The problem of systematic radioactive waste management in Croatia will be resolved with the construction of a radioactive waste management facility, Zarko Katic, state secretary at the Ministry of the Interior, said in parliament on Wednesday.
Speaking during discussion on the proposal to amend the Radiological and Nuclear Safety Act, Katic said that only low and medium radioactive waste from industry, medicine and science, as well as from the Krsko nuclear power plant, would be disposed of in the future facility, and not highly radioactive spent nuclear fuel.
As for the low and medium radioactive waste from Krsko, it is mostly disposable material worn by workers and discarded at the end of the day, he added.
Katic said that industrial and medical radioactive waste was currently disposed of in two storage facilities in Zagreb – the Rudjer Boskovic Institute and the Institute for Medical Research and Occupational Health. It currently amounts to 11.5 cubic metres and is expected to reach about 100 cubic metres by 2060.
With the waste from Krsko this amount will be an additional 1,130 cubic metres, and by the time Krsko closes in 2043, it is estimated that it will have reached 1,780 cubic metres, Katic said.
MPs did not have any major objections to the proposal and, in light of the current energy crisis, a portion of them supported the use nuclear energy as clean energy.
“Nuclear energy is needed. It is clean and our future lies in nuclear energy,” said Marin Miletic of the opposition populist Most party. Darko Klasic of the Croatian Social Liberal Party (HSLS) agreed, saying that nuclear energy is “a clean, safe, competitive and low-carbon source of energy.”
“The world has said yes to nuclear power plants. We need to have them because with growing consumption they are the only good, albeit not perfect, solution for now,” said the right-wing DP party’s Davor Dretar.
“I am sure that people in Dalmatia would not support the construction of a nuclear power station,” said Social Democrat Renata Sabljar Dracevac, stressing that the use of nuclear energy in Croatia requires a national consensus.
Anka Mrak-Taritas (Civil and Liberal Alliance) also said that Croatia should declare its political view on nuclear energy.
Katic said there were three reasons why the present law needed amending – to align it with the law on the Fund for financing the decommissioning and disposal of radioactive waste and with EU directives, and to improve the system. He announced that a nuclear emergency response plan would be adopted soon.
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