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Energy

Radioactive waste and spent fuel

EU rules require all EU countries to have a national policy for spent fuel and radioactive waste management.

Radioactive waste is mainly generated from the production of electricity in nuclear power plants, or from the non-power-related use of radioactive materials for medical, research, industrial and agricultural purposes. 

All EU countries generate radioactive waste, and 20 of them also manage spent fuel on their territory. Owing to its radiological properties and the potential hazard it poses, it is important to ensure the safe management of radioactive waste and spent fuel at all stages. It requires containment and isolation from humans and the living environment over a long period of time.

Radioactive waste is any radioactive material in gaseous, liquid or solid form that is not going to be used any longer in the country of origin, or in the destination country. The material has to be controlled as radioactive waste by a regulatory body under the legislative and regulatory framework of the countries of origin and destination. A natural or legal person can decide if a material is radioactive waste, but the decision needs to be accepted by the countries.

Disposal of waste

Progress has been made in safely disposing of very-low-level and low-level waste in the EU, and so far Finland, France and Sweden have selected sites for the deep geological disposal of intermediate-level and high-level waste from civilian facilities.

They plan to open the first repositories for these kinds of waste between 2025 and 2035.

Supervision and control of shipment

The shipment of radioactive waste and spent fuel, through import, export and transit, are common practices that occur regularly in the EU. 

The EU's Directive on Shipments of Radioactive Waste and Spent Fuel (2006/117/Euratom) establishes a system of prior authorisation for such shipments in Europe. It also

  • requires operators to notify national authorities about shipments of radioactive materials which depart from, go through, or end up in the EU
  • allows EU countries to ship spent fuel to each other for reprocessing and organise the return of the resulting radioactive materials
  • allows EU countries to send shipments of radioactive materials that do not comply with the directive back to their country of origin
  • prohibits the export of radioactive waste to African, Caribbean or Pacific countries, to Antarctica, or to any country which does not have the resources to safely manage it

National programmes and reports

The EU's Radioactive Waste and Spent Fuel Management Directive (2011/70/Euratom) requires that all EU countries have a national policy for spent fuel and radioactive waste management and that they draw up and implement national programmes for the management of these materials. The programmes should cover all types of spent fuel and radioactive waste under EU countries’ jurisdiction and all stages of spent fuel and radioactive waste management from generation to disposal.

Every 3 years since August 2015, EU countries submit national reports on the implementation of the directive to the Commission. Based on those,  the Commission drafts a report on the overall implementation of the directive and an inventory of radioactive waste and spent fuel present in the Community’s territory and the future prospects.

The below list provides links to each national programme and the national reports, as submitted by EU countries.

In the reference period covered by the second national reports (2018), the United Kingdom was still a Member State of the Euratom Community.

Self-assessments and reviews

EU countries carry out self-assessments and invite international peer reviews of their national framework, competent authorities and/or national programme at least every 10 years. The first full round of international peer reviews was carried out under the Integrated Review Service for Radioactive Waste and Spent Fuel Management, Decommissioning and Remediation (ARTEMIS) provided by the IAEA, and was completed in 2023; all reports are published on the IAEA website.

Documents