Process Flow Diagrams and Node Descriptions (PFDND) for the WMS
Process Flow Diagrams and Node Descriptions (PFDND) for the WMS
Slides - Institiute of Nuclear Materials Management Annual Meeting (INMM), Atlanta GA, July 20-24, 2014
Slides - Institiute of Nuclear Materials Management Annual Meeting (INMM), Atlanta GA, July 20-24, 2014
Slides - Institute of Nuclear Materials Management Annual Meeting, Atlanta GA, July 20-24, 2014
Slides - Institute of Nuclear Materials Management Annual Meeting (INMM), July 20-24 2014, Atlanta GA
To solve the still open question of high-level radioactive waste disposal, the countries having made the greatest progress in this
field usually choose to carry out comparing selection procedures including broad involvement of the public. This is a central
result of the “RepoSafe”symposium which took place from November 6 to 9, 2007, in Braunschweig. Within the scope of
this symposium, internationally leading experts, invited by the Federal Office for Radiation Protection (BfS) and Gesellschaft
Slides - Institute of Nuclear Materials Management, 55th Annual Meeting, July 20 – 24, 2014 Atlanta, Georgia
Slides - Institute of Nuclear Materials Management, 55th Annual Meeting, July 20 – 24, 2014 Atlanta, Georgia
The Federal Government will continue to meet Germany’s existing international obligations, particularly with regard to fulfilment of the Joint Convention on the Safety of Spent Fuel Management and on the Safety of Radioactive Waste Management. In submitting this report, Germany is demonstrating its compliance with the Joint Convention and how it ensures the safe operation of facilities for the management of spent fuel and radioactive waste, including the decommissioning of nu-clear installations.
The Federal Government will continue to meet Germany’s existing international obligations, par- ticularly with regard to fulfilment of the Joint Convention. In submitting this report, the Federal Re- public of Germany is demonstrating its compliance with the Joint Convention and ensuring the safe operation of facilities for the management of spent fuel and radioactive waste, including the de- commissioning of nuclear installations. At the same time, there is still a need for future action in order to maintain the required high standards of safety and ensure disposal.
There are currently nine power reactors in operation in Germany. These are exclusively light-water reactors (seven pressurised water reactors and two boiling water reactors whose fuel assemblies are composed of low-enriched uranium oxide or uranium/plutonium mixed oxide (MOX)).
Joint Convention on the Safety of Spent Fuel Management and on the Safety of Radioactive Waste Management, Questions and Comments in 2009 on the National Report posed to Germany
This report was written within the EU-project InSOTEC (www.insotec.eu) which aims to generate a better understanding of the complex interplay between the technical and the social in radioactive waste management and, in particular, in the design and implementation of geological disposal. In a first step 13 countries have been analysed in order to identify prevailing socio-technical challenges.