| Literature DB >> 23619797 |
Jens-Ove Näslund1, Jenny Brandefelt, Lillemor Claesson Liljedahl.
Abstract
For a deep geological repository for spent nuclear fuel planned in Sweden, the safety assessment covers up to 1 million years. Climate scenarios range from high-end global warming for the coming 100 000 years, through deep permafrost, to large ice sheets during glacial conditions. In contrast, in an existing repository for short-lived waste the activity decays to low levels within a few tens of thousands of years. The shorter assessment period, 100 000 years, requires more focus on climate development over the coming tens of thousands of years, including the earliest possibility for permafrost growth and freezing of the engineered system. The handling of climate and climate change in safety assessments must be tailor-made for each repository concept and waste type. However, due to the uncertain future climate development on these vast time scales, all safety assessments for nuclear waste repositories require a range of possible climate scenarios.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23619797 PMCID: PMC3636373 DOI: 10.1007/s13280-013-0406-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ambio ISSN: 0044-7447 Impact factor: 5.129
Fig. 1Relationship between the reconstruction of last glacial cycle conditions, the reference glacial cycle, the additional climate scenarios, and the corresponding safety assessment scenarios for the spent nuclear fuel repository. Red arrow indicates the choice of repeating the reconstructed last glacial cycle conditions for a future reference glacial cycle. Black arrows indicate modifications made to the reference glacial cycle to construct additional future climate scenarios to obtain a comprehensive coverage of possible climate developments of relevance for long-term safety. Blue arrows show which climate scenarios have been used to analyze which safety assessment scenario
Fig. 2Example of coupled modeling performed for the safety assessment of the spent nuclear fuel repository. The model output was used to make a reconstruction of conditions for the last glacial cycle, in turn used for the construction of the reference glacial cycle. Only input and output data shared between the models used to generate the boundary conditions are shown
The six climate scenarios constructed and analyzed for the spent nuclear fuel repository, and their use in the safety assessment SR-Site
| Climate scenario | Description | Basis on which the climate scenario was developed | Use in safety assessment |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Reference glacial cycle | Repetition of conditions reconstructed for the last glacial cycle, including the Weichselian glaciation | Based on a reconstruction of ice sheet-, permafrost, and shore-line development for the last glacial cycle | Main safety assessment scenario—base case |
| 2. Global warming | Moderate global warming. Longer period of initial temperate climate conditions than in 1 | Based on a medium-level greenhouse gas emission scenario (IPCC emission scenario A1B). The maximum air temperature increase in the Forsmark region is 3.7 °C (uncertainty range 3.2–4.2 °C), occurring 2700 years AP. The air temperature returns to present conditions after c. 25 000 years | Main safety assessment scenario—variant |
| 3. Extended global warming | Extensive and long-lasting global warming. Longer period of initial temperate climate conditions than in 1 and 2 | Based on a high-level greenhouse gas emission scenario (IPCC emission scenario A2). The maximum air temperature increase in the Forsmark region is 6 °C (uncertainty range 3.9–6.5 °C), occurring 3000 years AP. The air temperature returns to present conditions after c. 50 000 years | Additional safety assessment scenario |
| 4. Extended ice sheet duration | Longer period of glacial conditions that in 1 | Based on an envisaged glacial cycle without ice-free conditions during a period corresponding to the interstadial reconstructed for the Middle Weichselian in the Reference glacial cycle | Additional safety assessment scenario |
| 5. Maximum ice sheet configuration | Thicker ice sheet than in 1 | Based on the largest ice sheet over Fennoscandia during the Quaternary period (past c. 2 Ma), i.e., the Saalian glaciations | Additional safety assessment scenario |
| 6. Severe permafrost | Deeper permafrost than in 1 | Based on the most pessimistic combination of assumptions for all parameters of importance to permafrost growth, including last glacial cycle air temperatures | Additional safety assessment scenario |
Fig. 3Future climate scenarios for the safety assessment of a high-level waste repository. The development of climate and climate-related processes (ice sheet growth, permafrost development, shore-line changes) are depicted by successions of climate domains (see text for explanation). The level of detail in the climate developments is obtained from the last glacial cycle conditions and reflects natural climate variability. The climate scenarios were used as basis for the analysis of long-term safety of the planned repository for spent nuclear fuel in Forsmark, Sweden (SKB 2010, 2011). Note that one of the additional climate scenarios, with the maximum ice sheet configuration and thickness, is not depicted in the figure but could be said to fit within the development shown in the extended ice sheet duration scenario
Fig. 4Climate scenarios for the assessment of long-term safety for a shallow repository for short-lived low- and intermediate-level waste (SKB 2013). The example is from the SKB safety assessment for the SFR repository located in Forsmark