Safety objectives
Whereas siting of a new power generating reactor is one of the aspects of the project which can to a certain extent be a choice, this is not the case for numerous SMR projects.
Indeed, in the case of a SMR dedicated to industrial heat production, the site is determined by the location of the customer to whom it will be delivering the energy. Numerous SMR projects are thus aiming for deployment on industrial sites located near to or even within urban areas.
This type of siting near to densely populated or industrial areas is being envisaged by the project developers because these reactors are likely to be able to achieve safety levels significantly better than those of today’s large power generating reactors. The low power to be removed in the event of an accident should make it possible to combine passive and active safety systems, leading to increased diversification of the safety provisions, longer grace periods [1] and better protection of the containment barriers. In addition, some of the new technologies proposed have specific characteristics (such as the intrinsic containment performance of the particular fuels of high-temperature reactors), which also make it possible to envisage a significant reduction in radioactive releases in the event of an accident, even the most severe.
Even if these reactors can in principle achieve a higher safety level than those of the high-power electricity generating reactors, ASN considers that the safety objectives to be attained must be defined before envisaging such siting close to population centres.
ASN thus set up a pluralistic working group to consider the reinforced safety objectives to be defined before envisaging such siting choices.
[1]. Time during which safety can be guaranteed with no intervention being required (for example the time for which – in the event of total loss of electrical power – safety can be guaranteed passively, pending the restoration of a back-up power source).