Originally Posted by
uneverno
http:///forum/post/3022489
Like Russia?
Because the French rely on nuclear for ~75% of their electricity, that 10%still amounts to 5000+ tons/year. I realize Uranium is dense and stuff, so in terms of volume, that's not that much, but still - it has to go somewhere.
So why are the French outsourcing disposal?
Because their existing facilities have been fraught w/ technical difficulties, including leakage into groundwater (Tritium at the Champagne site - but no worries, that only has a half life of 12.5 years), and there's massive public opposition to building new ones. So, they put it on trains and send it to Russia. Meantime, the Germans have found container contamination on those trains as they pass through on their way to Siberia.
All that aside however, assuming it's done properly, the primary issue here isn't so much the technical aspects of safe disposal (vitrification, deep granite burial, etc.), as it is NIMBY. Public opposition cannot be removed from the safe disposal equation for the simple reason that because of it, safe disposal is not taking place as quickly as the waste is piling up. There's a lotta stuff being kept in temporary facilities some of which, like the Russian's, being of questionable standards.
I doubt France has anyplace without the groundwater given the geographical location.
I found this to discribe the amount of waste generated by a plant
"There is very little waste produced by a nuclear power plant. To put the amount of waste into perspective, if all of the spent fuel rods (the waste of a nuclear plant) from all of the plants in the United States were piled together, they would only cover an area the size of a football field three feet deep.4 This may seem like a lot, but there are over 100 plants in America, and the waste is from every plant since the inception of nuclear power."
Found something else that listed it as 3 cubic meters per billion Kilowatt Hours. Can't be too big seeing as how most is stored at power plants.
Really doesn't matter because nuclear is going to happen, it has to. You couldn't build enough wind and solar to come close to meeting any developed countries needs.