1. Authorisation procedure
In France, the dismantling of a reactor or nuclear facility can only begin once two prior phases have been completed:
- The first involves the final shutdown and dismantling decree (MAD-DEM), which must be issued by the government for the facility in question.
- The second involves the examination of all the facility’s safety case files by the French Nuclear Safety Authority (ASN), who must issue its authorisation to proceed with clean-up and dismantling. During this examination process, a public enquiry must be held for the relevant populations and stakeholders. The ASN is supported by the Institute for radiation protection & nuclear safety (IRSN), its technical expert.
However, the operators hold the responsibility for the dismantling of their facilities and the management of the waste resulting from these activities.
2. Material and waste removal
Any equipment and waste remaining inside the facility must be removed in two phases:
- First, the staff must remove any material and spent fuel.
- Then, the staff must dismantle all the remaining tools and large components, e.g. gloveboxes, dissolvers, reactor vessel, etc.
3. Clean-up
During this third phase, the operators in charge of the dismantling project must decontaminate all the engineered structures. The objective is to eliminate all the radioactivity in the buildings. It may also be necessary to demolish all or part of the buildings to do this.
4. Classification downgrade
An inspection phase is initiated once all the clean-up and dismantling operations have been completed. Carried out by the ASN, this inspection is designed to make sure that all the operations have been done correctly and that the initial objectives have been reached. If the inspection is successful, the facility’s classification is downgraded and it is ready to host other activities, nuclear or other.
The operator has to deal with any operational issues that arise during each phase. This can, in turn, generate numerous scientific and technical questions that can only be resolved through research and development (R&D).