La Hague, France. Nuclear Waste Reprocessing Facility. Would you be depressed if you worked in a plutonium factory? |
Le Monde reports this week that the nuclear
waste reprocessing center (plutonium factory) in La Hague has been ordered by the Autorité de sûreté nucléaire to cease some operations until several “serious
gaps” in security are addressed. Several pieces of equipment, containing high
levels of radioactivity, have not been handled properly. Pressurized containers
of radioactive gas have not been properly secured, and fire safety violations
were noted. In addition, the workforce has much higher rates of depression and
suicide than the outside population – a problem that the regulator also
identifies as a threat to the safety of operations.
The
English language media doesn’t seem very interested in covering the French
nuclear industry, so in case translations of the report don’t get picked up by
British and American media, my translation is available below.
__________________________
Nuclear:
The ASN (Autorité de sûreté nucléaire) again finds “serious gaps” at the facility in La Hague.
Le Monde. Agence France Presse.
January
29, 2013
It
is the third time in less than a year: On January 28th, Areva’s
nuclear waste reprocessing facility at La Hague was again ordered to halt
operations. The ASN is demanding compliance with regulations regarding tens of
pieces of equipment, of which some, it was stressed, contain very high levels
of radioactivity.
The
“gendarme du nucléaire” has discovered, from an inspection that began in early
December, sixty pieces of equipment that are “nuclear pressurized,” meaning
gases containing radionuclides stored above atmospheric pressure. These “could
present a significant security risk,” noted the ASN. Among these pieces, some
consist of confinement of radioactive substances and are susceptible, in case
of failure, to lead to the release of radioactivity.
The
ASN also found “serious gaps,” notably in documentation, which is the way to
record the required verifications for this type of nuclear pressurized
equipment. Areva has been given six months to conform with the demands made for
six pieces of equipment that help to evaporate solutions, and twelve months for
the others, according to AFP.
FIRES
AND SUICIDES
Areva
management explained this stoppage was due to “a delay in transmitting
documents,” and it assured that it was in the process of rectifying the error by
gathering the documents into a common source.
But
this is not the first time that warnings have been given to the facility in La
Hague – the site which concentrates the highest level of radioactivity in
Europe. Already in April 2012, following a surprise inspection, the ASN halted
operations and ordered the reinforcement of fire security. The “gendarme du
nucléaire” (ASN) reported then “serious gaps in the measures taken to protect
against the risk of fire” and a “lack of rigor in the application of provisions
for limiting this risk and, in particular, a poor management of fire permits
required by regulations” (fire permits notably being required for certain types
of operations for maintenance or dismantling of facilities).
Five
months later, in September, there was another stoppage ordered at La Hague.
This time, the concern was the “rate of suicides” among workers at the facility
– “three times higher than the average in the region (La Manche), which is
itself higher than the national average.” The health officer at the site, where,
according to AFP, 5,000 people work, was alarmed in 2011 over “the state of the
mental health of the workforce” which “had degraded at an accelerated pace in
two years.” This was estimated to be a risk factor “for the safety of the
installation.”
WARNINGS
Another
warning from the ASN to La Hague: In 2011, it indicated that the facility
under-estimated the gravity of numerous incidents that had occurred on the site
in the previous year. Further, in June 2012, following the nuclear catastrophe
in Fukushima, the ASN cited the reprocessing facility, as it gave out hundreds
of directives to all French nuclear installations. In the case of La Hague, it
demanded the implementation of robust backup systems for spent fuel storage
pools.
One
month later, in July 2012, the ASN came back with another concern: it reminded
Areva to take heed of predictable failures and reinforce the security of
radioactive waste at La Hague. This applied to the storage of waste products
accumulated during the operation of the first treatment facility, of which the
most part “was left in an unfinalized state” representing “an insufficient
level of security.”
DECOMMISSIONING
At
the site in La Hague, two facilities have taken over from the old nuclear waste
treatment facility, baptized UP2 400, which functioned from 1966 to 1998 and
must now be decommissioned. This task is to employ 500 people at the height of
operations and should achieve the treatment of 50,000 cubic meters of wastes.
It is a long-term operation, much more important than the decommissioning of
one reactor.
Areva
recently estimated the cost at 4 billion euros over twenty-five years,
according to the director of La Hague, Jean-Jacques Dreher. In 2010, Areva
nonetheless announced a figure much lower: 2.5 billion euros. This estimation “didn’t
include the cost of packaging the wastes, which means the most finalized
storage of wastes,” explained Areva. In January 2012, the Court of Auditors
announced, citing EDF (Electricité de France, the French electricity utility),
an estimated cost of decommissioning for the 58 French reactors of about 18
billion euros. In this report, it included a figure, dated as of 2010, of 3.2
billion euros for the UP2 400.
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