bat / bpm resource guide - … · best available techniques (bat) can be defined as: “[…] the...
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National Waste Programme
BAT / BPM Resource Guide
Guidance Document NWP-REP-100 – Issue 1 – Oct 2015
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Name Role
Originator: Helen Cassidy National Programme Implementation
Manager
Checker: Nicole Towler National Programme Implementation
Manager
Approver: Hannah Kozich Head of National Programme
Document history
Issue Date Amendments
DRAFT Aug 2015 Draft document for comment
1 Oct 2015 First issue
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Contributors to the Development of this Guide
Craig Ashton LLW Repository Ltd
Tim Bond Magnox Ltd
Simon Clark Dstl (obo MOD)
Richard Clarke Environment Agency
Gary Clarke Urenco
Jim Cochrane SEPA
Howard Falconer LLW Repository Ltd
Ruby Fleckney Capenhurst Nuclear Services Ltd
Simon Hunter LLW Repository Ltd
Juliet Long Environment Agency
David Loudon NDA
Anna MacDonald Capenhurst Nuclear Services Ltd
Alyson Morris NDA
Marc Rigby RWM
Lorna Stevens EDF
Rachel Tott AWE
Simon Turner Magnox Ltd
Rob Way Sellafield Ltd
The authors recognise the significant input from Magnox Ltd in the provision of information from
their BAT / BPM assessment process, which has provided a useful basis for the attributes and
attribute descriptions.
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Glossary
Term Definition
ALARA As Low As Reasonably Achievable
BAT Best Available Technique
BPM Best Practicable Means
BREF Best Available Techniques Reference Document
CEFAS Centre for Environment, Fisheries and Aquaculture Science
CIRIA Construction Industry Research and Information Association
D-DKMIT Deactivation and Decommissioning Knowledge Management
Information Tool
DECC Department for Energy and Climate Change
DEFRA Department for the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs
EA Environment Agency
EARWG Environment Agencies Requirements Working Group
EGG NDA Guidance Document
EIA Environmental Impact Assessment
ESC Environmental Safety Case
GHG Greenhouse Gases
HAW Higher Activity Waste
IAEA International Atomic Energy Agency
IEMA Institute of Environmental Management and Assessment
IIA Integrated Impact Assessment
ILW Intermediate Level Waste
IRAT Initial Radiological Assessment Tool
ISO International Standards Organisation
JWMP Joint Waste Management Plan
LA-LLW Low Activity Low Level Waste
LFE Learning From Experience
LLW Low Level Waste
LLWR Low Level Waste Repository
LoC Letter of Compliance
MOD Ministry of Defence
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Term Definition
NDA Nuclear Decommissioning Authority
NEA Nuclear Energy Agency
NICoP Nuclear Industry Code of Practice
NILG Nuclear Industry Liaison Group
NORM Naturally Occurring Radioactive Material
NRW Natural Resources Wales
NuLeAF Nuclear Legacy Advisory Forum
NWDRF Nuclear Waste and Decommissioning Research Forum
NWP National Waste Programme
OECD Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
ONR Office for Nuclear Regulation
PAF Performance Agreement Form
R&D Research and Development
RIFE Radioactivity in Food and the Environment
RSA93 Radioactive Substances Act (Scotland) 1993 [as amended]
RSF Repository Site Form
RWM Radioactive Waste Management Ltd
SAP Safety Assessment Principles
SED Safety and Environmental Detriment
SEPA Scottish Environment Protection Agency
TAG Technical Assessment Guides
TBuRD Technical Baseline and Underpinning Research and Development
TECDOC Technical Document
TRL Technology Readiness Level
UK United Kingdom
UKRWI UK Radioactive Waste Inventory
VLLW Very Low Level Waste
WAC Waste Acceptance Criteria
WIF Waste Inventory Form
WRAP Waste and Resources Action Programme
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Contents
Contributors to the Development of this Guide ........................................................... 3
Glossary .......................................................................................................................... 4
1. What is BAT / BPM? ............................................................................................... 7
2. How is the BAT / BPM identified? ......................................................................... 8
3. Purpose of this guidance ...................................................................................... 8
4. How to use this resource guide ............................................................................ 8
5. Things to consider when using this guidance .................................................... 9
Appendix 1: Setting the scope of BAT / BPM Assessments .................................... 10
Appendix 2: Attributes and sub-attributes for options identification and evaluation
............................................................................................................................... 11
Appendix 3: Resource List and Resource Maps ....................................................... 18
Appendix 3.1 Scoping BAT / BPM assessments ......................................... 19
Appendix 3.2 Technical Feasibility Attribute ............................................... 21
Technical Feasibility Attribute Resource Map ............................................. 25
A3.3 Environmental Impact Attribute ......................................................... 26
Environmental Impact Attribute Resource Map .......................................... 30
A3.4 Cost Attribute ...................................................................................... 31
Cost Attribute Resource Map ........................................................................ 33
A3.5 Community Impact ................................................................................ 34
Community Impact Attribute Resource Map ............................................... 37
A3.6 Political Attribute ................................................................................... 38
Political Attribute Resource Map .................................................................. 40
A3.7 Safety and security .............................................................................. 41
Safety and Security Attribute Resource Map .............................................. 44
A3.8 Legal ..................................................................................................... 45
Legal Attribute Resource Map ...................................................................... 48
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1. What is BAT / BPM for radioactive waste? Best Available Techniques (BAT) can be defined as:
“[…] the latest stage of development of processes, facilities or methods of operation which is practicable, suitable and appropriate to limit waste arisings and disposals”.
The identification and implementation of BAT option(s) for radioactive waste management is important, as it ensures that waste producers are minimising the impact on the environment by their actions whilst ensuring that the selected option is acceptable within the constraints on their organisation. The need to identify and implement BAT / BPM is a legal requirement on waste producers on nuclear sites across the UK, through their Environmental Permits or Radioactive Substances Act 1993 (RSA93) Authorisations. It arises from a regulatory requirement that radioactive waste disposals are optimised whilst keeping public exposures to ionising radiation as low as reasonably practicable (ALARP). This guidance document relates to identification of BAT / BPM for low level radioactive waste (LLW). Best Practicable Means (BPM) is the equivalent of BAT for the regulation of radioactive wastes in Scotland and is a requirement on waste producers through their RSA93 Authorisations. The identification of the BAT / BPM option for radioactive waste management is thus a key requirement for waste producers. BAT / BPM assessment should:
Be proportionate – the scale and complexity of the BAT / BPM process (and selected option) should reflect the nature of the waste.
Address the full waste lifecycle –from avoidance to generation / retrieval to final disposal.
Consider any learning from experience from other projects, waste producers, stakeholders and suppliers.
Consider the needs and views of relevant stakeholders – early engagement with stakeholders will contribute to a robust BAT / BPM assessment.
Be evidence based. The Nuclear Industry Code of Practice on Best Available Techniques for the Management of the Generation and Disposal of Radioactive Waste (BAT NICoP) is a very useful source of information on the definition, features and methodology for undertaking BAT / BPM assessment. This NICoP can be accessed on-line via http://www.nuclearinst.com/write/MediaUploads/SDF%20documents/Best_Available_Techniques_for_the_Management_of_the_Generation_and_Disposal_of_Radioactive_Wastes_-_NICoP.pdf.
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2. How is the BAT / BPM identified? There are a range of methodologies that can be used to
determine the BAT / BPM for a particular waste population
ranging from reasoned argument through to formal numerical-
based methods such as multi-attribute decision analysis.
Waste producer organisations will have their own arrangements for the determination of
BAT / BPM and these should be followed by practitioners. The methodology selected
should be proportionate to the size, complexity and potential implications of the
wastestream. The desired outcome of a BAT / BPM assessment is a practicable option
that has been selected through an optimisation process; thus the methodology selected
should involve proportionate optimisation (often undertaken through some process of
optioneering). Advice will be available from relevant specialist personnel local to the site
or organisation, or from the regulators.
It should be noted that BAT / BPM assessment is not a “one-off” activity. Waste
producers and other duty holders should keep operations and projects under review to
ensure that they continue to apply BAT / BPM as required, and that the BAT / BPM
option remains proportionate, practicable and optimised.
3. Purpose of this guidance This guidance document provides information on the resources that could be used to
support the scoping and assessment of BAT / BPM by waste producers. It signposts to
the different types of resources available including documents, data and expertise.
This guidance brings together and consolidates experience from a range of practitioners
and stakeholders, and acts as a directory of resources which can be researched and
used during the BAT / BPM process. This resource guide is not, however, an exhaustive
list of resources; in particular additional sources of information local to the organisation
or site will also be available. Advice should be sought from the relevant personnel about
other sources of information which could be used in the BAT / BPM process.
This document does not intend to set an expectation on how BAT should be undertaken,
what factors should be considered or how the inclusion / exclusion of factors or
information should be justified. This document is complementary to processes,
procedures and expectations used by waste producers; and should be used in line with
such arrangements.
4. How to use this resource guide This guidance is a directory of resources which can be researched and used during the
BAT / BPM process. Resources can be documents, data or people; essentially any
source of information which is useful or relevant to the process of scoping or assessing
BAT / BPM. This guidance provides information that can support the scoping, options
identification and options evaluation phases of the BAT / BPM process.
Additional
information is
available in the
BAT NICoP.
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This resource guide contains the following sections:
Scoping Resources (Appendix 1 and Appendix 3.1) – this provides a list of useful
questions and sources of information which support the successful scoping of a
BAT / BPM assessment.
Attributes and sub-attributes (Appendix 2) – this provides a list of attributes and
sub-attributes which could be considered when screening options and / or
assessing options during the BAT / BPM determination process.
Resource list and Resource Maps (Appendix 3) – this section provides a
summary of the different resources, where they can be accessed and a measure
(based on stakeholder opinion) of their relative usefulness. In addition, this
appendix shows how the information resources map against the sub-attributes
for a given attribute group (showing the resources that may prove useful in the
evaluation of a given sub-attribute). It should be recognised that this is not an
exhaustive or mandatory mapping; and that due regard to the size and
complexity of the problem should be given when selecting both sub-attributes
and sources of information to evaluate them.
5. Things to consider when using this guidance
1. Resources may be documents, data or people.
2. Information resources may be local to the site / organisation or may be more
widely available. Look for and use additional local, specific sources of
information as well as using those identified in this guidance document.
3. The range (number, type and detail) of attributes and information sources used
in the BAT / BPM identification process should be proportionate to the size and
complexity of the problem and the methodology.
4. Methodologies for undertaking BAT / BPM assessment should be selected in line
with local arrangements and should be proportionate.
5. Seek advice from the BAT / BPM specialists for your site / organisation and / or
from the regulators when undertaking an assessment.
6. Use appropriate experts to inform the assessment (such as Radioactive Waste
Advisors, Radiation Protection Advisers, environmental or safety specialists,
engineering/maintenance specialists and regulators).
IMPORTANT:
Where available, hyperlinks have been provided to information sources available via
the internet to support waste producers in the use of this document. However, the
internet is subject to constant change and the hyperlinks listed may be out-of-date. If
this occurs, please use an appropriate search engine to search for the document by
producer (author) and document title.
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Appendix 1: Setting the scope of BAT / BPM Assessments The scoping phase is arguably the most important stage in undertaking a BAT / BPM
assessment, as it is during this phase that decisions are made on the boundaries and
methodology for the study. Information on ways to undertake scoping of BAT and BPM
assessments is available in local arrangements and the BAT NICoP. However, the following
questions may be useful prompts when undertaking the scoping phase of BAT / BPM
assessments.
A matrix of resources that may prove useful when undertaking scoping of BAT / BPM
assessments is provided in Appendix 3.1.
Considerations for scoping BAT / BPM assessments:
What can be done to avoid generating waste?
How can the waste hierarchy be applied?
Are there any relevant National BAT assessments?
Does the waste merit consolidation into other volumes?
Is the waste novel or similar to other wastes?
Has anyone handled this type of waste before?
Is there any international best practice for handling this type of waste?
What are the boundaries of the waste – type of waste; does the study cover a
project, site or wider?
Are there any potential solutions in the non-radioactive sector?
Is anyone interested in working together on this project? Can different waste
producers consolidate their waste? Who might act as an integrator? Is there an
integrator available already?
What options are available?
What are the problems with waste route availability now and / or anticipated in the
future?
What are the drivers and concerns of my organisation?
What are the timescales for the project?
What is the project trying to achieve?
Are there any other constraints or imperatives?
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Appendix 2: Attributes and sub-attributes for options identification and evaluation There are a diverse range of attributes and sub-attributes which can be used
in the identification and evaluation of options during a BAT / BPM
assessment. This section provides a summary of potential attributes and sub-
attributes which can be used in the BAT / BPM process.
Attribute Sub-attribute Description of sub-attribute
Technical
feasibility
Difficulty of deployment How easy or difficult it is to install, commission, operate, maintain and decommission an
option.
Time to end of project or liability
The time until the project is complete or until the waste / facility / land ceases to require
further management by the waste producer (i.e. the degree to which an option will
contribute to delivery of early solutions)
Complexity of disposal case
The expected level of difficulty in making a successful disposal case for a given option
(i.e. ability to meet the requirements of a Letter of Compliance (LoC), Environmental
Safety Case (ESC) or Waste Acceptance Criteria (WAC)).
Susceptibility to further degradation How robust the physical features of an option are to degradation in the long term.
Implementation risk The risk that future rework will be required following implementation of an option.
Land use
The extent to which the planned or desired future (long-term) use of land will be
impacted by the implementation of an option; or the extent to which planned land use
will impact on the availability of land for implementation of an option.
Impact on future options The extent to which an option will impact on future options for managing waste or
facilities.
Development status The maturity and availability of a particular option, often measured as a Technology
Readiness Level (TRL).
The number and range of attributes used will depend on the
size / complexity of the problem and the methodology used.
Seek further advice from a relevant technical expert on which
to consider if unsure.
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Attribute Sub-attribute Description of sub-attribute
Dependence on other site facilities The level of dependence an option will have on other site facilities and the degree of
competition for these other assets, or the timing of availability of these assets.
Consistency with other plans and
strategies
The degree to which options are consistent with established plans and strategies (local,
regional and / or national).
Precedence Whether an option has been successfully implemented on another site and has
delivered the desired outcomes.
Compliance with own permit Whether the option complies with the criteria and limitations within existing
Environmental Permits / RSA93 Authorisations.
Resilience
The ability of an option to deal with the circumstances that could reasonably arise or to
shocks (e.g. in different waste characteristics, funding changes and other external
factors).
Likelihood of success in delivering
desired outcome
The likelihood that the option will successfully deliver the desired outcome.
Permissions required
The time it would take to obtain the number and range of permissions (including
external permissions such as Environmental Permit / RSA93 Authorisation and planning
consent) required for implementation of an option.
Availability of skills and capabilities Whether any specific skills and capabilities for an option are required, and whether
these skills are available in the required timeframe.
Strategic impacts on assets /
facilities
Whether an option will have a positive or negative impact on the capability, capacity
and longevity of assets / facilities (including impact on a national basis).
Environmental
impact Waste Hierarchy
The degree to which an option delivers preferable performance against the Waste
Hierarchy.
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Attribute Sub-attribute Description of sub-attribute
Precautionary approach
The precautionary approach includes considerations of intergenerational equity and of
sustainable utilisation. It is not an excuse for using excessively conservative
assumptions when assessing risks, but is a requirement to respond cautiously to
properly assessed risks. It involves consideration of the precautionary principle to risk
management (i.e. the social responsibility to ensure that decisions do not cause harm to
others).
Transport mode, proximity and
transport miles
The mode of transport and the number of waste miles associated with an option.
Greenhouse gas emissions The total greenhouse gas emissions associated with implementation of an option.
Use of unrecoverable materials The use of unrecoverable materials (such as concrete and steel) associated with
implementation of an option.
Non-radioactive emissions
(gaseous)
The environmental impacts arising from the non-radioactive components of gaseous
discharges associated with an option.
Non-radioactive emissions
(aqueous)
The environmental impacts arising from the non-radioactive components of aqueous
discharges associated with an option.
Volume / activity of LLW (primary
and secondary)
The volume and / or activity of Low Level Waste (LLW) and Very Low Level Waste
(VLLW) resulting from an option [primary and secondary wastes].
Volume of ILW (primary and
secondary)
The volume and / or activity of Intermediate Level Waste (ILW) resulting from an option
[primary and secondary wastes].
Exposure to the public from
emissions (gaseous)
The radiological exposure received by the public representative individual(s) associated
with gaseous discharges from an option.
Exposure to the public from
emissions (aqueous)
The radiological exposure received by the public representative individual(s) associated
with aqueous discharges from an option.
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Attribute Sub-attribute Description of sub-attribute
Exposure to the public from the
option
The radiological exposure received by the public representative individual(s) associated
with an option.
Radioactive emissions (gaseous) The environmental impacts arising from any radioactive gaseous discharges associated
with an option.
Radioactive emissions (aqueous) The environmental impacts arising from any radioactive aqueous discharges associated
with an option.
Disturbances (noise, nuisance,
etc.) to host and receiving
communities
Disturbance and nuisance (e.g. from noise, light, number of transport moves) to host
and receiving communities from an option.
Volume and nature of conventional
waste (primary and secondary)
The volume and nature of non-radioactive waste resulting from an option [primary and
secondary wastes].
Resource use (energy, water and
other raw materials)
The amount of resources such as energy, water and other raw materials used in an
option.
Radioactive / non-radioactive
impact on non-human species
The impact on non-human species from the radioactive and non-radioactive emissions
from an option.
Cost
Cost profile The cost profile (set of costs over the lifetime of the option implementation lifecycle) for
a given option.
Direct and indirect costs The direct and indirect costs associated with a given option.
Externalities (public dose, etc.) as
cost
The degree to which an option will cause an affect to other parties without this being
reflected in market prices.
Savings and benefits The level of savings and benefits that a given option would provide.
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Attribute Sub-attribute Description of sub-attribute
Community
impact
Impacts on future generations
The impact that an option will have on future generations (including the level and
duration of the management, control and clean-up of any contaminated material
generated by an option).
Effect on community outside (host
and receiving)
The impact that an option would have, from a socio-economic perspective, on host and
receiving communities.
Alignment with local and regional
plans
The degree to which an option aligns with local and regional socio-economic plans.
Political
(local,
national and
international)
Political implications The wider local, regional and national political implications that would arise from a given
option.
Stakeholder considerations The degree of likely stakeholder acceptance of implementation of a given option.
Organisational reputation The degree to which implementation of a given option would impact on organisational
reputation by stakeholders and the local community.
Stakeholder attitude The expected attitude and level of acceptance of a given option by stakeholders.
Safety and
security
Criticality The risk of (and degree of mitigation required to prevent) criticality from an option.
Intrinsic safety risk The intrinsic potential for significant nuclear, radiological or conventional accidents,
taking into account the ease of mitigation.
Time to significant hazard
reduction
The speed of hazard reduction that a given approach or technology would provide
(expressed as a time period).
Exposure to workers (lifecycle) The individual and / or collective radiological exposure received by workers to the point
that no further work is required (excluding doses from off-site transport).
Exposure to workers (waste facility) The radiological exposure received by the worker representative individual(s)
associated with an option (at the facility where the option is implemented).
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Attribute Sub-attribute Description of sub-attribute
Exposure to workers from transport The radiological exposure received by the worker representative individual(s)
associated with off-site transport.
Exposure to the public from
transport
The radiological exposure received by the public representative individual(s) associated
with off-site transport.
Exposure to the public from option
implementation
The radiological exposure received by the public representative individual(s) associated
with implementation of the option (excluding transport).
Active / passive management The degree of reliance on active systems, monitoring and maintenance to achieve or
maintain safety, as well as the potential need for prompt human intervention.
Conventional safety risk
The risks to workers from a conventional safety perspective including construction,
operation, decommissioning, working at height, confined space working, heavy lifting
etc. This excludes the risks from off-site transport.
Safety risk from non-radioactive
waste
The risks to workers and the public from the hazardous properties of non-radioactive
waste associated with an option.
Conventional safety risk to workers
(transport)
The conventional safety risk to workers from on-site / off-site transport associated with
the option (e.g. from traffic accidents).
Conventional safety risk to the
public (transport)
The conventional safety risk to the public from on-site / off-site transport associated with
the option (e.g. from traffic accidents).
Transport security The degree of transport security required (its complexity, cost etc.) for implementation
of an option.
Precautionary approach The potential for the risk to safety to have been under-estimated and to be significant.
Novelty or prior use The maturity of the option (is the option novel or has it been successfully used
elsewhere?).
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Attribute Sub-attribute Description of sub-attribute
Security (for option
implementation)
The extent of security requirements and controls required for a given option.
Safeguards The extent of safeguards controls of nuclear material required for a given option.
Impact of loss of corporate memory
/ records
The impact that any loss of corporate memory or records would have on
implementation of an option and realisation of desired outcomes.
Legal
Legal implications The wider legal implications that would arise from a given option.
Article 37 Whether implementation of a particular option would require Article 37 permissioning
and the impact this would have on the desired outcome.
Insurance The degree to which a given option would require additional insurance and the
likelihood of obtaining this.
Planning constraints The degree to which implementation of an option would be constrained by or would
contribute to additional planning consent conditions.
Propensity for claims The likelihood that implementation of a given option would have to insurance claims.
Transfrontier Shipment Whether implementation of a particular option would require Transfrontier Shipment
consent, the availability of this and the impact this would have on the desired outcome.
Consistency with government
policy and strategy.
The degree to which options are consistent with established government policy and
strategies.
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Appendix 3: Resource List and Resource Maps The Resource List and Resource Maps provide information on and signposting to resources which may be useful when undertaking BAT / BPM
assessments; and are divided by BAT / BPM attribute group.
Resource list
The resource list provides a summary of useful resources to help determine the scope of the BAT / BPM assessment and to support option
identification and evaluation. It provides: a resource code (used in the resource maps); the name of the resource; the type of media that the
resource is; where the resource is available from; the usefulness / ease of use of the resource; and a description of the resource including what it
is, how it is useful and where it can be obtained (including hyperlinks where relevant).
Resource media Available from Usefulness / ease of use
Document
Data or statistics
Person / group
Waste producer site / organisation
Other waste producer sites /
organisations
Supply chain (including LLW Repository
Ltd and RWM)
Local communities
Regulators
@ Internet website
Low usefulness / difficult to use
Medium usefulness / ok to use
Useful / easy to use
Resource maps
These are provided after the relevant resource list and provide a mapping of the resources against the sub-attributes (as defined in Appendix 2)
to show which sub-attribute groups the resources may be useful in assessing. It should be noted that this is not an exhaustive mapping exercise
and also that the resources may be used in other ways than shown.
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Appendix 3.1 Scoping BAT / BPM assessments
These are generic sources of information which may be useful in scoping a BAT / BPM assessment (including consideration of the questions in Appendix 1) and which may prove useful across the
whole BAT / BPM assessment process.
Resource
code Resource
Resource
media
Available
from Usefulness Ease of use Comments
SC1 UK Radioactive Waste Inventory (UKRWI) @
UKRWI is very
high level.
This provides information about the volume, characteristics and arisings profile for wastes
(typically on a wastestream basis); and is updated on a three-yearly basis. Inventory
information can be accessed on-line [https://www.nda.gov.uk/ukinventory/].
SC2 Waste Inventory Form (WIF)
This provides information about the volume, characteristics, arisings profile and routing
assumptions for wastes (typically on a wastestream basis). This information is updated on an
annual basis and is available internally within organisations.
SC3 Joint Waste Management Plans (JWMP) @
JWMP are plans developed by waste producers which demonstrate how the waste producer is
implementing the UK LLW Strategy. These provide summaries of delivery and transformational
activities for strategy implementation, identification of opportunities and a forward five-year
projection of waste arisings by waste route. These can be obtained internally or else via the
LLW Repository Ltd website (http://llwrsite.com/national-waste-programme/programme-
management-arrangements/joint-waste-management-plans/).
SC4
Internal information repositories for inventory,
characterisation reports and BAT / BPM
assessments
These provide information on inventory, characterisation and historical BAT assessments for
individual sites / organisations. This information is available internally within organisations.
SC5 Nuclear Waste and Decommissioning
Research Forum (NWDRF) @
It may be difficult to
identify the NWDRF
representative.
The NWDRF is a forum whose role is to promote a common understanding and collaboration
between relevant bodies across the UK about respective research and development needs,
risks and opportunities required to enable the delivery of the decommissioning of the UK’s
nuclear legacy. It involves waste producers (NDA and non-NDA estate), the NDA, research
organisations, regulators and other stakeholders. It is a source of expert contacts and
information about research and development (R&D). Information about the NWDRF is available
on the NDA Knowledge Hub or from the relevant site contact(s).
SC6
Technical Baseline and Underpinning
Research and Development (TBuRD)
documents
@
The TBuRD is a document produced by NDA estate sites which summarises the technical
baseline and R&D needs for organisations. This could provide information on timescales and
organisational needs. These should be available internally within organisations, although some
publish on their websites. These are not available for most non-NDA sites although they may
have equivalent documents.
SC7 LLW Repository Ltd Problematic Waste
Inventory database @
Cannot currently be
accessed in its full
state by duty
holders.
This is a database which compiles information on the UK lower-activity problematic waste
inventory. Data from the database is available upon request from the NWP Office and
summaries of the information are published on-line via http://llwrsite.com/national-waste-
programme/supporting-guidance-and-analysis/.
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SC8 EARWG database @
The EARWG database is a resource containing summaries of technologies and approaches for
the minimisation of radiological waste compiled by the Environment Agencies Requirements
Working Group (EARWG). This is available online
[http://www.rwbestpractice.co.uk/Default.aspx] but is a little out-of-date. Members of EARWG
are also a useful source of expertise and contacts.
SC9 Decision calendar or technology insertion
calendar
May not be
available for every
site.
These are documents which specify when decisions or technologies are required against a
timeline of operations / decommissioning for a waste producer site; giving information about
when options are required. If produced by an organisation, these should be available internally.
SC10 Environmental Permits / RSA93
Authorisations @
These documents are permissions from the relevant environmental regulators that define the
conditions and limitations that a waste producer or waste receiver (duty holder) needs to abide
by when undertaking waste management activities on their site. These may specify things such
as environmental discharge limits, permitted waste routes, etc. These are available from
individual facilities (some are available on-line) or else can be obtained for a fee from the
relevant environmental regulator (the Environment Agency, the Scottish Environment
Protection Agency or Natural Resources Wales).
SC11 National strategic BAT assessments @
Strategic level BAT studies have been undertaken to determine and underpin the strategic
decisions relating to waste treatment for VLLW, soft-solid organic waste and metallic waste;
and to provide a source of information for waste producers undertaking their own BAT / BPM
assessments. These are available on-line via http://llwrsite.com/national-waste-
programme/supporting-guidance-and-analysis/.
SC12 Accessing the Waste Services
(NWP/REP/093) @
Accessing the Waste Services is a guidance document, developed by the NWP Office, which
provides a summary of the routes available under the LLW Repository Ltd Waste Service
frameworks and the process to be followed to access the services. This is available on-line via
http://llwrsite.com/national-waste-programme/supporting-guidance-and-analysis/.
SC13 NDA Value Framework @
This is NDA’s departmental specific guidance on what it values and how to measure it. It
provides a toolkit that can be used to consistently assess the value and impact of different
strategies, funding scenarios and options. This can be obtained on-line
[http://www.nda.gov.uk/publication/egg08-nda-guidance-and-expectations-for-business-cases-
and-value-management/].
SC14
Lord Chancellor’s Code of Practice on the
Management of Records issued under
Section 46 of the Freedom of Information Act
2000.
@
This guidance document provides information on the importance of records management, risk
assessment relating to records and knowledge management. This sets out the arrangements
which relevant bodies should follow in creating, keeping, managing and destroying records.
This is available on-line (https://www.btp.police.uk/pdf/Lord-Chancellors-code-of-practice-
Section-46-2009.pdf).
SC15 Regulatory dialogue
Dialogue can and should be had with the relevant local or national regulators to enable
improved understanding of regulatory views and requirements; as well as providing an
opportunity to discuss any necessary or beneficial changes to conditions in permits.
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Appendix 3.2 Technical Feasibility Attribute
Resource
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Available
from Usefulness Ease of use Comments
T1 Technology Readiness Levels (TRLs) @
TRLs are a means of measuring how ready a technology or item of equipment is for use in plant
operations. Guidance on defining TRLs and how they can be applied is available in NDA
guidance on TRLs [http://www.nda.gov.uk/publication/guide-to-technology-readiness-levels-for-
the-nda-estate-and-its-supply-chain/].
T2 IAEA Technical Documents @
IAEA Technical Documents (TECDOCs) are a series of documents developed by the IAEA
covering a range of topics such as waste management, decommissioning and radiological
safety. These provide a compendium of technical information on these subjects and can be
accessed on-line [http://www-pub.iaea.org/books/IAEABooks/Series/34/IAEA-TECDOC].
T3 EARWG Database @
The EARWG database is a resource containing summaries of technologies and approaches for
the minimisation of radiological waste compiled by the Environment Agencies Requirements
Working Group (EARWG). This is available online
[http://www.rwbestpractice.co.uk/Default.aspx] but is a little out-of-date. Members of EARWG
are also a useful source of expertise and contacts.
T4 Manufacturers Specifications @
These are summaries of technologies, feedstock requirements, throughput, operating envelope,
etc. for specific technologies produced by manufacturers. These are available direct from
manufacturers but can be difficult to obtain.
T5 Radioactive Waste Management Ltd (RWM)
(people, documents and website) @
RWM is the organisation responsible for the implementation of geological disposal of higher
activity waste for England and Wales. Information is available from RWM about geological
disposal and associated requirements for waste management. Documents and contact details
are available via their website [http://www.nda.gov.uk/rwm/].
T6 Waste Acceptance Criteria (WAC) and
underlying safety cases @
WAC define what wastes can be accepted for treatment and disposal at individual waste
receiver sites (including requirements for packaging, labelling, records, etc. where relevant);
whilst the underlying safety cases define the conditions that the facility operates under to
ensure safe operations now and in the future. These WAC are available via individual suppliers,
although some are accessible on-line. The WAC for the LLWR site can be accessed via
http://llwrsite.com/customer-portal/waste-acceptance-criteria/.
T7 Environmental Permits and Discharge
Authorisations @
These documents are permissions from the relevant environmental regulators that define the
conditions and limitations that a waste producer or waste receiver (duty holder) needs to abide
by when undertaking waste management activities on their site. These may specify things such
as environmental discharge limits, permitted waste routes, etc. These are available from
individual facilities (some are available on-line) or else can be obtained from the relevant
environmental regulator (the Environment Agency, the Scottish Environment Protection Agency
or Natural Resources Wales) for a fee.
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T8 LLW Repository Ltd Waste Management
Services (people, documents and website) @
LLW Repository Ltd manage the UK’s primary LLW disposal facility, manage a diverse range of
waste management services (providing waste producers with access to supply chain services
for, amongst other things, metallic waste treatment, incineration and VLLW disposal) and lead
the LLW National Programme. LLW Repository Ltd can provide advice on all aspects of LLW
management. Information, documents and contact details are available via the LLW Repository
Ltd website [http://llwrsite.com/].
T9 National strategies and policies @
National strategies and plans define national (Government) level expectations for management
of LLW in the UK. These are available online:
Policy for the Long-Term Management of Solid Low Level Radioactive Waste in the
United Kingdom:
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/254393/L
ow_level_waste_policy.pdf
UK Strategy for Management of Solid LLW from the Nuclear Industry –
https://www.gov.uk/
Strategy for Management of solid low level radioactive waste from the non-nuclear
industry in the United Kingdom Part 1 – Anthropogenic
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/48291/46
16-strategy-low-level-radioactive-waste.pdf
Strategy for the Management of Naturally Occurring Radioactive Material (NORM)
waste in the United Kingdom:
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/335821/F
inal_strategy_NORM.pdf
Implementing Geological Disposal
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/332890/
GDF_White_Paper_FINAL.pdf
Scotland’s Higher Activity Waste Policy -
http://www.gov.scot/Topics/Environment/waste-and-pollution/Waste-
1/16293/higheractivitywastepolicy
Joint regulatory guidance on Higher Activity Waste management -
http://www.onr.org.uk/wastemanage.htm
NDA Value Framework - http://www.nda.gov.uk/publication/egg08-nda-guidance-and-
expectations-for-business-cases-and-value-management/ (NDA sites).
Integrated Impact Assessments
T10 Site / organisation strategies, policies and
plans @
These define site and organisation specific plans, approaches and drivers; including those
relating to waste management (including their Integrated Waste Strategyand Radioactive Waste
Management Cases). These are site / organisation specific and should be available internally
within organisations (although some may be published on external websites).
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T11 Learning From Experience (LFE) from other
waste producers
Relevant LFE may
be difficult to
access.
LFE includes good practices and lessons learned on the selection and implementation of
approaches and technologies for waste management based on the experiences of waste
producers at other sites or organisations. This is available via networking, forums (such as the
LLW Practitioners Forum, Delivery Overview Group and Nuclear Waste & Decommissioning
Research Forum), benchmarking, the LLW Repository Ltd. website (www.llwrsite.com) and site
visits.
T12 BAT / BPM assessments and technical
assessments from other waste producers
May be difficult to
access from other
sites.
BAT, BPM and technical assessments from other waste producers provide a diverse range of
technical information and LFE on waste management approaches. This is available principally
via networking with other sites and organisations; and may be challenging to access.
T13 Journals @
Journal articles provide information on different waste management approaches, technologies
and lessons learned from experience of their deployment from the experience of waste
producers and suppliers. A range of journal articles are available online [for example, but not
limited to, Nuclear Future http://www.nuclearinst.com/NuclearFuture-Archive].
T14 Mineral and Waste Local Plans @
These are plans produced by local planning authorities and set out planning policy for minerals
and waste developments (including those for radioactive waste) for a given geographical area.
These should be available on-line via the specific council / unitary authority website for the area
of interest.
T15 Site land use plans
These are site / organisation specific plans which set out how land will be used across the
lifecycle of the site, including definition of any interim and final end-states. These should be
available internally within organisations but may not always be readily available.
T16 Skills assessments @
Skills assessment project future skills needs and availability in order to identify gaps, issues and
opportunities. These may be produced on a local, regional or national basis; and can help to
show whether any specialist skills that are required for a particular option are available in the
required timescales. Local skills assessments should be available internally within
organisations. National level assessments can be accessed through organisations such as the
National Skills Academy for Nuclear (NSAN) [https://www.nsan.co.uk/nuclear-energy-skills-
alliance/nesa-nuclear-workforce-assessment-2014] and Cogent [http://www.cogentskills.com/].
T17 Inventory data @
UKRWI very high
level. WIF data not
freely available.
This provides information about the volume, characteristics and arisings profile for wastes
(typically on a wastestream basis). Inventory information should be available internally within
organisations or may be accessed on a site / national basis via sources such as the UK
Radioactive Waste Inventory (UKRWI) [https://www.nda.gov.uk/ukinventory/] and the Waste
Inventory Form (WIF).
T18 Characterisation data
Information about the physical, chemical and / or radiological characteristics of a waste
population. This is specific to individual sites / organisations and should be available internally
within organisations.
T19
Deactivation and Decommissioning
Knowledge Management Information Tool (D-
D KMIT)
@
On-line database of information about technologies for decommissioning and waste
management, including lessons learned on deployment
[https://www.dndkm.org/Technology/AdvanceSearch.aspx].
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T20 SciTech Connect @
On-line database for the US Department of Energy which consolidates technical papers and
reports on a range of topics including radioactive waste management. This provides access to
information from waste practitioners on the deployment of approaches and technologies
[http://www.osti.gov/scitech/].
T21 Advice from technical specialists
Provides access to advice and guidance on specific aspects of technical feasibility for different
approaches and technologies. Should be readily available internally within organisations.
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A3.3 Environmental Impact Attribute
Resource
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Available
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E1 Characterisation data
Information about the physical, chemical and / or radiological characteristics of a waste
population. This is specific to individual sites / organisations and should be available internally
within organisations.
E2 Inventory data @
UKRWI very high
level. WIF data not
freely available.
This provides information about the volume, characteristics and arisings profile for wastes
(typically on a wastestream basis). Inventory information should be available internally within
organisations or may be accessed on a site / national basis via sources such as the UK
Radioactive Waste Inventory (UKRWI) [https://www.nda.gov.uk/ukinventory/] and Waste
Inventory Form (WIF).
E3
LFE from previous projects (own
and other sites) such as
theoretical vs actual arisings;
assumptions, etc.
Relevant LFE may be
difficult to access.
LFE includes good practices and lessons learned on the environmental impact from
implementation of approaches and technologies for waste management based on the
experiences of waste producers at other sites or organisations. This is available via networking,
forums (such as the LLW Practitioners Forum, Delivery Overview Group and Nuclear Waste &
Decommissioning Research Forum), benchmarking and site visits.
E4 Discharge history and dose
history for the site or project
The environmental discharge history provides information about the quantity, type and nature of
such discharges from a site or project. The dose history provides information about the
radiological nature of the waste. This provides baseline information or enables estimates to be
made about the impact of implementing new approaches. This should be available internally
within organisations.
E5 Permits and authorisations @
These documents are permissions from the relevant environmental regulators that define the
conditions and limitations that a waste producer or waste receiver (duty holder) needs to abide
by when undertaking waste management activities on their site. These may specify things such
as environmental discharge limits, permitted waste routes, etc. These are available from
individual facilities (some are available on-line) or else can be obtained, for a fee, from the
relevant environmental regulator (the Environment Agency, the Scottish Environment Protection
Agency or Natural Resources Wales).
E6
Previous environmental
monitoring data (own, other
waste producers and receiving
sites)
May be difficult to
access from other
waste producers.
This provides wider environmental monitoring data about a site, waste receiver (treatment and
disposal) site and other waste producers. It provides underpinning data to enable the estimation
of the environmental impact of implementing waste management approaches. This information
should be available internally, from other waste producers (e.g. via networking) or from
suppliers on request.
E7 Proximity (location of treatment
and disposal sites) @
The number of transport miles provides data to enable the calculation of impact from transport
to the environment. Proximity can be calculated or else, for use of waste routes available under
the LLW Repository Ltd Waste Services Frameworks, is available in a look-up table within the
LLW Repository Ltd Carbon Emissions guidance document [http://llwrsite.com/national-waste-
programme/supporting-guidance-and-analysis/].
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E8 Tools for calculation of public
doses @
A range of tools and models are available for the calculation of public doses (e.g. MicroShield
http://radiationsoftware.com/microshield/ , PC-CREAM https://www.phe-
protectionservices.org.uk/pccream/models/ and ADMS http://www.cerc.co.uk/environmental-
software/ADMS-model/options.html) and guidance is available from the environment agencies
(https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/296390/geho120
2bklh-e-e.pdf). An additional tool is Initial Radiological Assessment Tool (IRAT) used for the
assessment of radiological dose, incorporating guidance on clearance and exemption. The
methodology is detailed in guidance documents available via
https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/initial-radiological-assessment-methodology.
Advice and guidance should also be sought from relevant radiological protection technical
specialists on tools and methods for calculating public dose.
E9
Radioactivity In Food and the
Environment (RIFE) / Habit
Surveys / ERICA survey
@
These are a range of tools which enable the radiological risks to the environment, people and
non-human species to be assessed; and to enable the impact of different options to be
estimated and compared. RIFE
(http://www.food.gov.uk/science/research/radiologicalresearch/radiosurv/rife) is a
comprehensive annual report of radioactivity in food and measures the radioactivity in different
parts of the food chain. Habits Surveys are surveys of diet, consumption rates and other habits
of people that enable radiation exposure to be calculated; a number of these are available on-
line via CEFAS (https://www.cefas.co.uk/). ERICA (http://www.erica-tool.com/) is a tool which
enables the radiological risk to terrestrial, freshwater and marine biota to be calculated.
E10
Application of concepts of
exclusion, exemption and
clearance (IAEA RS-G-1.7)
@
IAEA RS-G-1.7 is a guidance document that specifies an approach for exclusion, exemption
and clearance of waste; and may be used to assess whether waste management approaches
will deliver a waste of this classification. The guidance document is available on-line via
http://www-pub.iaea.org/MTCD/publications/PDF/Pub1202_web.pdf.
E11 Greenhouse gas emissions
(GHG) - tools and guidance @
This includes a range of tools and guidance on how to calculate greenhouse gas emissions for
different technologies and waste management approaches (such as DEFRA greenhouse gas
emission guidance
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/69282/pb13309-
ghg-guidance-0909011.pdf, DEFRA carbon factors
http://www.ukconversionfactorscarbonsmart.co.uk/ and LLW Repository Ltd Carbon Emissions
guidance http://llwrsite.com/national-waste-programme/supporting-guidance-and-analysis/.
Information on GHG emissions may also be available from suppliers or internally commissioned
studies / reports.
E12
Data from treatment and
disposal facilities (worker dose,
resource use, GHG, volume
reductions, etc.)
May be difficult to
obtain.
Range of data on operation of particular treatment and disposal routes may be available from
specific suppliers (including worker dose, resource use, greenhouse gas emissions, volume
reductions, secondary waste, etc.). Some data may be available on supplier websites or on
request; although some may be difficult to obtain.
E13 Maintenance and testing data for
abatement systems
Provides information on the efficacy and condition of abatement systems providing a measure
of their performance and hence enabling projections of how they might perform for different
waste management approaches; enabling information to be fed into calculations of
environmental impact. Available internally or from supply chain.
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E14 Tools for impacts on non-human
species @
A range of tools are available to enable calculation of the impacts on non-human biota (such as
ERICA http://www.erica-tool.com/). Some tools are available on-line but advice should be
sought from relevant technical experts on their use.
E15 Waste Hierarchy @
The Waste Hierarchy is defined and described in the UK LLW Policy
(https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/254393/Low_lev
el_waste_policy.pdf) and strategy (https://www.gov.uk/). Additional information and guidance on
how the Waste Hierarchy can be applied is available in LLW Repository guidance document A
Good Practice Guide for Application of the Waste Hierarchy (http://llwrsite.com/national-waste-
programme/supporting-guidance-and-analysis/). Networking with other waste producers can
also be a useful source of guidance.
E16 Disposability assessments @
These provide information on the disposability of different waste types and populations. Advice
is available from LLW Repository Ltd (with contact details available via http://llwrsite.com/) and
RWM (http://www.nda.gov.uk/rwm/). Information on previous disposal assessments for HAW is
available on-line via the RWM website.
E17
Advice from specialists
(environmental, radiological
protection, construction, etc.)
Provides access to advice and guidance on specific aspects of environmental impact for
different approaches and technologies. Should be readily available internally within
organisations. External technical support may be available via organisations such as IEMA
(http://www.iema.net/) and CIRIA (http://www.ciria.org/).
E18
Technical guidance on how to
assess and classify non-
radioactive waste (WM3)
@
This is a guidance document on how non-radioactive waste should be classified (i.e. how to
identify and assess hazardous properties of waste and how to apply the classifications). This
document (available via https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/waste-classification-
technical-guidance) defines expectations for duty of care for non-radioactive waste.
E19 IEMA (people, documents and
website) @
IEMA is the professional body for environment and sustainability professionals. The
organisation provides information on legislation, policy changes, horizon scanning, etc. on
issues relating to environmental management and non-radioactive waste. Information,
documents and contact details are available via http://www.iema.net/.
E20 WRAP (people, documents and
website) @
WRAP is an organisation that promotes and drives sustainability and the circular economy.
WRAP can provide useful information on non-radioactive waste management and the Waste
Hierarchy. Information, documents and contact details are available via http://www.wrap.org.uk/.
E21 Legislation (NetRegs and
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/) @
These resources provide information and guidance relating to legislation in the UK (NetRegs,
available via http://www.netregs.org.uk/ provides information for Scotland and Northern Ireland,
whilst the UK Government website http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ provides information for the
whole of the UK).
E22 Local authority planning teams
and NuLeAF @
Local authority planning teams are a source of information on the planning process, planning
consents and their conditions. Contact details for the relevant local planning team should be
available via the website of the appropriate local council. The Nuclear Legacy Advisory Forum
(NuLeAF) is an organisation which seeks to build capacity within local government to engage
effectively with nuclear legacy management, and is a source of information about planning and
the issues affecting the planning community / local government. Information on NuLeAF is
available via http://www.nuleaf.org.uk/.
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E23 Environment Agency RSR
Environmental Principles (REPs) @
These are the principles that are used by the Environment Agency when regulating and making
decisions in relation to radioactive substances. This is available via the internet
[https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/radioactive-substances-regulation-environmental-
principles].
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Environmental Impact Attribute Resource Map
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A3.4 Cost Attribute
Resource
Code Resource
Resource
media
Available
from Usefulness Ease of use Comments
C1 EGG01 Cost Norms Guidance (NDA)
This guidance document provides cost norms, a model for their use and worked examples to
enable the cost of using different LLW waste treatment and disposal routes for LLW
management to be estimated. Available on request from NDA.
C2 Supply chain costs and estimates
Supply chain organisations should be able to provide information on costs (e.g. through the
provision of indicative cost estimates) for the use of different waste routes. Cost estimates for
services through the LLW Repository Ltd waste services frameworks can be obtained through
LLW Repository Ltd Service Delivery (contact details available via http://llwrsite.com/).
C3 Energy Bills
Energy bills from the host site, receiving site or other waste producers may provide an
indication of costs associated with deployment of different approaches and technologies for
waste management. These are available internally within organisations, on request from
suppliers or from networking with other waste producers.
C4 The Green Book (Treasury) @
‘The Green Book’ is an HM Treasury document which addresses options appraisal and
evaluation in central Government. It provides clear guidance on how monetary impacts should
be evaluated and the impact of time on these but also states that money is not the only
consideration when determining value and that other benefits / detriments should be factored
into any analysis. This document is available on-line
(https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/220541/green_b
ook_complete.pdf).
C5 EGG08 Business Case Template and
Guidance @
This guidance document defines the approach to be used by NDA estate organisations on
development, underpinning and management of business cases. This document includes
information on how to evaluate options using the NDA Value Framework. This document is
available on-line (http://www.nda.gov.uk/publication/egg08-nda-guidance-and-expectations-for-
business-cases-and-value-management/).
C6 Environmental Impact Assessments
(EIA) @
EIA is the formal process used to predict and document the environmental consequences of a
plan, policy, programme or project; and should include information on socio-economic impacts
and costs. These should be available on-line via local planning authority planning portals.
C7 Upstream and downstream supply costs
These are supplier or site specific costs which enable the upstream or downstream impacts of
an approach or technology to be considered from a cost perspective. For example, this may
include the detrimental cost of mining new ore rather than recycling materials or the benefit of
re-use of concrete to fill voids on-site rather than buying in new aggregate. These should be
locally available or may be obtained from suppliers.
C8 Performance Agreement Forms (PAF)
[NDA estate]
May not be
relevant and may
be difficult to
access.
PAFs are a tool used to define targets set by NDA and its estate organisations. These should
be available internally within NDA estate organisations and provide information on financial
incentives and / or expected timescales. Fees (incentives) may drive or hinder project
progression and may change costs, so PAFs may be a source of information to enable profiling
of costs.
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C9 Lifetime Plans (NDA estate) or costed
site plans (non-NDA) @
Specific, costed plans for individual organisations including assumptions on waste management
costs. This may be a source of information on organisational assumptions and costs for
different approaches. These are site / organisation specific and should be available internally.
C10 NWP LLW Cost Model
This is a model developed by the LLW Repository Ltd NWP Office to enable lifecycle modelling
of costs relating to LLW management. It uses data from cost norms and site specific data to be
provided by sites / organisations. This is available upon request from the NWP Office.
C11 RSF 3.08.01_01B Benefit Calculator @
This is a tool, developed by the NWP Office, for calculating the benefits (in terms of cost,
carbon emissions and Low Level Waste Repository (LLWR) life extension) of diverting waste
relative to the cost of waste disposal. This tool can be accessed on-line via
http://llwrsite.com/national-waste-programme/programme-management-arrangements/.
C12 Technical experts (e.g. Commercial,
Finance)
Provides access to advice and guidance on specific aspects of cost for different approaches
and technologies. Should be readily available internally within organisations.
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A3.5 Community Impact
Number Resource Resource
media
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I1 Local / regional development plans @
These are plans for community and socio-economic development on a local or regional
basis; providing information on community priorities, issues, gaps, drivers and aspirations.
Where available, these should be accessible on-line.
I2 Mineral & Waste Local Plans @
These are plans produced by local planning authorities and set out planning policy for
minerals and waste developments (including those for radioactive waste) for a given
geographical area. These should be available on-line via the specific council / unitary
authority website for the area of interest.
I3 Site / organisational strategies, policies
and plans @
These define site and organisational specific plans, approaches and drivers; including those
relating to waste management. These are site / organisation specific and should be
available internally within organisations (although some may be published on external
websites).
I4 Site land use plans
These are site / organisation specific plans which set out how land will be used across the
lifecycle of the site, including definition of any interim and final end-states. These should be
available internally within organisations but may not always be readily available.
I5 WAC and underlying safety cases @
WAC define what wastes can be accepted for treatment and disposal at individual waste
receiver sites (including requirements for packaging, labelling, records, etc. where relevant);
whilst the underlying safety cases define the conditions that the facility operates under to
ensure safe operations now and in the future. These are available via individual suppliers,
although some are accessible on-line.
I6 LFE from other waste producers
Relevant LFE may
be difficult to
access.
LFE includes good practices and lessons learned on the selection and implementation of
approaches and technologies for waste management based on the experiences of waste
producers at other sites or organisations; and may provide information on community
impacts from equivalent projects elsewhere. This is available via networking, forums (such
as the LLW Practitioners’ Forum, Delivery Overview Group and Nuclear Waste &
Decommissioning Research Forum), benchmarking, the LLW Repository Ltd. website
(www.llwrsite.com) and site visits. LFE may be difficult to access.
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I7 Engagement with local site stakeholder
groups or local liaison committees @
Site stakeholder groups / local liaison committees are groups which enable engagement
between nuclear licensed sites and their local communities covering subjects such as
safety, socio-economic plans, performance, etc. There is a site stakeholder group or local
liaison committee for every nuclear licensed site. There is information available on-line for
many of these:
AWE - http://www.awe.co.uk/our-responsibilities/local-liaison-committee/
BAE - http://www.barrowbc.gov.uk/community-living/policing-public-
safety/emergency-planning/
Magnox Ltd Berkeley site - http://magnoxsites.com/site/berkeley/
Magnox Ltd Bradwell site - http://magnoxsites.com/site/bradwell/
Magnox Ltd Chapelcross site - http://magnoxsites.com/site/chapelcross/
Magnox Ltd Dungeness A site - http://magnoxsites.com/site/dungeness-a/
Magnox Ltd Harwell site - http://magnoxsites.com/site/harwell/
Magnox Ltd Hinkley Point A site - http://magnoxsites.com/site/hinkley-point-a/
Magnox Ltd Hunterston A site - http://magnoxsites.com/site/hunterston-a/
Magnox Ltd Oldbury site - http://magnoxsites.com/site/oldbury/
Magnox Ltd Sizewell A site - http://magnoxsites.com/site/sizewell-a/
Magnox Ltd Trawsfynydd site - http://magnoxsites.com/site/trawsfynydd/
Magnox Ltd Winfrith site - http://magnoxsites.com/site/winfrith/
Magnox Ltd Wylfa site - http://magnoxsites.com/site/wylfa/
HMNB Devonport - https://www.babcockinternational.com/about-
us/responsibilities/community/devonport-royal-dockyard/devonport-local-liaison-
committee/
Dounreay - http://www.dounreaystakeholdergroup.org/
EDF Dungeness B site - http://www.edfenergy.com/energy/power-
stations/dungeness-b
EDF Hartlepool site - http://www.edfenergy.com/energy/power-stations/hartlepool
EDF Heysham 1 site - http://www.edfenergy.com/energy/power-stations/heysham-1
EDF Heysham 2 site - http://www.edfenergy.com/energy/power-stations/heysham-2
EDF Hinkley Point B site - http://www.edfenergy.com/energy/power-stations/hinkley-
point-b
EDF Hunterston B site - http://www.edfenergy.com/energy/power-
stations/hunterston-b
EDF Sizewell B site - http://www.edfenergy.com/energy/power-stations/sizewell-b
EDF Torness site - http://www.edfenergy.com/energy/power-stations/torness
Sellafield Ltd, LLW Repository Ltd and Studsvik - http://wcssg.co.uk/
I8 Wider stakeholder engagement
Networking, community events such as open days, community support, specific / targeted
engagement and use of social media enables wider stakeholder engagement and could
enable collection of information about the views and drivers of local communities.
Information should be available internally from previous activities or may be obtained from
such activities.
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I9 Characterisation data
Information about the physical, chemical and / or radiological characteristics of a waste
population. This is specific to individual sites / organisations and should be available
internally within organisations.
I10 Inventory data @
UKRWI very high
level. WIF data not
freely available.
This provides information about the volume, characteristics and arisings profile for wastes
(typically on a wastestream basis). Inventory information should be available internally within
organisations or may be accessed on a site / national basis via sources such as the UK
Radioactive Waste Inventory (UKRWI) [https://www.nda.gov.uk/ukinventory/].
I11 Organisational socio-economic plans or
corporate social responsibility reports
Such documents define socio-economic development objectives, drivers and plans for
organisations for their local communities. These may provide information on how the
activities of the site / organisation will impact the local community. These are site /
organisation specific and should be available internally within organisations.
I12 Government Communications Service:
Working With Stakeholders @
This is guidance produced by the Government Communications Service on how to
effectively plan and deliver stakeholder engagement; which would support activities to
gather information on community impacts. This information is accessible on-line
(https://gcn.civilservice.gov.uk/guidance/how-to-guides/working-with-stakeholders/).
I13 BAT NICoP @
The BAT NICoP contains useful information and guidance on how to execute stakeholder
engagement relating to BAT / BPM and the wider community impacts to consider. This is
available on-line
(http://www.nuclearinst.com/write/MediaUploads/SDF%20documents/Best_Available_Techn
iques_for_the_Management_of_the_Generation_and_Disposal_of_Radioactive_Wastes_-
_NICoP.pdf).
I14
SAFEGROUNDS: Good Practice
Guidance for Management of
Contaminated Land on Nuclear Licensed
and Defence Sites
@
The SAFEGROUNDS document provides useful guidance on stakeholder engagement and
issues regarding community impact from the perspective of contaminated land
management. This guidance document is available on-line
(http://www.safegrounds.com/pdfs/w29_safegrounds_lmg_version_2.pdf).
I15 Horizon scan for special interest groups
and interest areas. @
Horizon scanning information enables understanding of the drivers, objectives, issues and
concerns for the local community and special interest groups active in the local community.
This information may be available internally (for example from stakeholder relations
personnel), from internet searching or from networking.
I16 Advice from technical specialists (e.g.
stakeholder relations)
Provides access to advice and guidance on specific aspects of community impact for
different approaches and technologies. Should be readily available internally within
organisations.
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A3.6 Political Attribute
Political attributes could be considered as a component of other attributes during the assessment process or may (for particularly significant or potentially controversial projects) be considered
separately. It is important that political attributes are assessed on the basis of evidence (i.e. from actual engagement with stakeholders) rather than opinion or supposition.
Resource
Code Resource
Resource
media
Available
from Usefulness Ease of use Comments
P1 Site stakeholder group dialogue and
engagement with planners / local government @
Site stakeholder groups / local liaison committees are groups which enable engagement
between nuclear licensed sites and their local communities covering subjects such as safety,
socio-economic plans, performance, etc. There is a site stakeholder group or local liaison
committee for every nuclear licensed site. There is information available on-line for many of
these:
AWE - http://www.awe.co.uk/our-responsibilities/local-liaison-committee/
BAE - http://www.barrowbc.gov.uk/community-living/policing-public-safety/emergency-
planning/
Magnox Ltd Berkeley site - http://magnoxsites.com/site/berkeley/
Magnox Ltd Bradwell site - http://magnoxsites.com/site/bradwell/
Magnox Ltd Chapelcross site - http://magnoxsites.com/site/chapelcross/
Magnox Ltd Dungeness A site - http://magnoxsites.com/site/dungeness-a/
Magnox Ltd Harwell site - http://magnoxsites.com/site/harwell/
Magnox Ltd Hinkley Point A site - http://magnoxsites.com/site/hinkley-point-a/
Magnox Ltd Hunterston A site - http://magnoxsites.com/site/hunterston-a/
Magnox Ltd Oldbury site - http://magnoxsites.com/site/oldbury/
Magnox Ltd Sizewell A site - http://magnoxsites.com/site/sizewell-a/
Magnox Ltd Trawsfynydd site - http://magnoxsites.com/site/trawsfynydd/
Magnox Ltd Winfrith site - http://magnoxsites.com/site/winfrith/
Magnox Ltd Wylfa site - http://magnoxsites.com/site/wylfa/
HMNB Devonport - https://www.babcockinternational.com/about-
us/responsibilities/community/devonport-royal-dockyard/devonport-local-liaison-committee/
Dounreay - http://www.dounreaystakeholdergroup.org/
EDF Dungeness B site - http://www.edfenergy.com/energy/power-stations/dungeness-b
EDF Hartlepool site - http://www.edfenergy.com/energy/power-stations/hartlepool
EDF Heysham 1 site - http://www.edfenergy.com/energy/power-stations/heysham-1
EDF Heysham 2 site - http://www.edfenergy.com/energy/power-stations/heysham-2
EDF Hinkley Point B site - http://www.edfenergy.com/energy/power-stations/hinkley-point-b
EDF Hunterston B site - http://www.edfenergy.com/energy/power-stations/hunterston-b
EDF Sizewell B site - http://www.edfenergy.com/energy/power-stations/sizewell-b
EDF Torness site - http://www.edfenergy.com/energy/power-stations/torness
Sellafield Ltd, LLW Repository Ltd and Studsvik - http://wcssg.co.uk/
Additional information about wider political aspects can be obtained through dialogue and
engagement with local planning authorities and local government.
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Resource
Code Resource
Resource
media
Available
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P2
Consultation responses to permits /
authorisations and variations to permits /
authorisations
@
Lengthy documents
– may be difficult to
find useful
information.
Consultation responses to permits / authorisations and variations to them provide information
on stakeholder considerations, perceptions and organisational reputation (both in the local
community and more widely). These can be obtained on-line via:
EA (https://consult.environment-agency.gov.uk/portal)
SEPA (http://www.sepa.org.uk/regulations/consultations/currentopen-consultations/)
NRW (https://naturalresources.wales/about-us/consultations/?lang=en)
P3 Public enquiry and appeal output @
Lengthy documents
– may be difficult to
find useful
information.
Public enquiry reports and output provide information on stakeholder considerations and
perceptions relating to specific developments. It may provide information about the likely
political implications of new developments relating to waste management routes. This
information would be available online (via https://www.gov.uk/ for national level enquiries) or
via planning portal websites for local planning authorities (for local enquiries).
P4 Organisational policies and strategies @
These define site and organisational specific plans, approaches and drivers; including those
relating to waste management. These are site / organisation specific and should be available
internally within organisations (although some may be published on external websites).
P5 Government policy, priorities and legislation @
This provides information about government policy, priorities, requirements and
expectations. Information on a national basis is available on-line via https://www.gov.uk/ and
websites for the devolved administrations (http://www.gov.scot/ for Scotland and
http://www.assembly.wales/en/Pages/Home.aspx for Wales). Information may be also
available through intelligence internal to organisations. Information of particular relevance
would be available from the Department for Energy & Climate Change (DECC)
[https://www.gov.uk/government/organisations/department-of-energy-climate-change], the
MOD [https://www.gov.uk/government/organisations/ministry-of-defence] and HM Treasury
[https://www.gov.uk/government/organisations/hm-treasury]. Information specific to
regulations in Scotland and Northern Ireland is available via http://www.netregs.org.uk/.
P6 Networking with other waste producers,
suppliers, regulators, etc.
Provides information and intelligence about the political implications of deploying different
waste management approaches and technologies from the perspective of different
stakeholders.
P7 Advice from technical specialists (e.g.
stakeholder relations)
Provides access to advice and guidance on specific aspects of political impact for different
approaches and technologies. Should be readily available internally within organisations.
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A3.7 Safety and security
Number Resource Resource
media
Available
from Usefulness Ease of use Comments
S1 Radioactivity In Food and the
Environment (RIFE) @
RIFE is a tool which enables the radiological risks to people and non-human species to be
assessed; and to enable the impact of different options to be estimated and compared. RIFE
(http://www.food.gov.uk/science/research/radiologicalresearch/radiosurv/rife) is a
comprehensive annual report of radioactivity in food and measures the radioactivity in
different parts of the food chain.
S2 Critical dose assessment for each site
These are assessments specific to a site or organisation of doses to critical groups and
should be available internally within organisations. Advice from radiological protection
specialists should be sought on their derivation and usage.
S3 Department of Transport statistics @
This is a set of data on road traffic, accidents, casualties and congestion in Great Britain.
This is available on-line via https://www.gov.uk/government/organisations/department-for-
transport/about/statistics.
S4 Transport Risk Factors @
Risk factors are a range of data and information relating to the factors which effect the
impact or likelihood of road traffic accidents in Great Britain; available on-line via
http://www.dft.gov.uk/rmd/programme.asp?intProgrammeID=73. Further information about
the transport of radiological waste is available via the Office for Nuclear Regulation (ONR)
website [http://www.onr.org.uk/transport/].
S5 HSE Reducing Risks: Protecting People @
HSE Reducing Risks: Protecting People is a guidance document providing a methodology
and information on risk assessment relating to safety risks under the Health and Safety At
Work Act 1974 (and the philosophy for regulation by ONR). This is accessible on-line
[http://www.hse.gov.uk/risk/theory/r2p2.pdf].
S6
Recommended Radiological Protection
Criteria for the Recycling of Metals from
the Dismantling of the Nuclear Industry,
EU-RP89
@
This document provides recommended radiological protection criteria for the recycling of
metals from the dismantling of nuclear installations. This provides information on radiation
exposures relating to the recycling of steel, copper and aluminium; and is available on-line
[https://ec.europa.eu/energy/sites/ener/files/documents/89.pdf].
S7 Initial Radiological Assessment Tool
(IRAT) @
IRAT is a tool for the assessment of radiological dose, incorporating guidance on clearance
and exemption. The methodology is detailed in guidance documents available via
https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/initial-radiological-assessment-methodology.
Advice from radiological protection specialists should be sought on this tool and its usage.
S8 Environmental Impact Assessments (via
local planning department websites). @
EIA is the formal process used to predict and document the environmental consequences of
a plan, policy, programme or project; and should include information on vulnerable road
users, road improvements and public safety risks. These should be available on-line via local
planning authority planning portals.
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S9 Chemical safety data sheets @
Chemical safety data sheets provide information on chemical products which help users of
those chemicals to make a risk assessment. These describe the hazards that the chemical
presents and give information on handling, storage, usage and emergency measures in case
of accident. These are available on-line from chemical manufacturers (such as, but not
limited to, http://www.fisher.co.uk/index.php/en/global-chemicals and
https://www.sigmaaldrich.com/united-kingdom.html).
S10 Best Available Techniques Reference
Document (BREF) @
BREF notes are standards that describe BATs for non-radioactive waste. They generally
provide information on a specific industrial/agricultural sector in the EU, on the techniques
and processes used in the sector, emission and consumption levels, techniques to consider
in the determination of the best available techniques (BAT) and emerging techniques. It also
provides links to webpages containing relevant legislation/standards. These are available on-
line via http://eippcb.jrc.ec.europa.eu/reference/.
S11 CIRIA Best Practice Guides @
CIRIA publish a range of best practice guides relating to the construction industry, providing
information on a range of safety topics, testing, verification and construction. These are
available via the CIRIA website
[http://www.ciria.org/CIRIA/Bookshop/Bookshop/Books/Bookshop.aspx?hkey=5d0b1bf4-
bcee-4410-ade0-2dfb2a319cc2].
S12 Modelling tools (e.g. PC-CREAM,
MicroShield and ADMS) @
A range of tools and models are available for the calculation of public doses (e.g.
MicroShield http://radiationsoftware.com/microshield/ , PC-CREAM https://www.phe-
protectionservices.org.uk/pccream/models/ and ADMS http://www.cerc.co.uk/environmental-
software/ADMS-model/options.html) and guidance is available from the environment
agencies
(https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/296390/geho
1202bklh-e-e.pdf). MicroShield is useful for worker dose calculation, whilst the other tools are
more useful for calculation of environmental doses. Advice and guidance should also be
sought from relevant radiological protection technical specialists on tools and methods for
calculating public dose.
S13 EARWG database @
The EARWG database is a resource containing summaries of technologies and approaches
for the minimisation of radiological waste compiled by the Environment Agencies
Requirements Working Group (EARWG). This is available online
[http://www.rwbestpractice.co.uk/Default.aspx] but is a little out-of-date.
S14
Industry groups (e.g. Nuclear Industry
Liaison Group (NILG), Safety Directors’
Forum etc.)
Industry groups provide intelligence and useful expert contacts on legal issues and
implications. The Safety Directors’ Forum is a forum that brings together senior level nuclear
industry executives to promote learning, agree strategy, network, to provide industry input to
new developments and to ensure a focus on continuous improvement. This is useful as a
source of expert contacts. Details for this forum are available on-line
[http://www.nuclearinst.com/SDF-1]. The NILG is a forum for discussion between nuclear site
operators and the UK environment agencies; covering topics such as government policy,
legislation and regulatory initiatives. Representatives on the NILG forum should be available
within your organisations.
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S15 Security Standards
These consist of a range of security requirements and standards relating to the nuclear
industry. Specific advice on security standards and security requirements should be obtained
from a relevant technical expert (such as a site security specialist).
S16
Safety Assessment Principles (SAPs),
Technical Assessment Guides (TAGs)
and Site Licence Conditions.
@
ONR inspectors use Safety Assessment Principles (SAPs), together with the supporting
Technical Assessment Guides (TAGs), to guide regulatory decision making in the nuclear
permissioning process. Site Licence Conditions define the conditions that licensed sites must
have adequate arrangements to comply with to remain within the bounds of their site licence.
These can be accessed online via http://www.onr.org.uk/saps/index.htm for SAPs,
http://www.onr.org.uk/tagsrevision.htm for TAGs, and http://www.onr.org.uk/licensing.htm for
site licence conditions. These are long documents but very useful.
S17 NDA Safety & Environmental Detriment
measure (SED) @
SED is a measure of expressing the safety and environmental concern of a facility. The
measure takes account of the potential impact of stored material being released to the
environment, conditions of storage and to some extent the threat posed by the existence of
the facility and its contents. Information about deriving and using SED can be obtained on-
line via NDA guidance [http://www.nda.gov.uk/publication/egpr02-nda-prioritisation-
calculation-of-safety-and-environmental-detriment-scores-rev6/].
S18 IAEA Safety Standards @
IAEA Safety Standards (available via http://www-
pub.iaea.org/books/IAEABooks/Series/33/IAEA-Safety-Standards-Series) are a series of
documents developed by IAEA which provide standards for safety for the protection of health
and minimisation of danger to life and property. These cover a wide range of topics including
radioactive waste management.
S19 Nuclear Energy Agency (NEA) Safety
Standards @
The NEA (a specialised agency within the OECD) has developed a series of documents and
information relating to nuclear safety and safety of radioactive waste management. These
are available on-line via http://www.oecd-nea.org/.
S20 Characterisation / monitoring data
Information about the physical, chemical and / or radiological characteristics of a waste
population. This is specific to individual sites / organisations and should be available
internally within organisations.
S21
Advice from technical specialists
(radiological protection, safety advisors,
safeguards, security etc.)
Provides access to advice and guidance on specific aspects of safety for different
approaches and technologies. Should be readily available internally within organisations.
S22 IMG01 Knowledge Management Guide
(NDA) @
This is a document providing guidance and best practice on knowledge management;
including descriptions of effective knowledge management systems and the risks of poor
knowledge management practices. This is available on-line
(http://www.nda.gov.uk/publication/img01-knowledge-management-best-practice-guide/).
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A3.8 Legal
These attributes may be considered during the assessment process or may else be considered after choosing a preferred option or as part of the evaluation of the timescales / costs to option
implementation,
Number Resource Resource
media
Available
from Usefulness Ease of use Comments
L1 Legal Aspects Register
Legal aspects registers are matrices on legal requirements on sites or organisation
deriving from environmental permits / authorisations, site licenses and relevant
legislation. These should be available internally within organisations.
L2 Company standards and policies @
These define site and organisational specific plans, approaches and drivers;
including those relating to waste management. These are site / organisation specific
and should be available internally within organisations (although some may be
published on external websites).
L3 Environmental Permits / Authorisations, Site
Licences and conditions @
Environmental permits / authorisations are permissions from the relevant
environmental regulators that define the conditions and limitations that a waste
producer or waste receiver (duty holder) needs to abide by when undertaking waste
management activities on their site. These may specify things such as environmental
discharge limits, permitted waste routes etc. These are available from individual
facilities (some are available on-line) or else can be obtained, for a fee, from the
relevant environmental regulator (the Environment Agency, the Scottish Environment
Protection Agency or Natural Resources Wales).
Site licenses are documents that set out the general safety requirements to deal with
the risks on a nuclear site. A Nuclear Site Licence and the conditions attached to it
are the primary means of ensuring the safety of nuclear sites in Great Britain. These
are legal documents containing site-specific information and define the number and
type of installations permitted. These are available internally within organisations.
Details of site licence conditions can be found on the ONR web-site via
http://www.onr.org.uk/licensing.htm.
L4 Planning consents and their conditions @
These specify the detail of planning permission and any associated conditions
imposed by planning authorities for developments in the UK. Site / organisational
information should be available internally within organisations or else via the on-line
planning portal for the relevant local planning authority.
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L5 UK obligations (Paris-Brussels treaty, etc.) @
Lengthy, may be
difficult to find and
interpret.
These comprise a range of documents which specify the requirements on the UK
from international treaties, agreements and regulations. Specific detail on the
plethora of UK obligations relating to radioactive waste management can be difficult
to access. An overview of the key UK obligations relating to radioactive waste
management is provided in the LLW Repository Ltd Guidance on Low Level Waste
Management Legislation (available via http://llwrsite.com/national-waste-
programme/supporting-guidance-and-analysis/) and in the UK National Programme
for the Responsible and Safe Management of Spent Fuel and Radioactive Waste
Management (available via https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/the-uks-
national-programme-to-the-eu-commission-on-the-responsible-and-safe-
management-of-spent-fuel-and-radioactive-waste).
L6 Guidance on Low Level Waste Management
Legislation @
The LLW Repository Ltd Guidance on Low Level Waste Management Legislation
provides an overview of legislation and regulation relating to LLW management in
the UK. This is available via http://llwrsite.com/national-waste-
programme/supporting-guidance-and-analysis/.
L7 Technical guidance on how to assess and
classify non-radioactive waste (WM3) @
This is a guidance document on how non-radioactive waste should be classified (i.e.
how to identify and assess hazardous properties of waste and how to apply the
classifications). This document (available via
https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/waste-classification-technical-guidance)
defines expectations for duty of care for non-radioactive waste.
L8 IEMA (people, documents and website) @
IEMA is the professional body for environment and sustainability professionals. The
organisation provides information on legislation, policy changes, horizon scanning,
etc. on issues relating to environmental management and non-radioactive waste.
Information, documents and contact details are available via http://www.iema.net/.
L9 WRAP (people, documents and website) @
WRAP is an organisation that promotes and drives sustainability and the circular
economy. WRAP can provide useful information on non-radioactive waste
management and the Waste Hierarchy. Information, documents and contact details
are available via http://www.wrap.org.uk/.
L10 Legislation (NetRegs and
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/) @
These resources provide information and guidance relating to legislation in the UK
(NetRegs, available via http://www.netregs.org.uk/ provides information for Scotland
and Northern Ireland, whilst the UK Government website
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ provides information for the whole of the UK).
L11 Industry groups (e.g. Nuclear Industry Liaison
Group (NILG), Safety Directors’ Forum etc.)
Industry groups provide intelligence and useful expert contacts on legal issues and
implications. The Safety Directors’ Forum is a forum that brings together senior level
nuclear industry executives to promote learning, agree strategy, network, to provide
industry input to new developments and to ensure a focus on continuous
improvement. This is useful as a source of expert contacts. Details for this forum are
available on-line [http://www.nuclearinst.com/SDF-1]. The NILG is a forum for
discussion between nuclear site operators and the UK environment agencies;
covering topics such as government policy, legislation and regulatory initiatives.
Representatives on the NILG forum should be available within organisations.
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Number Resource Resource
media
Available
from Usefulness Ease of use Comments
L12 Local authority planning teams and NuLeAF @
Local authority planning teams are a source of information on the planning process,
planning consents and their conditions. Contact details for the relevant local planning
team should be available via the website of the appropriate local council. The
Nuclear Legacy Advisory Forum (NuLeAF) is an organisation which seeks to build
capacity within local government to engage effectively with nuclear legacy
management, and is a source of information about planning and the issues affecting
the planning community / local government. Information on NuLeAF is available via
http://www.nuleaf.org.uk/.
L13 National strategies and policies @
National strategies and plans define national (Government) level expectations for
management of LLW in the UK. These are available online:
Policy for the Long-Term Management of Solid Low Level Radioactive Waste
in the United Kingdom:
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/fil
e/254393/Low_level_waste_policy.pdf
UK Strategy for Management of Solid LLW from the Nuclear Industry –
https://www.gov.uk/
Strategy for Management of solid low level radioactive waste from the non-
nuclear industry in the. United Kingdom Part 1 – Anthropogenic
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/fil
e/48291/4616-strategy-low-level-radioactive-waste.pdf
Strategy for the Management of Naturally Occurring Radioactive Material
(NORM) waste in the United Kingdom:
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/fil
e/335821/Final_strategy_NORM.pdf
Implementing Geological Disposal -
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/fil
e/332890/GDF_White_Paper_FINAL.pdf
NDA Strategy II: http://www.nda.gov.uk/publication/nda-strategy-effective-
from-april-2011/
Scotland’s Higher Activity Waste Policy -
http://www.gov.scot/Topics/Environment/waste-and-pollution/Waste-
1/16293/higheractivitywastepolicy
NDA Value Framework - http://www.nda.gov.uk/publication/egg08-nda-
guidance-and-expectations-for-business-cases-and-value-management/
(NDA sites).
Integrated Impact Assessments
L14 Advice from technical specialists (legal,
commercial, environmental management, etc.).
Provides access to advice and guidance on specific aspects of the legal impacts for
different approaches and technologies. Should be readily available internally within
organisations.
OFFICIAL
NWP/REP/100
Issue 1 – Oct 2015
Page 48 of 48
National Waste Programme
OFFICIAL
LLW Repository Ltd
Legal Attribute Resource Map