Agence nationale pour la gestion des déchets radioactifs

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Agence nationale pour la gestion des déchets radioactifs
AbbreviationANDRA Edit this on Wikidata
Legal statusnational public industrial or commercial establishment without a public accountant Edit this on Wikidata
Budget363,402,000 Euro (2019) Edit this on Wikidata
Employees674 (2020) Edit this on Wikidata
Presentation of ANDRA research at Meuse/Haute Marne Underground Research Laboratory, in Bure

The Agence nationale pour la gestion des déchets radioactifs (ANDRA), or National agency for the management of radioactive waste is a 'public institution of an industrial and commercial nature' charged with the management of radioactive waste in France.

Placed under the supervision of the ministers for research, the industry and the environment, ANDRA leads complementary industrial, research and public information missions.

ANDRA's funding comes from a mixture of public and private sources, including a tax on producers of radioactive waste and commercial contracts with waste producers.[1]

ANDRA is responsible for the Cigéo deep geological repository project.

Locations

ANDRA is currently based at five locations:

  • The head office, at Châtenay-Malabry (92) ;
  • Manche storage centre, at La Hague site (50), which accepted wastes from 1969 to 1994 and is now in care and surveillance;
  • Aube storage centre, in Soulaines-Dhuys (10), which accepts low-level waste and short-lived intermediate-level waste;
  • Morvilliers storage centre (10), which accepts very-low-level waste ;
  • feasibility studies
    for the Cigéo deep geological repository for the disposal of high-level and long-lived intermediate-level waste.

Andra publishes [2] a national inventory of radioactive materials and wastes every three years, then every five years following the public debate of 2019. The three first inventories were criticised for not containing information on military nuclear sites. Th 1996 edition touches on 29 sites relevant to the ministry of defence and contains military nuclear wastes, and the 1997 edition touches on 45 sites.[3]

Partnerships

Espace technologique de Saudron

ANDRA develops public-public and

public-private
partnerships with other organisations. For example:

  • 4 September 2009, a partnership agreement was signed with the
    numerical simulation
    , to better model the evolution of a radioactive waste disposal facility over millions of years.
  • 29 April 2010, the Institut national de la recherche agronomique (Inra) signed a partnership agreement with Andra for the study of dynamic evolution of terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems, and to evaluate and model the impact on biodiversity of global changes and human impacts, with the Observatoire pérenne de l'environnement (OPE) (Permanent Observatory of the Environment) of Andra, which, since 2007, observes several thousand hectares in Meuse and Haute-Marne, for at least a century [4]
  • 3 August 2010,[5] a new agreement was signed by the State and Andra, in the context of the "Programme of future investments" (financed by borrowing) and of the "National plan for management of radioactive materials and wastes" 2010–2012. On this occasion, 100 million Euros were promised to Andra to finance two projects aimed at reducing the volume and hazard of certain problematic radioactive wastes; the aims were:
    • to improve recycling of very low level radioactive (ferrous) metals within the nuclear sector, which originate in dismantling of nuclear installations; possible use cases include steel or cast iron containers for radioactive wastes destined for diposal at Andra centres, or integration into the construction of the disposal facility (e.g. as doors) at the Aube VLLW repository. According to Andra, this would save 130000 m3 of space in its disposal facilities.[5]
    • improve the treatment and conditioning of certain wastes which are the most problematic for diposal (e.g. gases, liquids, organic matter). The aim is to better treat, inert and dispose of wastes without a current defined dispoal route (produced by minor producers), and to obtain the physical-chemical forms which are as inert as possible with respect to the requirements for disposal. The volumes of these wastes are relatively limited at present, but expected to increase in the years to come.[5]

History

Andra was created in November 1979 within the

CEA.[6]

In 1983, ANDRA selected twenty-eight sites whose geology would be favourable to the establishment of an underground storage facility for long-lived HLW.[7] Lively local opposition forced ANDRA to abandon research on these sites.

The law of 30 December 1991 relating to research on radioactive waste management (known as the Bataille Law after its sponsor, Christian Bataille), gave Andra its independence from the CEA and gave it its statue as an établissement public à caractère industriel et commercial.[8] Andra is notably charged with designing and realising new storage centres taking account of long-term perspectives on production and management of wastes, and to carry out all necessary studies to this end, such as the realisation and operation of underground laboratories for the study of deep geological formations. Andra installed its headquarters at Châtenay-Malabry.

In 2003, ANDRA decided to record certain of its archives on permanent paper in resistant ink, with the aim of guaranteeing preservation of the information for a minimum of 300 years, for the purpose of compliance with decree No. 2003-30 of 10 January 2003, which obliges the Manche storage centre to permanently record information relating to its stored wastes after the site is closed.[9]

In the context of dismantling of French nuclear facilities, ANDRA launched an invitation to tender in September 2015 for the development of innovative technological solutions aiming at minimising the impact of nuclear wastes. According to estimates, dismantling of nuclear facilities will produce 2.1 million cubic metres of Very Low Level Waste (VLLW), which is more than three times the capacity of the Aube storage centre.[10]

On 5 August 2015, the Constitutional Council censured the insertion into the law for growth, activity and equal economic opportunities, known as the Macron law, of an article defining reversibility adopted in the Senate on 18 April on the proposal of Gérard Longuet, on the grounds that it does not have a link, even indirect, with the provisions contained in the bill.[11] The condition of reversibility is nevertheless included in the law defining the scope of the Cigéo project[12] adopted in July 2016.[13]

In the 2017 finance bill, ANDRA's budget is charged to the budgetary programme of the Ministry of Ecology, under item 174 (Energy, Climate and post-mining).

Bure laboratory

In 1999, ANDRA was charged by the State with creating an underground laboratory in the commune of Bure, Meuse for the study of radioactive waste storage, and to operate it until 2006.[14] The project consists of testing deep geological storage (at a depth of 500 m in a layer of clay), of the most dangerous wastes. The aim of deep geological storage is to contain the wastes until they become non-hazardous, over a period of 100000 years. ANDRA has been progressively buying land for the site, and has created a public information centre at Saudron, to inform the public on the principles of geological disposal. As of August 2015, 1650 m of tunnels had been constructed.[15]

The construction of this laboratory has provoked a strong opposition among some local residents. In exchange for the use of the underground, ANDRA consecrates a budget of 5 million French Francs per year to support local communities (10 million in 1997), and promises 60 million Francs if the laboratory is constructed. Opponents of the project foresee a potential for corruption of the local political authorities as a result of these funding offers[needs update].

Cigéo

In December 2002, the Société générale pour les techniques nouvelles (then a subsidiary of

COGEMA signed a framework contract with ANDRA for engineering studies relating to the project.[16]

ANDRA proposes the following provisional timeline, assuming that the necessary authorisations are obtained:[17]

  • 2015: submission to the State of a proposal for a master plan for the operation of Cigeo, and to the ASN a safety options file and a portfolio of options for recoverability techniques, in order to prepare for the examination of the application for authorisation to create Cigeo;
  • 2019: submission of the application for a declaration of public utility by ANDRA;
  • 2030: Start of surface construction;
  • 2035: Start of operations with a pilot industrial phase.

After more than thirty years of research,[18] including at the Meuse/Haute Marne Underground Research Laboratory, Andra applied in 2023 to ASN, the French nuclear safety authority, for permission to construct the facility.[18]

Governance

Direction

  • Pierre-Marie Abadie, director general since 2014.[19] succeeded Marie-Claude Dupuis, director from 2005 to 2014.[20]
  • Frédéric Launeau, director of the Cigéo project since 2015[21]

Administrative council

The council is composed of 23 members: two representatives of the French Parliament; six representatives of the State; seven qualified persons; eight representatives of the employees of the agency. Since the 9 May 2019, it is presided over by Adolphe Colrat, préfet hors classe.[22]

Scientific council

The Scientific council was created by the law of 30 December 1991. It is composed of twelve additional members, nominated for five years. The members are French and foreign experts, men and women, chosen by the ministers on proposition by Andra. The Scientific council issues opinions on the strategy, research programmes and results presented by the agency.

Communication

The agency declares having an annual communications budget of a little over 1 million Euros at its disposal.[23]

Lobbying activity in France

For 2020, the agency declared to the Haute Autorité pour la transparence de la vie publique that it engaged in lobbying activities in France pour with a value not exceeding 200 000 Euros.[24]

Promotion of agency activities

ANDRA edits and distributes a free journal (200000 copies) as well as pedagogical materials aimed at teachers.[23]

The agency finances video-bloggers (Simon Puech, Anonimal, David Sheik), the Play Bac enterprise (2010 et 2017) and Usbek & Rica (magazine) in order to promote the Cigéo project.[23][25]

International homologues

Filmography

  • L'Histoire de l'Andra ou l'invention d'un métier, 20 min (DVD)

See also

Notes and references

  1. ^ "Financement" [Financing]. Andra. Retrieved 27 July 2023.
  2. ^ "Sous la responsabilité de l'ANDRA. Un inventaire des sites de stockage de déchets radioactifs en France va être établi" [Under the responsibility of ANDRA. An inventory of radioactive waste storage sites will be established]. Le Monde (in French). 18 January 1992.
  3. ^ "L'évolution de la recherche sur la gestion des déchets nucléaires à haute activité - Les déchets militaires" [The evolution of research on management of radioactive wastes - military wastes]. Senat.fr. 15 December 1997.
  4. ^ "L'Andra et l'Inra étudient les écosystèmes sur le long terme" [Andra and Inra study ecosystems in the long term]. Actu-Environnement. 4 May 2010.
  5. ^ a b c "Investissements d'avenir : 100 M€ attribués à l'Andra pour financer deux projets innovants" [future investments: 100 M€ allocated to Andra to fund two innovative projects] (PDF). Andra. Châtenay-Malabry. 19 August 2010. Retrieved 24 July 2023.
  6. ^ "Arrêté du 7 novembre 1979 portant création au sein du commissariat à l'énergie atomique d'une agence nationale pour la gestion des déchets radioactifs" [Decree of 7 November 1979 supporting the creation within the atomic energy commission (CEA) of a national agency for the management of radioactive wastes]. JORF (261). 10 November 1979. Retrieved 26 July 2023 – via Légifrance.
  7. ^ "Le stockage des déchets nucléaires ne fait plus peur" [The storage of nuclear wastes no longer causes fear]. Le Monde. 2 November 1993.
  8. ^ "1969 - 1991 : les origines" [1969-1991: the origins]. Andra.fr.
  9. ^ "Un centre de stockage nucléaire choisit le papier "permanent" pour archiver ses données" [A nuclear storage centre chooses "permanent" paper to archive its data]. Transfert.net. 23 October 2003.
  10. ^ Ludovic Dupin (24 September 2015). "L'industrie au secours des déchets nucléaires" [Industry comes to the aid of nuclear waste]. Usinenouvelle.com. Retrieved 7 August 2023.
  11. ^ "Considérants 157 et 165 de la décision n° 2015-715 DC". Site du Conseil constitutionnel. 5 August 2015. Retrieved 7 August 2023.
  12. ^ "Enfouissement des déchets radioactifs : l'Assemblée fixe les modalités de création de Cigéo". Actu-Environnement. 12 July 2016. Retrieved 2020-10-07.
  13. ^ Galmiche, Nicolas (2016-07-12). "Déchets nucléaires. Bure-Cigéo : les députés adoptent la loi sur la réversibilité" [Nuclear wastes. Bure-Cigéo: members adopt the law on reversibility]. L'Est Républicain. Retrieved 2020-10-07.
  14. ^ Journal officiel du 6 août 1999
  15. ^ Stoerkler, Arnaud (30 August 2015). "Argile et radioactivité : l'évangile selon l'Andra" [Clay and radioactivity: the Gospel according to ANDRA]. Lasemaine.Fr.
  16. ^ [dead link]
  17. ^ "Andra Sites Meuse - Le projet Cigéo". www.andra.fr (in French). Retrieved 2017-11-27.
  18. ^
    World Nuclear News. World Nuclear Association
    . 23 June 2023. Retrieved 4 July 2023.
  19. ^ "Pierre-Marie Abadie, nouveau Directeur général de l'Andra" [Pierre-Marie Abadie, new Director General of Andra]. Sfen. Retrieved 2023-05-23.
  20. ^ "Marie-Claude Dupuis quitte l'Andra et rejoint la RATP". Drupal. 3 September 2014. Retrieved 2020-10-07..
  21. ^ Projet Cigeo : nouvelles nominations
  22. ^ JORF, 11 May2019.
  23. ^ a b c Raphaël Gourment (2019-01-21). "L'Andra paye des médias pour orienter l'opinion en faveur de Cigéo" [Andra pays the media to steer opinion in favour of Cigéo]. Reporterre, le quotidien de l'écologie. Retrieved 2019-01-21.
  24. ^ "Fiche Organisation « Haute Autorité pour la transparence de la vie publique". www.hatvp.fr. Retrieved 2021-06-01.
  25. ^ "Arrêt sur images". www.arretsurimages.net. Retrieved 2019-02-10.

Bibliography

External links