Korean waste agency to cooperate with Finland, Spain
The Korea Radioactive Waste Agency has signed agreements with Finland's Posiva Oy and Spain's Enresa to strengthen cooperation in radioactive waste management.
On 25 November, the Korea Radioactive Waste Agency signed a Memorandum of Understanding with Posiva and its subsidiary Posiva Solutions. The signing ceremony was attended by Ilkka Poikolainen, chairman of the board of directors of Posiva, and Mika Pohjonen, president of Posiva Solutions.
Finnish radioactive waste management company Posiva is jointly owned by Finnish nuclear power companies TVO and Fortum and has developed that country's geological disposal facility at Olkiluoto. Posiva has applied for an operating licence for the repository for a period from March 2024 to the end of 2070. Pending a final decision on its application by the government, Enresa is scheduled to begin operating the world's first high-level radioactive waste disposal facility in 2025.
"In particular, the MoU with Finland's Posiva and Posiva Solutions is expected to serve as a cornerstone for securing technological capabilities in high-level radioactive waste management projects, including sharing experiences in constructing and operating underground research facilities, promoting joint research, and operating human resource development programs through expert exchanges," the Korea Radioactive Waste Agency said.
The Korean agency on 27 November signed an MoU with Spanish decommissioning and waste management firm Enresa, attended by Enresa President Jose Luis Navarro Rivera.
The signing of the MoU with Enresa (Image: Korad)
Enresa was created in 1984 as a public, non-profit organisation responsible for the management of radioactive waste, with the aim to perform an essential public service: collecting, treating, conditioning, storing and disposing of the radioactive waste produced throughout the Spanish State. It has been operating the low and intermediate-level radioactive waste disposal facility in El Cabril since 1992, while high-level radioactive waste is managed in on-site storage facilities at the nuclear power plants.
"Through an MoU with Spain's Enresa, we plan to expand the foundation necessary for promoting the corporation's future projects by sharing information on the treatment and disposal of decommissioning waste and the operation of an interim storage facility for high-level radioactive waste," the Korea Radioactive Waste Agency said.
The agency said that, through the MoUs, it will strengthen cooperation on issues including: the establishment of radioactive waste management policy and site selection process; and the treatment, transport, storage and disposal of radioactive waste.
"I sincerely hope that productive cooperation activities will be actively carried out based on these MoUs," said Korad Chairman Cho Seong-don. "In Korea, we will also work hard to promote management projects led by the corporation, starting with the enactment of the Special Act on the Management of High-Level Radioactive Waste."