Another Franco-German nuclear waste transport this autumn

Ger­man author­i­ties have allowed anoth­er trans­port of high­ly active nuclear waste from France to the north Ger­man vil­lage of Gor­leben this year.

It will be the first since 2006 and as usu­al is expect­ed in autumn on dates not yet revealed.

Ger­man author­i­ties have allowed anoth­er trans­port of high­ly active nuclear waste from France to the north Ger­man vil­lage of Gor­leben this year.

It will be the first since 2006 and as usu­al is expect­ed in autumn on dates not yet revealed.

Each trans­port by train and trucks usu­al­ly costs about 30 mil­lion euros to police as thou­sands of demon­stra­tors from all over Ger­many con­verge on Gor­leben, rough­ly equidis­tant between Ham­burg and Hanover.

About 20,000 police drawn from all over Ger­many are usu­al­ly mar­shalled into the area to assure pas­sage on the last 20 kilo­me­tres of the jour­ney by heavy-duty, low-loader trucks from a rail­head at Dan­nen­berg to the pre­fab­ri­cat­ed stor­age hall at Gor­leben.

On past occa­sions both police and demon­stra­tors have been injured in clash­es. Police have been chas­tised many times by the country’s supreme court for ille­gal actions against pro­test­ers.

A new French type of cas­ket claimed to with­stand greater radi­a­tion heat will be used this year while devel­op­ment of a new Ger­man type has been held up.
This delay has caused French and Ger­man author­i­ties to call off the trans­port planned for next year.

The local group resist­ing waste dump­ing in Gor­leben demands from the licens­ing author­i­ty, the Fed­er­al Agency for Radi­a­tion Pro­tec­tion (MfS), total dis­clo­sure of per­mit doc­u­men­ta­tion for the 11 socalled Cas­tor cas­kets to roll this year.

“It can­not be allowed that the pop­u­la­tion is exposed to great dan­gers while secu­ri­ty doc­u­men­ta­tion is kept secret,” said a media spokesman for the Lüchow Dan­nen­berg Cit­i­zens Envi­ron­ment Ini­tia­tive (BI), Fran­cis Althoff.

“After it’s become known that the books were cooked in regard to the safe­ty of the new­ly devel­oped Ger­man Cas­tor HAW 28 M, now all the facts about the just per­mit­ted French mod­el TN 85 need to be put on the table in a pub­licly under­stand­able form.

“Specif­i­cal­ly we want to know whether drop-crash or fire tests were made, or whether again only ques­tion­able math­e­mat­i­cal mod­els were the foun­da­tion for the per­mit,” Althoff wrote in a media release.

“The secre­cy hand­i­caps our rights to lit­i­gate. The trans­ports have to be stopped imme­di­ate­ly.”

The waste orig­i­nat­ed in Ger­man pow­er sta­tions and was trans­port­ed to La Hague in north­ern France for pro­cess­ing in a plu­to­ni­um fac­to­ry there. Ger­many is con­trac­tu­al­ly oblig­ed to take the unus­able rem­nants back.

The last trans­ports from La Hague to Gor­leben, with 11 cas­kets each, are planned for 2010 and 2011.

The gov­ern­ment of Low­er Sax­ony state, where Gor­leben is locat­ed, says the stor­age hall there now holds 80 Cas­tor cas­kets and 33 more are due from France.

Local activists, who include sci­en­tists, claim that every Cas­tor cas­ket con­tains the equiv­a­lent of about two fifths of the radi­a­tion released by the Cher­nobyl melt­down in 1986 or the Hiroshi­ma bomb.

The oppo­nents argue that every new ship­ment makes it more like­ly that a salt mine built at vast cost in Gor­leben to explore its suit­abil­i­ty will become the per­ma­nent repos­i­to­ry for high­ly radioac­tive waste.

Waste in a sim­i­lar nuclear dump, the ‘Asse’ tri­al salt mine near Wolfen­büt­tel, about 80 kilo­me­tres east of Hanover, is flood­ing and the radi­a­tion is threat­en­ing to con­t­a­m­i­nate the bios­phere. The Gor­leben pit was con­struct­ed using the same sci­ence as Asse.

As pres­sure grows to solve the waste issue and the Euro­pean Union dou­bles spend­ing to pro­mote nuclear pow­er, the Gor­leben pit looks more and more like­ly to become Germany’s – if not Europe’s – final dump.

This although the pit has con­tact with ground water and aquifers which, if breached, would con­t­a­m­i­nate drink­ing water sup­plies in a radius of hun­dreds of kilo­me­tres.
Gor­leben activists argue that there has been sci­en­tif­ic proof since the ear­ly 80s that the Gor­leben salt dome can­not pre­vent atom­ic waste from enter­ing the bios­phere because it lacks a seal­ing rock cov­er.

They demand that Gor­leben be giv­en up as a dump site and argue that the only way to solve the waste issue is to stop nuclear pow­er pro­duc­tion.