Zapping Nuclear Waste in Minutes Is Nobel Winner’s Holy Grail Quest

Elevator shaft at the Cigeo project in Bure, France. Photographer: Alex Kraus/Bloomberg

A physics professor who looks a little like Doc from the “Back to the Future” movies has captured the imagination of France’s nuclear industry.

Gerard Mourou—one of the three winners of the 2018 Nobel Prize for Physics—claims that the lifespan of radioactive waste could potentially be cut to minutes from thousands of years. Although Mourou, 74, is quick to say that the laser option for nuclear waste that he and Irvine, California-based Professor Toshiki Tajima are working on may be years away, its promise has created a flurry of excitement for the sector in France.

Gerard Mourou
Gerard Mourou in his laboratory at the Ecole Polytechnique. Photographer: Philippe Lopez/AFP/Getty Images

“It would be the Holy Grail,” said Christian Chardonnet, head of infrastructure for major projects at the French ministry of research. “Gerard is a gifted and very enthusiastic scientist, and he didn’t realize the hopes the words in his Nobel speech would create. But every possible way must be opened and we stand ready to fund it if necessary.”

France’s Nuclear Landscape

Operational reactors

Permanently shutdown

La Hague

 

Cigeo, Bure

Paris

Nantes

Lyon

Marcoule

Toulouse

Operational reactors

Permanently shutdown

6

La Hague fuel

reprocessing plant

 

 

2

4

2

2

4

Paris

Cigeo underground

waste location, Bure

2

2

2

4

2

2

Nantes

4

3

2

2

4

Lyon

4

2

2

2

8

3

Toulouse

Marcoule research

and storage facility

Operational reactors

Permanently shutdown

6

La Hague fuel

reprocessing plant

 

 

2

4

2

2

4

Paris

Cigeo underground

waste location, Bure

2

2

2

4

2

2

Nantes

4

3

2

2

Lyon

4

4

2

2

2

8

3

Marcoule research

and storage facility

Toulouse

Operational reactors

Permanently shutdown

6

La Hague fuel

reprocessing plant

 

 

2

4

2

2

4

Paris

Cigeo underground

waste location, Bure

2

2

2

4

2

2

Nantes

4

3

2

2

Lyon

4

4

2

2

2

8

3

Marcoule research

and storage facility

Toulouse

Sources: World Nuclear Association Reactor Database, Andra

Nuclear energy has its advocates—it spews little by way of emissions and is produced relatively cheaply. But no country can claim to have a comprehensive solution for dealing with its toxic waste. Environmental group Greenpeace estimates that there’s a global stockpile of about 250,000 tons of toxic spent fuel spread across 14 countries, based on data from the International Atomic Energy Agency. Of that, 22,000 cubic meters—roughly equivalent to a three-meter tall building covering an area the size of a soccer pitch—is hazardous, according to the IAEA. A 2015 report by GE-Hitachi put the cost of disposing nuclear waste—outside of China, Russia and India—at well over $100 billion.

France produces more nuclear waste per-capita than any other country. With almost 72 percent of its electricity coming from nuclear energy—the most in the world—it generates 2 kilograms of radioactive waste per person each year. And although only a fraction of that is highly toxic, more than 60 years after getting into nuclear energy, the country still has no definitive way to cope with it.

Share of Nuclear in the Energy Mix

Many European countries rely on nuclear for their electricity generation

71%

France

56

Ukraine

55

Slovakia

51

Belgium

48

Hungary

41

Sweden

36

Slovenia

Czech Rep.

35

71%

France

56

Ukraine

55

Slovakia

51

Belgium

48

Hungary

41

Sweden

36

Slovenia

Czech Rep.

35

71%

France

56

Ukraine

55

Slovakia

51

Belgium

48

Hungary

41

Sweden

36

Slovenia

Czech Rep.

35

2017 data
Source: Bloomberg NEF

On April 17, France opens its third national debate on nuclear waste, bringing together policy makers, advocacy groups and scientists to discuss handling an estimated 10,000 cubic meters of radioactive waste collectively produced by the country’s 58 reactors over their lifespan. And that doesn’t include atomic material generated by the military and medical sectors.

The most toxic parts are stored right now in short-term facilities in La Hague in Normandy, in Marcoule and Cadarache in southern France and in Valduc, near Dijon. At the facility in La Hague, an hour’s drive from the D-Day beaches, specially designed robots cast the most radioactive nuclear waste into glass casings before putting them in inox containers. Already the world’s largest facility for processing atomic waste, it is constantly being expanded—making a long-term solution urgent.

State-controlled nuclear entities Electricite de France SA and Orano SA, charged with nuclear waste management, and CEA, France’s Atomic Energy Agency, have spent billions on the toxic material. At least another 25 billion euros ($28 billion) is set to be plowed into an underground maze of tunnels near the village of Bure in northeastern France that could be the final resting place for the highly toxic waste starting in 2025.

Underground Lab

The site in Bure is being studied for suitability for storing radioactive waste

Forest to be converted

into area for servicing underground work

Bure

Waste

receiving zone

Cigeo underground laboratory

Bure

Waste to be stored 500m underground in Callovo- Oxfordien claystone

Waste to be stored 500m underground in Callovo- Oxfordien claystone

Bure

Forest to be converted

into area for servicing underground work

Bure

Mandres-en-Barrois

Saudron

Waste

receiving zone

Cigeo underground laboratory

Service wells for transferring staff, materials and extracting air

Descent passage to disposal tunnels from waste receiving zone

High-level

waste galleries

Medium-level

waste galleries

Sources: Andra, Geoportail, BRGM

Like with other deep storage sites in place, under construction or being considered in countries including the U.S., Japan, Finland and Sweden, the Bure plan has drawn protests. Greenpeace has pointed to several risks, not least of which being the chance of the toxic material seeping into the groundwater or a fire releasing radioactive gases.

A replica nuclear waste cannister stands beside a dormant storage borehole at the Cigeo laboratory. Photographer: Alex Kraus/Bloomberg

Laser Pulses
Enter Mourou, with his high-intensity laser option. The physicist’s work has paved the way for the shortest and most-intense laser pulses ever created. In his Nobel Lecture on Dec. 8, Mourou laid out his vision for using his “passion for extreme light” to address the nuclear-waste problem.

“Nuclear energy is maybe the best candidate for the future, but we are still left with a lot of dangerous junk,” he said. “The idea is to transmute this nuclear waste into new forms of atoms which don’t have the problem of radioactivity. What you have to do is to change the makeup of the nucleus.”

Mourou has been in huddles with the CEA, the French parliament’s committee for scientific choices and the state’s energy and research ministries even though he maintains it’s very early days.

“I think about what it could mean all the time,” the scientist said in an interview at the Ecole Polytechnique, France’s most prestigious engineering school, near Paris, where he teaches. “I don’t overlook the difficulties that lie ahead. I dream of the idea, but we will have to wait and see what happens in the years to come.”

‘Like Karate’
The process he and Tajima are working on is called transmutation, which involves changing the composition of an atom’s nucleus by bombarding it with a laser. “It’s like karate—you deliver a very strong force in a very, very brief moment,” said Mourou, wearing the golden pin of the Nobel Prize on his lapel.

Transmutation research has been going on for three decades, with efforts in the U.K., Germany, Belgium, U.S. and Japan either failing or in various stages of study.

“The research remains at the laboratory level and the prospect of seeing transmutation used at an industrial level is complex and expensive,” said Emmanuel Touron, who heads research on future fuel disposal at the CEA.

For Cedric Villani, a French lawmaker and the winner of the Fields Medal—the Nobel Prize equivalent for mathematics—that’s no reason to give up. “What Mourou is really after is the accelerator that the laser creates,” he said. “It’s far-off, but why not?”

Mourou and Tajima want to create a high-speed laser-driven accelerator to produce a beam of protons that can penetrate atoms. The idea is to shrink the distance the beam would have to travel by 10,000 times, avoiding the impracticability of current accelerators.

“I can imagine that the physics might work, but the transmutation of high-level nuclear waste requires a number of challenging steps, such as the separation of individual radionuclides, the fabrication of targets on a large scale, and finally, their irradiation and disposal,” said Rodney C. Ewing, a professor in nuclear security and geological sciences at Stanford University. A radionuclide is an atom that has excess nuclear energy, making it unstable.

Orano doesn’t want to wait around. It wants to push ahead with its Bure deep-storage project, saying “many more years will be required before any industry-scale application” can emerge from Mourou’s work.

That’s short-sighted, said Bernard Laponche, a physicist who co-signed Greenpeace’s report this year on nuclear waste and who opposes any plan to put the toxic material deep in the ground.

“Even if it means waiting for many more years, dozens of years, we should wait,” he said in an interview. “We must give science a chance.”