China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Nuclear processing site suspended

- By CANG WEI in Nanjing cangwei@chinadaily.com.cn

A coastal city in eastern China on Wednesday backed away from its selection of a site for a Sino-French nuclear waste processing plant, after days of protests by residents.

Since Saturday, thousands of people concerned about safety took to the streets of Lianyungan­g, Jiangsu province, to protest the proposed 100 billion yuan ($15 billion) plant.

The local government said on its website on Wednesday that the city would “suspend the site selection and preliminar­y work on the nuclear recycling project”. No other details were given.

French nuclear fuel group Areva and China National Nuclear Corp signed a deal for the project in 2012 for processing spent fuel produced by nuclear power plants.

Constructi­on is scheduled to start in 2020, with completion by 2030. But the location has yet to be decided.

A media report on July 26 said that a deputy director of the State Administra­tion of Science, Technology, and Industry for National Defense, accompanie­d by CNNC executives, were inspecting Lianyungan­g as a possible location for the plant. The report drew huge public attention and local people protested.

“The final site will be decided by the central government after being scientific­ally researched, released to the public and supported by the local government,” Xue Weiming, general manager of the CNNC’s Nuclear Fuel Reprocessi­ng Co, was quoted as saying by Science Daily on Wednesday.

He added that radiation risks in the nuclear reprocessi­ng program are low and the influence on the environmen­t and nearby residents can be controlled.

However, Chen Yong, a teacher at the city’s Huaihai Institute of Technology, said it’s the transporta­tion process, not the nuclear reprocessi­ng technology, that he is worried about.

“Nobody can give assurances that the spent nuclear waste is 100 percent safe during transporta­tion, as people are needed to lift it, unload it and drive it during the process,” Zhang said.

“People have a right to worry about their safety and demand that the dangerous material is not in their backyard,” he said. “The government should communicat­e with the public patiently and earn their trust on the program.”

The city government promised earlier this week that it would release accurate informatio­n about the plant to the public in a timely manner. It also said that anyone who fabricates informatio­n or spreads rumors will be punished.

Lianyungan­g, about 500 kilometers north of Shanghai, is a port city with a population of 4.5 million.

Tianwan Nuclear Power Station, with two Russian-designed reactors, is located there. Two more units are being built.

The Chinese mainland now has 34 nuclear power plants in operation, 20 under constructi­on and more planned, according to the World Nuclear Associatio­n.

Founded in 2011, Nuclear Fuel Reprocessi­ng Co is responsibl­e for preliminar­y work in the China-France nuclear recycling program that is supported by both countries. Since 2015, it has researched about 10 sites in coastal provinces, including Shandong, Fujian and Zhejiang.

People have a right to worry about their safety and demand that the dangerous material is not in their backyard.” Chen Yong, teacher at Huaihai Institute of Technology

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