地质作为核废料容纳的不合格基础设施

Penny Harvey
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引用次数: 0

摘要

随着气候变化的严重后果最终促使世界各国政府开始探索如何摆脱对化石燃料的依赖,核电作为一种潜在的能源在英国重新被提上议事日程。然而,这种新发现的热情面临着一个根本性的挑战--即自上世纪 50 年代第一座核电站建成以来不断积累的放射性废料仍有待确保其在未来的长期安全。在政府层面,国际社会明确承诺,管理放射性废料最安全的选择是将其深埋在地下的工程地质处置设施(GDF)中。芬兰在这一领域处于国际领先地位,位于 Onkalo 的处置库预计将于 2025 年全面投入使用。瑞典政府于 2022 年批准了建造乏核燃料地下处置库的计划,加拿大、法国、日本、瑞士、英国和美国都在积极开展选址和设计工作。促使公众接受地质处置的策略各不相同,参与方式、投入的时间和资金以及决策过程也各不相同。这些过程在概念和政治上都具有挑战性。它们不仅需要跨学科的技术专长和科学理解,还需要有想象力,能够跨越时间和空间的尺度进行思考,这就是 Ele Carpenter(2016: 14)所建议的 "反向开采"。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Geology as Unconforming Infrastructure For the Hosting of Nuclear Waste
As the dramatic consequences of climate change finally begin to motivate governments around the world to explore how to move away from a dependence on fossil fuels, nuclear power is back on the agenda in the UK as a potential energy source. However, this new-found enthusiasm confronts a fundamental challenge—namely, that the radioactive wastes, accumulating since the very first nuclear power stations were built in the 1950s, have yet to be made safe for the long-term future. At the governmental level, there is a clear international commitment to the view that the most secure option for the management of radioactive waste matter is burial deep underground in an engineered geological disposal facility (GDF). Finland leads the international field, and the repository at Onkalo is expected to be fully operational by 2025. The Swedish government approved plans for the construction of an underground repository for spent nuclear fuel in 2022, with Canada, France, Japan, Switzerland, the UK, and the USA all actively engaged in siting and design initiatives. Strategies for generating public acceptance of geological disposal vary, as do the modes of engagement, the investments of time and money afforded, and the decision-making processes. These processes are conceptually and politically challenging. They require not only technical expertise and scientific understanding across an entire range of disciplines, but also the imaginative capacity to think across scales of time and space in what Ele Carpenter (2016: 14) has suggestively referred to as ‘reverse mining’.
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