Periodic Reporting for period 1 - NUCLEARDECOM (Half-lives/Afterlives: Labor, Technology, Nature, and the Nuclear Decommissioning Business)
Okres sprawozdawczy: 2021-10-01 do 2023-09-30
During the second part of the fellowship (October 2022-October 2023) the PI met (in person and through video conferences) experts and activists involved in decommissioning projects at Saluggia, Trino Vercellese, Latina, Isar 1, Tihange (Belgium), and Diablo Canyon (California) and Pilgrim (Massachusetts). Visits inside decommissioning nuclear plants took place at Trino Vercellese and Latina (Italy), and Mühleberg (Switzerland). The PI gained a better understanding of the number of factors shaping decommissioning projects: unique features and challenges of site environmental characteristics, socioeconomic and political contexts, regulatory context, and reactor technical designs, which demand ad hoc decommissioning strategies. The research has extended into the exploration of expert communities’ approaches and debates on decommissioning. The PI attended several expert conferences and technical workshops. Participating to these events gave the PI the possibility to better understand the decommissioning cultures (plural) that exist across different national contexts, and to gauge the distance that often exist between how experts look at decommissioning and how local communities experience the uncertainties connected to the long socioecological transition involved in decommissioning projects.
The material and the results of the actions have been openly discussed through public outlets, academic conferences and other dissemination activities, for a total of 12 events.
Today, nuclear decommissioning is an internationally recognized, regulated, and economically remunerative sub-field, but many questions that shaped early debates in the 1970s remain unanswered. One of the most controversial aspects is related to the costs involved in the dismantling operations of nuclear facilities. If nuclear decommissioning and waste disposal costs are not put into the equation, it is difficult to understand whether nuclear power generation is economically competitive with other energy sources, especially renewables.
Especially in the United States and in the UK, community involvement is often organized through Citizens Advisory Panels, and in Italy through so-called tavoli tecnici. A closer look at these organized forms of participation makes one wonder whether citizens advisory panels (which do not have any formal decision-making or deliberative power) are really enhancing and empowering community level involvement or rather are forms of rationalization of the public debate with the intent of preventing more adversarial forms of engagement with state agencies and corporate entities.
NUCLEARDECOM has produced the following outcomes: (1) a history of nuclear decommissioning practices since the 1970s; (2) mapping out the structure and operational challenges of the nuclear decommissioning industry in the US and in several EU countries; (3) exploring the social, economic, and ecological effects of decommissioning projects at specific sites. Three articles, covering each one of the research dimensions mentioned above, will be submitted for publication (open access) by the Spring of 2024. The PI contributed to building a network of researchers working on decommissioning in the UK, in Sweden and Norway, in Belgium, Italy, Germany, and in the US. To bring them together, the PI organized a conference panel which took place at the meeting of the European Society for Environmental History in Bern between 22-26 August 2023.
Given the complexity and the variety of nuclear decommissioning experiences that the PI has started to document and analyze, future actions will be required to include more case studies and explore dimensions that could not be analyzed before closure of the project.