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ENERGY

‘Project of the century’: Swiss seek to bury radioactive waste

Storing radioactive waste above ground is a risky business, but the Swiss think they have found the solution: burying spent nuclear fuel deep underground in clay. 

'Project of the century': Swiss seek to bury radioactive waste
A picture shows the secure entrance of the acces tunnel to the Mont-Terri Rock Laboratory. (Photo by Fabrice COFFRINI / AFP)

The Mont Terri international laboratory was built to study the effects of burying radioactive waste in clay which sits 300 metres (985 feet) below the surface near Saint-Ursanne in the northwestern Jura region. 

The underground laboratory stretches across 1.2 kilometres (0.7 miles) of tunnels. Niches along the way, each around five metres high, are filled with various storage simulations, containing small quantities of radioactive material monitored by thousands of sensors. 

More than 170 experiments have been carried out to simulate the different phases of the process — positioning the waste, sealing off the tunnels, surveillance — and to reproduce every imaginable physical and chemical effect. 

According to experts, it takes 200,000 years for the radioactivity in the most toxic waste to return to natural levels. 

Geologist Christophe Nussbaum, who heads the laboratory, said researchers wanted to determine what the possible effects could be “on storage that needs to last for nearly one million years.” 

That “is the duration that we need to ensure safe confinement,” he said, adding that so far, “the results are positive.” 

Potential sites identified

Three prospective sites in the northeast, near the German border, have been identified to receive such radioactive waste. 

Switzerland’s nuclear plant operators are expected to choose their preferred option in September. 

The Swiss government is not due to make the final decision until 2029, but that is unlikely to be the last word as the issue would probably go to a referendum under Switzerland’s famous direct democracy system. 

Despite the drawn-out process, environmental campaigners Greenpeace say Switzerland is moving too fast. 

“There are a myriad of technical questions that have not been resolved,” Florian Kasser, in charge of nuclear issues for the environmental activist group, told AFP. 

For starters, he said, it remains to be seen if the systems in place can “guarantee there will be no radioactive leakage in 100, 1,000 or 100,000 years.” 

“We are putting the cart before the horse, because with numerous questions still unresolved, we are already looking for sites” to host the storage facilities, he said. 

Kasser said Switzerland also needed to consider how it will signal where there sites are to ensure they are not forgotten, and that people many centuries from now remain aware of the dangers. 

Swiss nuclear power plants have been pumping out radioactive waste for more than half a century. 

A picture shows rock core samples in the Mont-Terri Rock Laboratory. (Photo by Fabrice COFFRINI / AFP)

Until now, it has been handled by the National Cooperative for the Disposal of Radioactive Waste, or NAGRA, founded in 1972 by the plant operators in conjunction with the state.  For now, the waste is being stored in an “intermediary depot” in Wurenlingen, some 15 kilometres from the German border. 

Horizon 2060 

Switzerland hopes to join an elite club of countries closing in on deep geological storage. 

So far, only Finland has built a site, in granite, and Sweden gave the green light in January to build its own site for burying spent nuclear fuel in granite. 

Next up is France, whose Cigeo project, led by the National Agency for Radioactive Waste Management (ANDRA), plans to store radioactive waste underground in clay. 

“We are awaiting the declaration of public utility but in the meantime we will submit a request for a construction permit,” said ANDRA spokeswoman Emilie Grandidier during a visit to Mont Terri. 

Following the 2011 nuclear accident at the Fukushima power station in Japan, Switzerland decided to phase out nuclear power gradually: its reactors can continue for as long as they remain safe. 

A projected 83,000 cubic metres of radioactive waste, including some high activity waste, will have to be buried. 

This volume corresponds to a 60-year operating life of the Beznau, Gosgen and Leibstadt nuclear power plants, and the 47 years that Muhleberg was in operation before closing in 2019. 

Filling in the underground nuclear waste tombs should begin by 2060. 

“It’s the project of the century: we have carried out the scientific research for 50 years, and we now have 50 years for the authorisation and the realisation of the project,” said Nagra spokesman Felix Glauser. 

The monitoring period will span several decades before the site is sealed some time in the 22nd century. 

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ENERGY

Are Swiss cities cutting back on Christmas lights this year?

Cities across Switzerland cut back on festive lighting last year amid the energy crisis. We look at what's happening this year.

Are Swiss cities cutting back on Christmas lights this year?

Switzerland is a stunning place to visit during the festive period because of its bustling Christmas markets, twinkling lights, and winter weather.

But last winter, lighting was pared back significantly across many countries due to energy saving measures following Russia’s war against Ukraine. 

The Swiss government urged people to cut down on energy as much as possible due to fears over energy shortages and spiralling costs as Russia throttled supplies. 

Households and businesses were asked to turn down heating, use less hot water, cut down energy when cooking and switch off electrical devices when they weren’t in use. 

Swiss cities also announced plans to turn down heating and save electricity in public buildings, including controls on Christmas lights.

This year things look very different and the EU is no longer in the danger zone when it comes to looming energy shortages. But there are still some energy saving measures in place in Switzerland even though the government isn’t calling for them at this time. 

The city of Zurich was a pioneer in electricity saving measures last winter, announcing restrictions early on. Now Zurich has relaxed them: offices can again be heated to a temperature higher than 19C, at night churches and other monuments shine brightly.

However the City Vereinigung Zürich (Zurich City Association) is imposing some restrictions on Christmas lights. “We will refrain from switching on the Christmas lights in the morning,” Managing Director Dominique Zygmont told broadcaster SRF.

The switching on of the “Lucy” Christmas lights on Bahnofstrasse – an established tradition in Zurich – takes place at 6pm on November 23rd. They will remain in place until January 6th 2024.

READ ALSO: The Swiss Christmas markets opening in November

There are also restrictions in the city of Bern, with the Christmas light timings being regulated. The lights are to switch off at 11 pm. Reto Nause, the energy director at Bern, said some lighting events will also be cancelled. Meanwhile, street lighting will continue to be dimmed when safety permits. 

This makes ecological and financial sense, says Nause, because the price of energy is significantly higher than in previous years.

“We therefore have the impression that it is economically worthwhile to continue these savings measures,” he said.

Basel-City also wants to follow the example of last winter and has permanently adapted the regulations for administrative offices. An upper temperature limit of 20 to 21C now applies.

Mobile “Heizöfeli” or heaters and air-conditioning units are no longer allowed, nor is a personal printer at the workplace. On the other hand, the people of Basel can enjoy the Christmas lights in their full length this year – as things stand at the moment.

There will be slight restrictions on electricity consumption in other cities this year as well. However, energy is set to be less scarce in the upcoming winter compared to last year, said the Director of the Swiss Federal Office of Energy, Benoît Revaz.

“Europe is better prepared than a year ago,” Revaz added in a recent report on Swiss broadcaster SRF.

Just a year ago, Revaz warned that the winter of 2023/24 would be even more difficult than the last. However, the situation is better than predicted due to the well-filled gas storage facilities in Europe, and the French nuclear power plants, of which more are running than expected.

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