[ RadSafe ] Visiatome nuclear museum opens in France
Franta, Jaroslav
frantaj at aecl.ca
Thu Sep 1 09:53:11 CDT 2005
The museum's web site is http://www.visiatome.fr (Very nicely done, IMO --
félicitations !!)
Jaro
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
NUCLEONICS WEEK SEPTEMBER 1, 2005
Marcoule angles for tourists with new nuclear museum
France inaugurated its first museum devoted to radioactivity and the nuclear
fuel cycle last week, in an initiative industry minister Francois Loos said
would help bring nuclear technologies closer to the public.
<SNIP>
The Visiatome is housed in a low-slung building with nature-friendly raw
wood shingles, local stone, and low-profile brushed steel nameplate. Inside,
the visitor finds information- in both French and English-about energy,
waste in general, nuclear waste, and health effects of radioactivity in a
series of rooms joined by passageways, all in a low-lit, high-tech
atmosphere with plenty of interactivity.
<SNIP>
the Visiatome is heavy on explanation about the nuclear fuel cycle and
treatment of nuclear waste, especially high-level and long-lived waste.
In one exhibit, which compares reprocessing with the once-through fuel
cycle, the visitor is informed that reprocessing allows concentration of
final waste from France's entire nuclear power production into about 1,400
containers per year, holding about 250 cubic meters total. The total annual
volume of waste corresponds to about "a tube of lipstick per (French)
family," it said.
Reprocessing, the exhibit says, allows elimination of "toxic plutonium" from
final wastes, reduces future energy dependence by recycling uranium, and
"hardly increases the cost of a kilowatt-hour."
Not reprocessing, it says, "requires very long-term management of spent
fuel" and "makes it necessary to condition spent fuel in appropriate
containers."
France and Japan have chosen reprocessing, Sweden, Finland and Spain have
chosen direct spent fuel disposal, South Korea, South Africa and Hungary
"have not yet made a deci-sion," and "the U.S. ... is re-examining the
question," Visiatome states.
But diplomatically, it concludes that "each country's approach depends on
the national energy and environmental policy and on constraints imposed on
natural resources."
Visiatome (http://www.visiatome.fr), which opened to the public in April, is
open seven days a week to receive both school classes and general tourists.
<SNIP>
Visiatome partners also plan to conduct "educational workshops" about energy
and nuclear for young audiences, and has facilities for scientific workshops
as well.
<SNIP>
Participants in the inauguration were greeted by a noisy group of protesters
from Sortir du Nucleaire, a network of
French antinuclear organizations, who bore banners reading "Visiatome =
nuclear propaganda."
<SNIP>
the facility stemmed from an early 2004 request from former Prime Minister
Jean-Pierre Raffarin for the CEA
to help give the French public "the elements of physics that they need to
understand what's at stake in energy" policy.
"There's no connection with the national debate" on nuclear waste policy,
which was called for by Loos and former
environment minister Serge Lepeltier earlier this year.
Visiatome "isn't pronuclear communication," Bugat said, but an attempt to
provide the "physical bases to understand"
nuclear energy.
-Ann MacLachlan, Paris
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