Abstract

Abstract. After implementation of the Repository Site Selection Act (StandAG) in 2017, the Federal Company for Radioactive Waste Disposal (BGE), as the German waste management organization, started the site selection procedure for a nuclear repository for high-level radioactive waste in Germany. On the way towards the repository site with the best possible safety, the site selection procedure is required to be a participatory, transparent, learning and self-questioning process based on scientific expertise. With the Subareas Interim Report published in 2020, first results were presented outlining subareas with favourable geological conditions in preparation for defining the siting regions for surface exploration. Currently, one of the main tasks in the site selection procedure is to establish a detailed geoscientific synthesis (Geosynthesis) for each subarea. The Geosynthesis contains all geological information for the characterization of each subarea and hence serves as the foundation for the subsequent analysis within the representative preliminary safety assessments (rvSU) and the geoscientific consideration criteria. Based on this information, all areas within the subareas will be evaluated to find the siting regions for surface exploration. The Geosynthesis includes a description of the regional geology focusing on the host rock, the overburden and relevant geological processes that may affect the potential nuclear waste repository in the next 1 million years. The data for the Geosynthesis are mostly compiled from state authorities and include 3-D geologic models, regional maps and cross-sections, bore hole data (e.g. geophysical logs) and seismic data. Furthermore, it is necessary to digitize, process, interpret and evaluate the aforementioned data using the available knowledge from the scientific literature in the context of the site selection procedure.

Highlights

  • On the way towards the repository site with the best possible safety, the site selection procedure is required to be a participatory, transparent, learning and self-questioning process based on scientific expertise

  • With the Subareas Interim Report published in 2020, first results were presented outlining subareas with favourable geological conditions in preparation for defining the siting regions for surface exploration

  • The Geosynthesis contains all geological information for the characterization of each subarea and serves as the foundation for the subsequent analysis within the representative preliminary safety assessments and the geoscientific consideration criteria

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Summary

Introduction

The Geosynthesis includes a description of the regional geology focusing on the host rock, the overburden and relevant geological processes that may affect the potential nuclear waste repository in the 1 million years. Geoscientific Characterization and Interpretation (Geosynthesis) within the Preliminary Safety Assessment in the German Site-Selection Procedure for a High-level Nuclear Waste Repository

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