Title: INL Calcine Disposition
1INL Calcine Disposition
- Jim Beck
- Calcine Disposition
- Clean/Close INTEC
2High-Level Waste Calcine
- Calcinated aqueous raffinate from the chemical
dissolution and reprocessing of spent nuclear
fuel (SNF) - Classified as high-level waste by DOE Order 435.1
- Contains RCRA characteristic metals and listed
constituents - Currently stored in six concrete vaults (Bin Sets
or CSSFs) containing between three to twelve
stainless steels bins each - Destined for disposal at the geologic
repository,Yucca Mountain - Dispose as is at Yucca Mountain in 15-foot by
2-foot diameter SNF standards canisters
3High-Level Waste Calcine (Continued)
RCRA hazardous, High Level Waste resulting from
dissolution of multiple reactor fuel types for
uranium recovery Abrasive, granular oxides
ranging from 0.2 to 0.6 mm, (15 fines)
4Regulatory Background
- Calcine is RCRA regulated characteristically
hazardous and listed - Yucca Mountain will not accept RCRA hazardous
waste - Settlement Agreement requires acceleration of
treatment alternative evaluations - Record of Decision for calcine treatment by 2009
- Application for RCRA by 2012
- Calcine ready for shipment by about 2035
- Missed milestone suspension of DOE SNF
shipments into Idaho - Project Management Plan (PMP) accelerates
schedule to complete shipping by 2035 - ICP Request for Proposal (RFP) further
accelerates these dates
5Regulatory Background (Continued)
- Site Treatment Plan
- Submit schedule of milestones for permitting,
construction and operation by September 30, 2005 - High-Level Waste Facilities Disposition Final
EIS - DOE Proposed Action includes
- Making calcine suitable for disposal
- Safe storage of calcine
- Excluded alternatives
- Storage in CSSF for an indefinite period
- Shipment to Hanford for treatment
- State of Idaho preferred alternative - direct
vitrification
6Direct Disposal of Calcine
High Level Waste Calcine Shipped from Idaho
- ACCELERATED DISPOSITION
- PMP End State 2035
- ROD for calcine treatment path forward by
12/31/09 (SA) - RCRA Part B permit application by 12/1/12 (SA)
- RFP End State 2022
- RCRA Part B permit application by 9/30/09
- GFSI ROD for calcine treatment by 9/30/09
- GFSI - Removal of calcine from RCRA regulation
Direct Disposal - RFP
Direct Disposal - PMP
Vitrification
2000
2070
2035
Clean-up Activity Completion Date
- BENEFITS
- No interim storage/vitrification facility
- Waste volume reduction gt 50 compared to direct
vitrification - Cost Savings gt6B (treatment), 3-4B (disposal)
compared to direct vitrification - Safer than vitrification
7Project Timeline - RFP
(calendar year)
2006
2007
2008
2011
2009
2010
2012
2005
2022
2015
EPA Pre-Petition Meeting (Fed Baseline)
Schedule EPA Pre-Petition Meeting (Fed Baseline)
Calcine Treatment ROD
DOE Decision EPA approval expected?
Calcine removed from RCRA regulation
RCRA Petition Direct Disposal
Submit RCRA Part B permit application
6 month lag to obtain EPA commitment
Send RCRA Petition to DOE/HQ (Fed Baseline)
Permit Application
RCRA
RCRA permit approved
CD-0
MNS
Incorporate prelim design in RCRA permit
application
Project Initiation
Conceptual Design
Incorporate final design into permit application
Preliminary Design
CD-1
Construction
Final Design
CD-3
EPA Pre-Petition Meeting
6 month lag to obtain EPA commitment
CD-2,3A
Ops
CD-4
RCRA Initiative Alt Treatment
Develop Test Alt Treatment
Calcine removed from RCRA regulation
Critical Decision
Critical Path RFP Milestone GFSI Milestone
Settlement Agreement Milestone
Regulatory Activity
Optimistic
Realistic
8Treatment Options
9Treatment Options (Continued)
- Vitrification
- Baseline previous to PMP
- RCRA LDR required best demonstrated available
technology - Direct vitrification
- 12,000 high-level waste canisters
- 7B EM life cycle cost
- Chemical separations with vitrification
- 650 high-level waste canisters
- 10B EM life cycle cost
- RCRA delisting required minimum 3 years (based
on Hanford delisting of 200 area waste)
10Treatment Options (Continued)
- Alternate Treatment
- PMP back-up
- Performance requirements unknown
- Technology development multiple possibilities
costs not well defined - Unknown waste volume
- Still requires removal from RCRA regulation
11Treatment Options (Continued)
- Direct Disposal
- PMP direction
- Safe to ship and dispose without further
treatment - 1.3 B EM life cycle cost
- 4,400 high-level waste canisters
- EPA Rulemaking based on demonstration of
no-migration of RCRA hazardous contaminants
12Key Issues
- Highest project risk - dual RCRA-NRC regulation
- Highest technical risk - retrieval and
characterization - Integrating with YMP licensing and shipping
schedules - Stakeholder concerns
13Retrieval
- Uncertainties
- Physical characteristics
- Angle of repose, flow properties, and propensity
for rat-holing - Caking, fusing, abnormal clumping
- Surface friction (adherence to bin walls and
supports) - Bin set access
- Number of access points
- Additional access points
- Access size
- 2007 demonstration
- AEA Technologies testing- Mooresville, North
Carolina
14AEAT Testing
15Characterization
- Inventory development/maintenance
- D-cell calcine sampling and analysis
- CSSF II (1978 sampling event)
- Analysis completed during February 2004
- Historical Processing Model (HPM)
- Projects central repository for calcine
inventory data - Feed data from calcination campaigns
- Other modeling input
- ORIGEN
- HSC (thermodynamic)
16Characterization (Continued)
- Waste Acceptance
- Total System Performance Assessment (TSPA)
modeling - FEIS Version
- Initial TSPA screening and sensitivity analysis
of chemical and radionuclide constituents
completed in 2003 - Deterministic modeling of radionuclide
constituents completed concentrations well below
levels of concern at point of compliance - Stochastic modeling of RCRA metals completed
chemical concentrations well below levels of
concern at point of compliance
17Canister Development
- Cost Comparison Completed
- Comparison of three canister designs
- 2 x 10, 2 x 15, and 5.5 x 17.5 Super
Canister
- Cost savings associated with Super Canister
- Canisters/casks required
- Surface facility handling at Yucca Mountain
- Less (1/2 mile) tunnel space required
18Summary
- Highest project risk - dual RCRA-NRC regulation
- Regulatory strategy/approach determined via
DOE-HQ and U.S. EPA interface and input - Alternative treatment options to vitrification
should direct disposal be determined no go - Highest technical risk - retrieval and
characterization - Retrieval studies and testing in progress
- Calcine inventory characterization evolving
- Further modeling (HSC, etc.)
- 2007 demonstration
- Development of Alternate Treatment Process
- Risk compounded with accelerated schedule
- Regulatory strategy and technical approach may
change with new ICP contractor