The issue of Cs-137 in firewood and biomass combustion: a review

Author:

Pepin Stéphane1,Radulovic Sarah1,Wiegers Rob2,Mrdakovic Popic Jelena3,Kallio Antti4,Huss Marie5,Grandia Fidel6,Valls Alba6,Bruno Aina6

Affiliation:

1. Federal Agency for Nuclear Control (FANC) , rue du Marquis 1A, 1000 Brussels, Belgium

2. IBR Consult BV , De Giesel 14, 6081 PH Haelen, the Netherlands

3. Norwegian Radiation and Nuclear Safety Authority (DSA) , Grini Næringspark 13, 1361 Østerås, Norway

4. Radiation and Nuclear Safety Authority (STUK ), Jokiniemenkuja 1, 01370 Vantaa, Finland

5. Swedish Radiation Safety Authority (SSM) , Strålsäkerhetsmyndigheten, Stockholm SE-171 16, Sweden

6. Amphos 21 Consulting S.L. , Carrer de Veneçuela, 103, 08019 Barcelona, Spain

Abstract

Abstract In large parts of Europe, the Chernobyl accident of 1986 caused fallout of Cs-137. This led to the uptake of Cs-137 in trees or other materials used for bioenergy production or as firewood for domestic purposes. This Cs-137 may concentrate in the ashes of the combustion process in such a way that the clearance level of 100 Bq per kg, defined in Directive 2013/59/Euratom (EU BSS), may consequently be exceeded. There is currently no clear consensus in Europe regarding the regulatory approach to this issue: should the import and use of Cs-137 contaminated biomass and its ashes be considered as a planned exposure situation or rather as an existing exposure situation? If considered as an existing exposure situation, which reference level should be applied? We compare the approaches in various European countries, such as Finland, Norway, Sweden, Belgium and the Netherlands. Results of a recent measurement campaign performed in Belgium on firewood imported from Belarus, Ukraine and other countries show a quite large range of Cs-137 activity concentration in firewood. Analysis of samples from biomass combustion confirms that the clearance level of 100 Bq per kg Cs-137 may be exceeded even when the activity concentration in the initial pellet is trivial. A review of dose-assessment studies performed by STUK and from the literature is presented. The general context of biomass energy production is sketched: for instance, in the Netherlands, 40 large biomass firing plants (capacity > 10 MW) are operational and some 20 more are already planned. The fly ashes from the biomass combustion may be a valuable resource for the construction industry, and the issue of Cs-137 contamination is connected with the requirements of the EU BSS regarding the natural radioactivity of building materials. Assessing the impact of Cs-137 contamination and clarifying regulations in the frame of a graded approach are important elements in this context.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging,General Medicine,Radiation,Radiological and Ultrasound Technology

Reference27 articles.

1. Radiological investigation of wood used for combustion;Ladygiene;Ekologija,2010

2. Quality characteristics and radioactive contamination of wood pellet imported in Italy;Calabrese;Open J. Appl. Sci.,2015

3. Post-Chernobyl Cs-137 in the atmosphere of Thessaloniki: a consequence of the financial crisis in Greece;Stoulos;J. Environ. Radioact.,2014

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