Office of Environmental Management

02/20/2024 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 02/20/2024 15:04

EM Explores Vitrification Technology Abroad to Apply to Mission at Home

The EM team visited the Marcoule site in south France to view CEA's vitrification pilot facility, and they met with Science & Technology Institute Director Christophe Joussot-Dubien. This visit was important to EM for evaluating vitrification capabilities to assess potential applicability for treatment of calcined high-level waste at EM sites, including the INL Site.

EM is also exploring vitrification technology across the U.S.

Avery recently visited Catholic University, one of the leading institutions with a cutting-edge laboratory focusing on safe waste immobilization.

In Texas, EM leaders and other subject matter experts recently visited Veolia's GeoMelt Nuclear Waste Vitrification Facility to understand more about possibilities to vitrify legacy waste. That groundbreaking technology could help EM make low-level nuclear legacy waste safer, more cost effective and more efficient to treat and dispose.

France's significant contributions to the radioactive waste management field are of particular interest to EM. They include the deactivation and decontamination of legacy nuclear sites; decommissioning and dismantling of facilities; remediation, including groundwater and soil; long-term waste management solutions; and workforce development and stakeholder engagement.

EM upholds a memorandum of understanding with ANDRA that provides a framework for cooperation between the U.S. and France in radioactive waste management, including issues relating to repository disposal technologies, geologic and engineering studies, decommissioning approaches, groundwater and soil remediation, and interim storage of spent fuel.

A joint statement by the United Kingdom, France, Canada and the U.S. declares their commitment to continue building their longstanding collaboration of cleanup of nuclear legacy sites. The statement was issued during the Waste Management Symposia in Phoenix, Arizona, last year. EM will meet with leaders from France and other countries at this year's symposia from March 10-14.

"I believe that international partnerships help all of us solve our remaining challenges to environmental cleanup by enabling the sharing of best practices, allowing greater leverage of science resources and providing opportunities to accelerate innovation," Avery said in closing during a meeting with Orano.