NONTOXIC DISCHARGE, A NEW REQUIREMENT ON RADIOACTIVE LIQUID WASTE TREATMENT AT OPG NUCLEAR STATIONS

2001 
The Municipal and Industrial Strategy for Abatement (MISA) regulation, which came into effect in 1995 in Ontario (Ontario Regulation 215/95 under the Environmental Protection Act), imposed additional limitations on liquid discharges from power generating stations. The MISA regulation has divided discharges into non-event and event streams, which have to be monitored for, prescribed parameters and for toxicity. Radioactive Waste Management Systems fall into category of non-event streams. Standard toxicity testing involves monitoring lethality of Daphnia Magna and Rainbow Trout in the effluent. The new legislation has imposed a need to address several issues: acute toxicity, complying with the specific limits prescribed by the regulation and, in a long run, chronic toxicity. In the first phase, the correlation between various chemical parameters and acute toxicity was established and several investigations were initiated. The effects of microbial activities in the waste streams were the most difficult to address because many synergies between chemical toxicants and microbial toxins were not known. Due to limited time schedule to achieve MISA compliance, a wide approach was taken. Approaches included best management practices in the power plants, waste stream segregation and a choice of treatment technology that could simultaneously address a number of potential toxins. Furthermore, the variability of the waste streams in present and in future had to be taken into account. This approach had a drawback in potentially generating significant costs of consumables and volumes of secondary solid radioactive waste. A strategy, to monitor treatment technology performance and to optimize processes and costs in the long run, was therefore devised. Control of waste generation and centralizing laundry facilities from Pickering and Darlington to the Bruce site have enabled achievement of MISA compliance with simple processes and modifications at Pickering and Darlington stations (laundry is a key source of organic toxins). In parallel, the more elaborate technologies were applied at Bruce 1-4 site for treatment of additional laundry wastes. Originally, Active Liquid Waste Treatment (ALW) systems were designed to remove radioactivity from the liquid waste streams. Achieving radioactivity Derived Emission Limits (DEL's) and Station Target Limits was never a problem in Ontario Power Generation stations and the ALW treatment systems were rarely required for this purpose. Modifications of these existing systems and installation of the new treatment systems, were a part of the strategy developed at OPG.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    0
    References
    0
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []