What are nuclear wastes and how are they managed?
The most significant high-level waste from a nuclear reactor is the used nuclear fuel left after it has spent three years in the reactor generating heat for electricity. Low-level waste is made up of lightly-contaminated items like tools and work clothing from power plant operation and makes up the bulk of radioactive wastes. Items disposed of as intermediate-level wastes might include used filters, steel components from within the reactor and some effluents from reprocessing.
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By Volume
|
By Radioactive Content
|
High Level Waste
|
3%
|
95%
|
Intermediate Level Waste
|
7%
|
4%
|
Low Level Waste
|
90%
|
1%
|
Generating enough electricity for one person produces just 30 grams of used fuel each year.
High level wastes make just 3% of the total volume of waste arising from nuclear generation, but they contain 95% of the radioactive content. Low level wastes represent 90% of the total volume of radioactive wastes, but contain only 1% of the radioactivity.
Managing used fuel
Used nuclear fuel is very hot and radioactive. Handling and storing
it safely can be done as long as it is cooled and plant workers are
shielded from the radiation it produces by a dense material like
concrete or steel.
Water can conveniently provide both cooling and shielding, so a
typical reactor will have its fuel removed underwater and
transferred to a storage pool. After about five years it can be
transferred into dry ventilated concrete containers, but otherwise
it can safely remain in the pool for up to 50 years.
But this used fuel is also a valuable resource, and 96% of it
can be recycled. Currently, but means that the sustainability of nuclear power is
enhanced. In this case about 1% of the fuel is recycled
promptly into mixed oxide fuel (MOX), the rest is usually stored
for the future while about 3% of the original mass remains as waste
to be disposed of.
The high-level wastes (whether as used fuel after 50 years cooling, or the separated 3% of such fuel) will be disposed of deep underground in geological repositories.
Intermediate and low-level wastes
Intermediate- and
low-level wastes are disposed of closer to the surface, in many
established repositories. Low-level waste disposal sites are
purpose built, but are not much different from normal municipal
waste sites.
Nuclear power is not the only industry that creates radioactive wastes. Other industries include medicine, particle and space research, oil and gas, and mining - to name just a few. Some of these materials are not produced inside a reactor, but rather are concentrated forms of naturally occurring radioactive material.
Civil nuclear wastes from nuclear power plants have never caused any harm, nor posed an environmental hazard, in over 50 years of the nuclear power industry. Their management and eventual disposal is straightforward.

One characteristic of all radioactive wastes which distinguishes
them from the very much larger amount of other toxic industrial
wastes is that their radioactivity progressively decays and
diminishes. For instance, after 40 years, the used fuel removed
from a reactor has only one thousandth of its initial radioactivity
remaining, making it very much easier to handle and dispose of.
Disposal
The categorization - high,
intermediate, low - helps determine how
wastes are treated and where they end up. All radioactive waste facilities are designed
with numerous layers of protection to make sure that the environment remains
protected for as long as it takes for radioactivity to reduce to background
levels. Low-level and intermediate
wastes are buried close to the surface. For low-level wastes disposal is not
much different from a normal municipal landfill. High-level wastes can remain
highly radioactive for thousands of years. They need to be disposed of hundreds
of metres underground in heavily engineered facilities built in stable
geological formations. While no such facilities currently exist, there
feasibility has been demonstrated and there are several countries now in the
process of designing and constructing them.