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Waste Management in the Nuclear Fuel Cycle - Appendix 5
The first two statements were formulated and published in 1995 to confront the question of identifying the best and most appropriate means of managing and disposing of radioactive wastes from the civil nuclear fuel cycle. The third statement updates these to 1999.
The Principles of Radioactive Waste Management
A 1995 publication within the International Atomic Energy Agency's (IAEA's) Radioactive Waste Safety Standards (RADWASS) programme1 defines the objective of radioactive waste management and the associated set of internationally agreed principles. The principles set out in the document are:
1. Protection of human health
Radioactive waste shall be managed in such a way as to secure an acceptable level of protection for human health.
2. Protection of the environment
Radioactive waste shall be managed in such a way as to provide an acceptable level of protection of the environment.
3. Protection beyond national borders
Radioactive waste shall be managed in such a way as to assure that possible effects on human health and the environment beyond national borders will be taken into account.
4. Protection of future generations
Radioactive waste shall be managed in such a way that predicted impacts on the health of future generations will not be greater than relevant levels of impact that are acceptable today.
5. Burdens on future generations
Radioactive waste shall be managed in such a way that will not impose undue burdens on future generations.
6. National legal framework
Radioactive waste shall be managed within an appropriate national legal framework including clear allocation of responsibilities and provision for independent regulatory functions.
7. Control of radioactive waste generation
Generation of radioactive waste shall be kept to the minimum practicable.
8. Radioactive waste generation and management interdependencies
Interdependencies among all steps in radioactive waste generation and management shall be appropriately taken into account.
9. Safety of facilities
The safety of facilities for radioactive waste management shall be appropriately assured during their lifetime.
The Environmental and Ethical Basis of the Geological Disposal of Long-Lived Radioactive Waste
At its Special Session in March 1995, the Radioactive Waste Management Committee (RWMC) of the OECD's Nuclear Energy Agency reassessed the basis for the geological disposal strategy from an environmental and ethical perspective.2 After a careful review of the environmental and ethical issues, the members of the RWMC:
Keeping these considerations in mind, the Committee members:
This opinion has been endorsed by the IAEA and the European Commission.
Progress Towards Geologic Disposal of Radioactive Waste
In 1999 the Radioactive Waste Management Committee of the OECD Nuclear Energy Agency surveyed member countries as well as the European Commission and the IAEA to review the adequacy and continuing relevance of earlier collective opinions such as that quoted above.3 A very high level of consensus was found internationally among regulators and implementers.
Broad conclusions reached at the end of this review were that:
Alternative means of radioactive waste disposal have often appeared to have promise prior to consideration of all aspects of the proposal. Several exotic options were studied earlier, and no longer seriously considered. There are those who, for a variety of reasons, strongly advocate surface storage or partitioning and transmutation. The waste management community does however, regard extended or 'indefinite' surface storage as a real alternative to geologic disposal; at best it offers a postponement of final disposal. Partitioning and transmutation is also not regarded as an alternative; at best it reduces the volume, or changes the isotope distribution, of wastes requiring disposal.
Further Information
References
1. The Principles of Radioactive Waste Management, Safety Series No. 111-F, a publication within the RADWASS programme, IAEA (1995). [Back]2. The Collective Opinion of the Radioactive Waste Management Committee is part of the report titled The Environmental and Ethical Basis of Geological Disposal of Long-Lived Radioactive Wastes, OECD Nuclear Energy Agency (1995). A PDF file of the the report is also available.[Back]3. Progress Towards Geologic Disposal of Radioactive Waste: Where Do We Stand? An International Assessment, OECD Nuclear Energy Agency (1999). [Back]
Related information pages
Waste Management in the Nuclear Fuel Cycle