TRU and
    HLW
  • The baseline disposition pathway for these wastes
    involves retrieval, treatment, and deep geologic
    disposal
  • Nearly 650,000 m3 TRU and HLW
  • Over 60 billion and 70 years required to
    complete baseline activities under current
    schedules
  • Report issued in February 2005

9
Statement of Task
  • Provide recommendations on implementation of
    risk-based approaches in DOEs cleanup program
  • Key elements of a risk-based approach
  • Criteria for risk assessment
  • Potential alternatives to geologic disposal for
    disposition of low-hazard waste
  • Compatibility with current regulatory regimes
  • Knowledge and technology gaps for implementation
  • Broader implications, if any, for disposition of
    other EM wastes
  • Apply risk-based approaches to selected DOE waste
    streams to assess their practical usefulness

10
Committee Roster
  • David E. Daniel, University of Illinois at
    Urbana-Champaign, Chair
  • John S. Applegate, Indiana University School of
    Law-Bloomington, Vice Chair
  • Lynn Anspaugh, School of Medicine, University of
    Utah
  • Allen G. Croff, Oak Ridge National Laboratory
    (ret.)
  • Rodney C. Ewing, University of Michigan, Ann
    Arbor
  • Paul A. Locke, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of
    Public Health
  • Patricia A. Maurice, University of Notre Dame
  • Robin Rogers, University of Alabama
  • Anne E. Smith, Charles River Associates
  • Theofanis G. Theofanous, University of
    California, Santa Barbara
  • Jeffrey Wong, California Department of Toxic
    Substances Control

11
Selected Findings Recommendations
  • The nation needs a mechanism for considering
    alternatives to deep geologic disposal for those
    wastes that may not warrant such isolation based
    on the risks they pose and the risks and costs
    involved in retrieving and disposing of them
  • Risk is a good starting point for such
    considerations, but other factors may be at least
    as important deciding what disposition path to
    use, so a risk-informed decision process should
    be used
  • Such decisions, and the analyses and discussions
    that support those decisions, should involve DOE,
    regulators, and interested and affected outside
    parties in an iterative and cooperative decision
    process

12
Selected Findings Recommendations
  • The process would be more credible if an agency
    other than DOE had the authority to approve or
    reject DOE's proposals for alternate disposal
    paths
  • Congress, DOE, U.S. EPA, and U.S. NRC should take
    actions as necessary to enable DOE to implement
    effectively the risk-informed approach
    recommended in the report
  • DOE should form an authoritative, credible, and
    reasonably independent group to revamp the way
    DOE goes about implementing risk-informed
    approaches applied to waste disposition decisions

13
Accelerating Characterization and Treatment of
DOE Wastes
  • Requested and sponsored by DOE-EM
  • Focus on large DOE sites (Hanford, INL, Oak
    Ridge, SRS)
  • Study motivated by DOEs desire to improve the
    utilization of facilities and capabilities across
    its sites to reduce cleanup schedules, costs, and
    risks to workers and nearby residents, both now
    and in the future
  • Final report issued in February 2005

14
Statement of Task
  • Identify opportunities for improving waste
    characterization and treatment capabilities
  • Make more effective use of existing capabilities
    and facilities for waste characterization,
    treatment, or disposal
  • Eliminate self-imposed requirements that have no
    clear technical or safety basis
  • Improve characterization and treatment
    capabilities to achieve step efficiency
    improvements or to treat orphan waste streams
  • Recommend technology development and
    demonstration investments that EM should make
    over the near term to achieve these improvements
  • Focus on waste streams for which current
    characterization, treatment, or disposition
    pathways are difficult and (or) expensive, and
    for which improvements would help reduce costs,
    schedules, and hazards to workers, public, or the
    environment

15
Committee Roster
  • Milton Levenson, Bechtel International (retired),
    Chair
  • Cynthia Atkins-Duffin, Lawrence Livermore
    National Laboratory
  • Patricia J. Culligan, Columbia University
  • Robin Dillon-Merrill, Georgetown University
  • Lloyd A. Duscha, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
    (retired)
  • Thomas Gesell, Idaho State University
  • Carolyn L. Huntoon, CLH Associates, Inc.
  • Barry Scheetz, Pennsylvania State University
  • Laura Toran, Temple University
  • Raymond G. Wymer, Oak Ridge National Laboratory
    (retired)

16
Recommendations
  • DOE should aggressively pursue opportunities to
    simplify and expedite waste characterization,
    treatment, and disposal by
  • Work with the responsible classification offices
    to declassify, to the extent possible, classified
    materials declared as wastes
  • Better utilize the waste removal provisions of
    CERCLA, and
  • Develop more consistent interpretations among
    sites of waste acceptance requirements and
    accelerated cleanup objectives

17
Recommendations
  • DOE should consider managing the following
    facilities as corporate assets for the
    characterization and treatment of both mainstream
    and special-case or orphan wastes
  • Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA) incinerator
    at Oak Ridge
  • High-level waste calciner at Idaho
  • Advanced Mixed Waste Treatment Facility (AMWTF)
    at Idaho
  • Vitrification Facilities at Savannah River and
    Hanford
  • Existing groundwater-monitoring wells at all
    sites
  • H-Canyon at Savannah River
  • T-Plant at Hanford

18
Recommendations
  • EM should continue developing and deploying new
    or improved technologies that address limitations
    in current characterization and treatment
    capabilities. The committee recommends
    investments in
  • Steam reforming,
  • No-consequence TRU shipping containers,
  • Improved high-level waste vitrification, and
  • State-of-the-art sensors for environmental
    monitoring

19
Recommendations
  • For waste that EM considers leaving in place, the
    committee recommends that EM broaden the use of
    the cocooning concept as currently applied to
    the Hanford reactors
  • Applied to certain wastes for which cleanup cost
    and risk to workers exceeds benefits, the
    cocooning concept provides a scientifically sound
    framework to
  • Stabilize wastes or contamination in place for
    now
  • Monitor until radioactive decay, other natural
    processes, or new technologies make ultimate
    cleanup feasible or unnecessary
  • Adapt to new knowledge and
  • Make responsibilities clear to all stakeholders
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com