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Site in northern Switzerland picked for nuclear waste storage

Swiss authorities have selected a site in northern Switzerland, not far from the German border, to host a deep geological storage repository for radioactive waste, they said Saturday.

Site in northern Switzerland picked for nuclear waste storage
Leibstadt nuclear power plant near Leibstadt, Northern Switzerland. Photo: FABRICE COFFRINI/AFP

After nearly 50 years of searching for the best way to store its radioactive waste, Switzerland is gearing up for its “project of the century”, entailing burying spent nuclear fuel deep underground in clay.

The organisation in charge of handling the country’s radioactive waste said Saturday it had decided that the Nordlich Lagern region was the best of three sites it had been considering for the underground storage facility.

We “chose Nordlich Lagern as the safest site for a deep geological repository,” Felix Glauser, a spokesman for the National Cooperative for the Disposal of Radioactive Waste (Nagra), told AFP in an email, confirming a report by Swiss news agency Keystone-ATS.

“Extensive investigations have shown that Nordlich Lagern is the most suitable site and has the largest safety reserves,” he added.

Nagra has informed the local population directly and is expected to present its proposal to the Swiss government on Monday, Keystone-ATS reported.

The Swiss government is not due to make the final decision until 2029, but that is unlikely to be the last word as the issue would probably go to a referendum under Switzerland’s famous direct democracy system.

Swiss nuclear power plants have been pumping out radioactive waste for more than half a century.

But following the 2011 nuclear accident at the Fukushima power station in Japan, Switzerland decided to phase out nuclear power gradually: its reactors can continue for as long as they remain safe.

For now, the waste is being stored in an “intermediary depot” in Wurenlingen, some 15 kilometres from the German border.

With the new facility, Switzerland hopes to join an elite club of countries closing in on deep geological storage.

So far, only Finland has built a site, in granite, and Sweden gave the green light in January to build its own site for burying spent nuclear fuel in granite.

France also has plans to store radioactive waste underground in clay.

n Switzerland, a projected 83,000 cubic metres of radioactive waste, including some high activity waste, will have to be buried.

This volume corresponds to a 60-year operating life of the Beznau, Gosgen and Leibstadt nuclear power plants, and the 47 years that Muhleberg was in operation before closing in 2019.

Filling in the underground nuclear waste tombs should begin by 2060, followed by several decades of close monitoring.

The site would be sealed some time in the 22nd century.

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ENERGY

How much could electricity prices fall by in your part of Switzerland?

There is good news for most households in Switzerland: electricity prices will fall next year at last. But the drops won't be equal across the country.

How much could electricity prices fall by in your part of Switzerland?

Due to lower global energy supply after Russia attacked Ukraine in February 2022, energy prices in Europe climbed substantially.

In Switzerland, they increased by 20 percent on average in 2023 and 18 percent this year, taking out a big chunk of many families’ budgets.

However, after these considerable price hikes in the past two years, electricity tariffs will drop by an average of 10 percent in 2025, the Federal Electricity Commission (ElCom) announced on Thursday. 

This means that for a ‘typical’ household, which annually consumes 4,500 kWh, electricity bill will be 141 francs lower compared to 2024.

The reason for this positive evolution, according to ElCom, is that “prices on the wholesale electricity market have stabilised somewhat, resulting in a fall in energy tariffs.”

Different regional tariffs

Switzerland’s electricity network is highly decentralised, with about 600 different distributors.

For that reason, price disparities among Swiss electricity suppliers are significant, so the amount of the decrease will depend not only on your place of residence and the size of dwelling, but also on the production capacity of the local electricity provider.

Can you switch to a different (cheaper) power company?

No, private households can’t pick between different power suppliers. You are limited to using the local power company that holds the monopoly for your address.

How much cheaper will electricity be in your community in 2025?

The reduction of 10 percent is an average, which means more or less of a decrease in various communities.

For instance, if you live in canton Zurich, you are likely to pay nearly 13 percent less for electricity, while in the city of Zurich itself, your bill will be only 1.06 percent lower.

In Geneva and its communities, you are looking at a drop of 12.16 percent, while in Vaud, tariffs will be between about 7 and 12.69 percent lower (but only 4.19 percent less in Lausanne).

Basel-City and Basel-Country communities, however, will be a bit less lucky: tariffs there will be less than 1 percent lower.

Residents of many Valais communities, on the other hand, will enjoy a decrease of between 14 and over 17 percent.

But the residents of central municipalities around Lucerne will get the biggest break: they will pay 26.6 percent less than currently.

But there is bad news as well

Tariffs will actually go up for residents of some communities, especially in Solothurn and Schffhausen: their electricity bills will increase by up to …31.8 percent!

You can check out the 2025 tariffs in your community on this ElCom map

In any case, you will be soon receiving a letter from your local provider informing you of the prices in your community.

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