• In soils, technetium-99 (99Tc), carbon-14, strontium-90, cobalt-60 (60Co), iodine-129 (129I), iodine-131 (131I), americium-241 (241Am), neptunium-237 (237Np) and various forms of radioactive plutonium and uranium are the most common radionuclides. (wikipedia.org)
  • Background radioactivity - radioactive elements in the natural environment including those in the crust of the earth (like radioactive potassium, uranium, and thorium isotopes) and those produced by cosmic rays. (cdc.gov)
  • Radon and thoron (collectively called rfadon) are natural radioactive decay products of Uranium-238 and Thorium-232. (studyres.com)
  • Those fires, along with inadequate storage procedures and regular day-to-day operations, also released uranium, beryllium, tritium and carbon tetrachloride, a carcinogenic cleaning solvent, into the area. (huffpost.com)
  • In its elementary state uranium is only weakly radioactive due to its unstable isotopes, which vary naturally. (euradcom.org)
  • To do this, the centrifuge process is used, separating the uranium 235 from waste uranium by repeatedly diffusing the gas through a silver-zinc membrane in thousands of fast-spinning vertical tubes. (euradcom.org)
  • This uranium toxic waste is bad waste, but at least it is known. (rabble.ca)
  • This Guide does not concern naturally occurring radioactive substances, nuclear material (plutonium, uranium and thorium) or nuclear waste. (stuklex.fi)
  • In their analysis of public water system data collected between 2010 and 2015, EWG focused on six radioactive contaminants, including radium, radon and uranium. (dmirix.ru)
  • And concerns have echoed across the country - from abandoned uranium mines on Navajo Nation lands, to lingering nuclear waste from the Manhattan Project in Missouri, to contaminants leaching from phosphate mines in Florida. (dmirix.ru)
  • Beta particle ( ionizing radiation ) - a charged particle emitted from the nucleus of certain unstable atomic nuclei (radioactive isotopes), having the charge and mass of an electron. (cdc.gov)
  • This project investigated methods and sampling regimes for in-situ radioactive contamination mapping, developed and characterised a waste segregation measurement system and devised new methods for assessing waste drum and large concrete structure integrity. (euramet.org)
  • Waste pipes have weld defects, and have caused radioactive contamination. (robedwards.com)
  • These findings are a warning sign that tritium contamination is widespread around SSI. (tapcanada.org)
  • A fire at the Dow Chemical Co. Rocky Flats plant Sunday released a small amount of radioactive plutonium contamination, a plant spokesman said. (huffpost.com)
  • While ingesting radioactive elements through drinking contaminated water is not the only route of human exposure, it is a major risk pathway, says Daniel Hirsch, a retired University of California, Santa Cruz, professor who has studied the Santa Susana Field Laboratory contamination. (dmirix.ru)
  • Health advocates express concern that the government is not doing enough to protect the public from these and other risks associated with exposure to radioactive contamination in drinking water. (dmirix.ru)
  • Inside the reactor, there is deuterium-tritium plasma, which is confined by the magnetic field. (ysjournal.com)
  • Powerful lasers are aimed directly onto the surface of a deuterium-tritium pellet. (ysjournal.com)
  • Until 1971, Hanford's radioactive reactor effluent was discharged straight into the Columbia River, which has long been a vital waterway to the nearby towns of Richland, Pasco, and Kennewick, referred to today as the Tri-Cities. (uchicago.edu)
  • A Cold War-era liquid-fueled reactor design could transform thorium - a radioactive waste from mining - into a practically limitless energy source. (businessinsider.com)
  • The steam used to cool the reactor never comes in direct contact with the radioactive material (or shouldn't) and even if it does the water is cleaned before being released back out into the river/lake it was obtained from. (pinktentacle.com)
  • WASHINGTON, March 21 - Two more radioactive contaminants have shown up in the groundwater under the Indian Point nuclear reactor complex in Westchester County, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission said on Tuesday. (ipsecinfo.org)
  • For the last few months, plant technicians have been trying to find the flaw that is allowing water with tritium in it to seep out of the spent fuel pool for the Indian Point 2 reactor, but one of the radioactive materials discovered on Tuesday, nickel-63, is more likely to have come from the pool at Indian Point 1, a plant official said. (ipsecinfo.org)
  • In the reactor, the nickel can become radioactive. (ipsecinfo.org)
  • 1 The process which would take place in a fusion reactor involves the fusion of hydrogen, or more specifically with the isotopes deuterium and tritium. (ysjournal.com)
  • On February 29, a train headed to collect rad waste from the now-decommissioned Vermont Yankee nuclear reactor in Vernon, Vermont derailed. (nukewatchinfo.org)
  • The Vermont Yankee reactor has been in the decommissioning process since 2019 and has since been transporting highly radioactive waste fuel rods thousands of miles, via NorthStar, to the Andrews County, Texas, Waste Control Specialists dumpsite, the presumptive destination of the recently derailed empty train cars. (nukewatchinfo.org)
  • The funding will be directed to "groups of university, nonprofit, and private-sector partners" who will help communities decide that they want to be the recipients of the country's waste reactor fuel. (nukewatchinfo.org)
  • Officials at Ukraine's Energoatom corporation, replied that any collapse of the dike would be partial "even in a worst-case," and that there would still be sufficient water to keep the six reactor cores and the waste fuel cool. (nukewatchinfo.org)
  • Made all the more prevalent a year out from it's initial release by the recent robotic expeditions into Reactor #2 which gave us a clearer picture on just how deadly the radiation levels are, watch Chief Engineer and nuclear expert Arnie Gundersen inform viewers on what's going on at the Japanese nuclear meltdown site, Fukushima Daiichi. (candobetter.net)
  • Alpha particle ( ionizing radiation ) - two neutrons and two protons bound as a single particle (a helium nucleus) that is emitted from the nucleus of certain radioactive isotopes in the process of disintegration. (cdc.gov)
  • In ocean waters, the presence of tritium (3H), cesium-137 (137Cs), strontium-90 (90Sr), plutonium-239 (239Pu) and plutonium-240 (240Pu) has significantly increased due to anthropogenic causes. (wikipedia.org)
  • Radioactive cesium-137, strontium-90, plutonium-239 and tritium, along with a mix of other toxic chemicals and heavy metals, are known to have been released at the industrial site through various spills, leaks, the use of open-air burn pits and a partial nuclear meltdown. (dmirix.ru)
  • Developed waste package temperature-monitoring systems, to help identify container "hot spots" early and before thermally-induced damage can create the potential for radioactivity release. (euramet.org)
  • Concentrated on a compact site of 1.5 square miles is a jumble of buildings, pipes, roads, railways and waterways, randomly assembled over more than half a dozen decades, which together manage around two-thirds by radioactivity of all the radioactive wastes in the UK. (wiseinternational.org)
  • The Sellafield radioactive waste component includes all the high-level wastes (less than 1% by volume, over half the radioactivity) held in liquid form or stored in vitrified blocks, and half the volume of intermediate-level wastes (the other half being held at various sites around the country). (wiseinternational.org)
  • The bulk of the nation's low-level wastes (90% by volume, 0.1% radioactivity) are disposed of in a nearby shallow repository at Drigg. (wiseinternational.org)
  • He looked up at the miles of cables and pipes above us, indicating their exposed vulnerability in the event of disruption which could affect the cooling of the liquors below, releasing a massive burst of radioactivity, and commented: 'You could say we are standing on the most dangerous place on earth. (wiseinternational.org)
  • Regarding releases to air and water leakage from Fukushima, the main radionuclide from among the many kinds of fission products in the fuel was volatile iodine-131, which has a half-life of 8 days. (world-nuclear.org)
  • In assessing the significance of atmospheric releases, the Cs-137 figure is multiplied by 40 and added to the I-131 number to give an 'iodine-131 equivalent' figure. (world-nuclear.org)
  • On 16 March, Japan's Nuclear Safety Commission recommended local authorities to instruct evacuees under 40 years of age leaving the 20 km zone to ingest stable iodine as a precaution against ingestion ( e.g. via milk) of radioactive iodine-131. (world-nuclear.org)
  • Among those physical agents considered suitable for evaluation by the Monographs, and assigned high priority at that time, were electric and magnetic fields, the radioactive isotope iodine-131, and radioactive wastes. (who.int)
  • Plumes of strontium-90 and heavy metals leaked into the groundwater, and trace amounts of tritium have been found in local milk and wine. (uchicago.edu)
  • That waste, which can contain radioactive tritium, cobalt 60, nickel 63, iron 55 and argon 41 gas, is handled and stored using a complex series of storage barges, tanks and pipes deep within the base. (robedwards.com)
  • Rosselkhoznadzor said that it has asked Japan to provide information by Oct. 16 about its methodology for testing exported fish products for radiation, including how it tests for the residual presence of the radioactive isotope tritium. (pollution.news)
  • Exposure may be short-term (acute), People living near the ORR want to know whether their health could be affected by historical intermediate, or long- releases of contaminants to groundwater . (cdc.gov)
  • DOE's $12 million cleanup-on-the-cheap plan for Material Disposal Area C will create a permanent nuclear waste dump above our regional groundwater. (nukewatch.org)
  • Groundwater in the area is highly polluted with tritium oxide. (tapcanada.org)
  • Water used to cool the melted-down cores and groundwater from close to the damaged plant contain some radioactive materials, and are currently being collected and stored in tanks on the plant grounds. (uchicago.edu)
  • Three years later, it ratified the London Dumping Convention prohibiting, among other things, the ocean disposal of high-level nuclear wastes. (enviroreporter.com)
  • Irreversible radioactive waste disposal is most unwise," wrote Warf. (enviroreporter.com)
  • and because there is no mechanism for disposal of the waste products. (pinktentacle.com)
  • A Classification System for Radioactive Waste Disposal - What Waste Goes Where? (nrc.gov)
  • The law simply stated that no new nuclear plants could be constructed in Illinois until the Federal Government provided a permanent disposal solution for the deadly and long-lasting high-level radioactive wastes (HLRW - currently at ~11,000 tons, the most in the Nation, and growing annually) that all reactors produce. (neis.org)
  • More nuclear reactors of any kind will mean: more radioactive waste with no disposal, more nuclear power bailouts going to a demonstrably corrupt industry, more nuclear rate hikes, continued accident threat, and LESS renewable energy and efficiency. (neis.org)
  • In South Korea, Prime Minister Han Duck-soo banned imports of marine and other food products from Japan following strong criticism of the radioactive wastewater disposal program. (pollution.news)
  • The first generation of nuclear power plants are due for decommissioning, a process that is expected to cost 150 billion Euro and will generate large volumes of highly radioactive waste. (euramet.org)
  • On June 9, the U.S. Department of Energy named 13 consortia, each to receive $2 million in federal taxpayer funding, to help push the DOE's so-called "consent-based siting" of a consolidated interim storage facility (CISF) for highly radioactive waste. (nukewatchinfo.org)
  • For a radionuclide, the time required for the activity to decrease, by a radioactive decay process, by half. (gc.ca)
  • and technology inclusive safety assessment methodologies as well as fusion specific hazards such as tritium and decay heat. (iaea.org)
  • LOS ANGELES, CA - (NewMediaWire) - September 12, 2023 - As feared on August 24, Japan began diluting and releasing radioactive tritium, thus making it undetectable and untraceable without a specialized. (am-news.com)
  • We did observe as well that apples have this unique characteristic of having fairly high tritium concentrations even far away from some facilities and this is a subject of - will be the subject of some future research efforts to look at how apples are behaving this way. (tapcanada.org)
  • The Japanese Ministry of the Environment also published a report on water testing that claimed that tritium concentrations were below the lower limit of detection at 11 sampling points and would have no adverse effects on human health and the environment. (pollution.news)
  • We dare not let this toxic, radioactive garbage get into the food chain via the ocean or underground water. (enviroreporter.com)
  • After decades of mismanaging its nuclear waste, the US Department of Energy wrestles with its toxic legacy. (uchicago.edu)
  • But as dangerous as they are, the toxic vapors Garza's crew encountered aren't necessarily the tanks' worst hazard. (uchicago.edu)
  • Ultimately, as many as two million people were exposed to Hanford's toxic waste. (uchicago.edu)
  • The Department of Energy (DOE) has submitted a report to the New Mexico Environment Department (NMED) declaring its preferred plan to "cap and cover" radioactive and toxic wastes at one of the Los Alamos National Laboratory's (LANL's) oldest dumps. (nukewatch.org)
  • Instead,tritium extracted from Ontario reactors is being sold to SSI and incorporated into self-luminous devices, the manufacture of which results in chronic radioactive pollution of local air, water, soil and foodstuffs due to the inability of the SSI facility to handle this radio-toxic substance without spilling large quantities into the surrounding environment. (tapcanada.org)
  • If not," says Kamps of Beyond Nuclear, "our waste will be the toxic burden of near endless generations to come. (rabble.ca)
  • Separating and isolating that toxic waste is one of the main industrial challenges of the human race in this century. (rabble.ca)
  • how about if we just outlaw toxic waste period? (rabble.ca)
  • I am all for a ban on the production of any new toxic waste, but we have to figure out how to dig up the stuff we have buried for around 200 years. (rabble.ca)
  • Alongside seven Trafalgar class hunter killers currently based at Devonport in Plymouth, these vessels are routinely serviced at Faslane: their nuclear reactors produce radioactive coolant that has to be replaced and need regular maintenance. (robedwards.com)
  • Today, they supply about 20% of America's energy, though by the 2040s, this share may drop to 10% as companies shut down decades-old reactors, according to a January 2017 report released by Idaho National Laboratory (INL). (businessinsider.com)
  • CCNR points out that tritium is a radioactive waste byproduct of CANDU nuclear reactors which should be carefully isolated from the environment and living organisms. (tapcanada.org)
  • Since the collapse of the Kakhovka dam on June 6, its reservoir has been draining into the Dnipro River, has lost over three-quarters of its volume of water, and was expected to drop below the water intakes used to pump water into ponds used to cool the reactors, the waste fuel rods, and the diesel generators at the site. (nukewatchinfo.org)
  • In rather less hyperbolic language the Office for Nuclear Regulation (ONR) considers HAL 'the most significant hazard on the plant' and its containment a priority. (wiseinternational.org)
  • IARC, 1987b), a formal system for making overall evaluations of carcinogenic hazard to humans was introduced. (who.int)
  • This was not evaluated independently as a carcinogenic hazard at that time, but was subsequently evaluated in Volume 55 (IARC, 1992). (who.int)
  • Bioremediation of radioactive waste or bioremediation of radionuclides is an application of bioremediation based on the use of biological agents bacteria, plants and fungi (natural or genetically modified) to catalyze chemical reactions that allow the decontamination of sites affected by radionuclides. (wikipedia.org)
  • The presence of radioactive waste in the environment may cause long-term effects due to the activity and half-life of the radionuclides, leading their impact to grow with time. (wikipedia.org)
  • At the same time, anthropogenic radionuclides (caused by humans) are due to thermonuclear reactions resulting from explosions and nuclear weapons tests, discharges from nuclear facilities, accidents deriving from the reprocessing of commercial fuel, waste storage from these processes and to a lesser extent, nuclear medicine. (wikipedia.org)
  • The classification of radioactive waste established by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) distinguishes six levels according to equivalent dose, specific activity, heat released and half-life of the radionuclides: Exempt waste (EW): Waste that meets the criteria for exclusion from regulatory control for radiation protection purposes. (wikipedia.org)
  • SSI, located at the Peterborough, Ontario airport, routinely emits large quantities of radioactive tritium gas into the surrounding environment. (tapcanada.org)
  • It is clean- it emits no carbon dioxide, and leaves behind very little radioactive waste. (ysjournal.com)
  • Arnie Gundersen, the sole engineer of Fairewinds Associates , continues to tell lies about the radiation released from the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plants. (atomicinsights.com)
  • Shield Source Incorporated (SSI) will appear before the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission (CNSC) on May 2, 2012 seeking a 10-year license to manufacture glow-in-the-dark devices filled with tritium, a radioactive form of hydrogen. (tapcanada.org)
  • After the hydrogen explosion in unit 1 on 12 March, some radioactive caesium and iodine were detected in the vicinity of the plant, having been released via the venting. (world-nuclear.org)
  • Further I-131 and Cs-137 and Cs-134 were apparently released during the following few days, particularly following the hydrogen explosion at unit 3 on 14 March and at unit 4 on 15 March. (world-nuclear.org)
  • This project has successfully developed methods for the safe and cost-effective decommissioning of nuclear facilities, ensuring waste materials are managed according to their identified hazards. (euramet.org)
  • There may also be some radioactive materials produced at fusion plants, such as tritium. (forbes.com)
  • The ORR's mis- sion was to research, develop, and produce special radioactive materials for nuclear weapons. (cdc.gov)
  • Of course, it's dangerous for (as said), organics, as if you become radioactive yourself (do not try this at home), but on other materials, it change them into radioactive waste (most are not very dangerous, but some can be nasty). (bay12forums.com)
  • The waste water is currently being treated using an advanced liquid processing system referred to as ALPS, though the system does not remove tritium and has been found to leave small amounts of other radioactive materials. (uchicago.edu)
  • It was designated as a Superfund site in the early 1990s, and the radioactive materials have been removed. (huffpost.com)
  • Work involves radioactive materials, radiation sources, radiation generating devices, and radioactive and hazardous wastes. (gobgc.org)
  • This incident comes only a few weeks after a train derailment in East Palestine, Ohio that caused the release of several hazardous materials, a two-day fire, and evacuation of the local community. (nukewatchinfo.org)
  • The regulations applicable to nuclear materials and nuclear waste can be found in the Nuclear Energy Act (990/1987) and the statutes and rules issued by virtue of it. (stuklex.fi)
  • Anyone who imports, trades in, transfers to another party or otherwise places on the market radiation appliances, radioactive substances or materials containing radioactive substances must be able to demonstrate that said products meet the safety requirements pertaining to them. (stuklex.fi)
  • Grout materials are commonly used to immobilize low-level radioactive waste. (bvsalud.org)
  • Russia is considering banning seafood imports from Japan following the latter's decision to release radioactive wastewater from the Fukushima nuclear power plant. (pollution.news)
  • Watch this video from "Two Bit da Vinci" as host Ricky Roy lays out the arguments of both sides of the debate surrounding the release of radioactive wastewater from the Fukushima plant . (pollution.news)
  • According to the transcript, crabapples in a tree located 220 meters northeast from SSI question tested in 2010 contained over 2500 Becquerels per liter of tritium, compared to a normal background level of around 2 Becquerels per liter. (tapcanada.org)
  • Also of serious concern, apples 4.45 km north of SSI on Brealey Drive in Peterborough have consistently shown over 200 Becquerels per liter of tritium. (tapcanada.org)
  • The CNSC has refused to release a full report on a February 1, 2010 accident when SSI released roughly 150 trillion Becquerels of radioactive gas in a period of only about five minutes, nearly ten times the company's weekly release limit, and 30% of its yearly limit. (tapcanada.org)
  • Radioactive releases are measured by the amount of (radio)activity in the material, and quoted in Becquerels. (world-nuclear.org)
  • Indeed, the total estimate delivered to the International Atomic Energy Agency in June states that Fukushima has released 1.5×1016 becquerels (Bq) of Cs-137- about a fifth of the Cs-137 from Chernobyl . (atomicinsights.com)
  • These radioactive particles are by-products generated as a result of activities related to nuclear energy and constitute a pollution and a radiotoxicity problem (with serious health and ecological consequences) due to its unstable nature of ionizing radiation emissions. (wikipedia.org)
  • Its action is largely influenced by electron donors and acceptors, nutrient medium, complexation of radioactive particles with the material and environmental factors. (wikipedia.org)
  • As the local newspaper, the Tri-City Herald, reports, this has happened multiple times in the last five years, such as when a building demolition released plutonium dust that blew for miles, or when plutonium and americium particles contaminated workers' cars, including a rental later returned to the company. (uchicago.edu)
  • But the neutron (not radioactive in itself), if absorbed by other particles, can often make the said particles radioactive, like the inner plating (which will then be radioactive waste). (bay12forums.com)
  • A range of detection systems - for monitoring radioactive and thermal emissions - have also been assessed for nuclear sites and waste repository use. (euramet.org)
  • Shocked by the repeated safety breaches at the base, the Scottish Environment Protection Agency (Sepa) , the government authority that oversees radioactive emissions from civil nuclear sites, is pressing for the legal power to inspect and control Faslane's nuclear operations. (robedwards.com)
  • But space is running out fast, and the government is exploring ways to deal with the waste water - which already totals more than 1 million tons with the volume increasing by more than 100 tons every day. (uchicago.edu)
  • From 1946 through 1970, it was U.S. policy to dump rad waste in shallow land-burial sites on government property or in the ocean at AEC-licensed drop zones. (enviroreporter.com)
  • The Barrington Dog Park exhibits no signs of being the site of an old radioactive dump. (enviroreporter.com)
  • Rad Waste Dump Decisions: Consent or Bribery? (nukewatchinfo.org)
  • It's strange that out of a possible million sq km of available land, Ontario Power Generation (OPG) pinpointed a tiny patch virtually on the shore of one of our Great Lakes - the source of drinking water for millions - for an underground nuclear waste dump. (rabble.ca)
  • He recently appeared on Democracy Now , a liberal news program that recognizes the ills of unfettered capitalism and an economy that is dependent on using the atmosphere as a waste dump for massive quantities of fossil fuel waste. (atomicinsights.com)
  • He will routinely refer to anything which is 'Below Regulatory Concern' (or 'As Low As Reasonably Achievable,' an industry catch-phrase and technical term for 'spill whatever you want whenever you want to') as 'no release' even when it's physically impossible for that to be true some venting had to occur and yet Mr. Golden will describe it as 'zero. (animatedsoftware.com)
  • Anisokinetic sampling - a sampling condition that involves a mismatch between the air or \fluid velocity in the sampling probe and that in the stack releasing airborne effluents. (cdc.gov)
  • Very short lived waste (VSLW): Waste with very short half-lives (often used for research and medical purposes) that can be stored over a limited period of up to a few years and subsequently cleared from regulatory control. (wikipedia.org)
  • They comprise wastes arising from the plant's initial military function of producing plutonium for the atom bomb and subsequently wastes mainly derived from reprocessing spent fuel from the civil nuclear programme (Magnox and AGR) and those originating from reprocessing foreign fuels. (wiseinternational.org)
  • They seem unable to understand that tritium gas, which SSI releases from its stack, is readily oxidized to radioactive water, spreads throughout the environment and is incorporated into all organisms living nearby - including humans. (tapcanada.org)
  • Northeast Japan hit with flooding-Contaminated Fukushima soil stored in flood zones- Construction begins at Fukushima plant for water release! (netzfrauen.org)
  • Without the reservoir on the other side to counteract it, the internal pressure of the water in the waste fuel cooling pool could break the dyke around it, the IRSN said in a June 7 report. (nukewatchinfo.org)
  • Radioactive elements can be introduced into water via medical treatments, including radioactive iodine used to treat thyroid disorders. (dmirix.ru)
  • The nonprofit Environmental Working Group (EWG, a partner in this reporting project) estimates that drinking water for more than 170 million Americans in all 50 states "contains radioactive elements at levels that may increase the risk of cancer. (dmirix.ru)
  • The legal limits set by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) for several types of radioactive elements in community water systems have not been updated since 1976. (dmirix.ru)
  • He added by claiming that the water from Fukushima is safe after being treated to remove most radioactive elements. (pollution.news)
  • If we'd stopped producing in 1945, we'd have a minuscule amount [of radioactive waste] compared to what's out there in those tanks now," Franklin says. (uchicago.edu)
  • And it can be unearthed during oil and gas drilling, or any industrial activities that involve cracking into bedrock where radioactive elements naturally exist. (dmirix.ru)
  • The only waste of concern is dealt with by the numerous pooper-scoopers positioned about the separate small and large dog areas. (enviroreporter.com)
  • The facility is safe, but the event raises concerns about safety protocols at the site and warrants additional NRC inspection as it involves a breakdown of controls designed to prevent chemical, radiological, and criticality hazards - the primary concern at U.S. fuel cycle facilities. (tmia.com)
  • evaluate whether the releases could be harmful to people who live in communities near the reservation. (cdc.gov)
  • The process used to systematically identify and assess hazards to evaluate the potential internal, external, human-made and natural events that can cause the identified hazards to initiate faults that develop into accidents. (gc.ca)
  • That waste processing plant, Sepa later warned Faslane, is "in desperate need of improvement. (robedwards.com)
  • This is only a hazard for those on the plant site, and the level diminishes with distance from the radioactive source. (world-nuclear.org)
  • It is the chief hazard for the plant workers, who wear film badges so that the dose can be monitored. (world-nuclear.org)
  • Under the oversight of Dow Chemical and, later, Rockwell International, plant operators lost track of more than 2,600 pounds of plutonium and other radioactive material, as documented in later lawsuits and a Government Accountability Office assessment. (huffpost.com)
  • But the agency and the plant owner, Entergy Nuclear Northeast, said they did not pose a hazard. (ipsecinfo.org)
  • Even more troublesome, the plant has yet to stop producing dangerous nuclear waste. (rabble.ca)
  • Plutonium pits are the essential radioactive cores of nuclear weapons. (nukewatch.org)
  • The life cycles of radiation sources are monitored from manufacturing to decommissioning and the treatment of waste. (stuklex.fi)
  • The export of some radioactive substances (including tritium and certain alpha radiation sources) is furthermore subject to the regulations applicable to the dual-use items of the nuclear industry. (stuklex.fi)
  • It also developed systems for determining radioactive gas releases from high level nuclear waste storage facilities. (euramet.org)
  • If past examples are any indicator, the "consenting" communities are likely to be those most deprived of resources, especially Indigenous communities and communities of color, who may feel pressured to accept the DOE largesse along with the deadly hazards of living alongside high-level radioactive waste. (nukewatchinfo.org)
  • A series of other documents released by Sepa under the Freedom of Information Act disclose there have been at least eight radioactive leaks at the base in the last 10 years, bringing the total number of leaks acknowledged at Faslane over the last three decades to more than 40. (robedwards.com)
  • Superfund law and other laws that protect the public from hazardous waste and environ- with a substance by mental spills of hazardous substances. (cdc.gov)
  • A substance or waste, other than a nuclear substance, that is used or produced in the course of carrying on a licensed activity and that may pose a risk to the environment or the health and safety of persons. (gc.ca)
  • The import and export of some products is prohibited when a radioactive substance has intentionally been added to the products. (stuklex.fi)
  • Ensuring the containers used can withstand the heat generated by their contents and monitoring the store for environmental releases of radioactive gases pose long term challenges for current measurement techniques. (euramet.org)
  • In the early years, in an atmosphere of trust in technology and pride in being in the vanguard of both military and civil nuclear development, far less attention was paid to waste management. (wiseinternational.org)
  • Internal emitters of radiation are primarily Potassium-40, Carbon-14, and tritium. (studyres.com)
  • During the current licence period in late 2009, CNSC staff allowed SSI to increase the height of its stack without public notice or environmental review, so that the company could spread its radioactive pollution farther away from the factory. (tapcanada.org)
  • According to an estimate performed by the ministry, annual radiation levels near the release point after a release would be between 0.052 and 0.62 microsievert at sea, and 1.3 microsieverts in the atmosphere, compared with the 2,100 microsieverts that humans come into contact with each year in daily life. (uchicago.edu)
  • Exposure to ionizing radiation can also be by direct radiation from the plants and fuels themselves, though not released to the environment. (world-nuclear.org)
  • These structures include building B29, an open, single-skinned storage pond, and B30 ('Dirty Thirty'), considered by some to be 'the most dangerous industrial building in Europe' but rivalled for the epithet by B38, containing cladding and fuels mixed in with other wastes. (wiseinternational.org)
  • When transferring radioactive substances the use of which is not exempt from the safety licence, the transferor is obligated to ensure that the consignee has a safety licence which entitles it to possess radioactive substances. (stuklex.fi)
  • Both fires sent plumes of radioactive waste into the air, contaminating miles of land downwind. (huffpost.com)
  • Fire protection maintains safety and reduces hazards associated with fires. (nrc.gov)
  • The testing of prototype radiation detection instrumentation during the project has resulted in several companies developing commercial devices which are suitable for use at long-term high activity nuclear waste storage facilities. (euramet.org)
  • Local vegetation has incorporated tritium into a broad range of organic compounds. (tapcanada.org)
  • Organic moieties can be unintentionally present in common ingredients used to make these grout waste forms, which may result in the formation of organo-radionuclide species. (bvsalud.org)
  • The NRC staff also acknowledges that, "Potential hazards of current fusion energy systems appear lower than typical utilization facilities," suggesting that relying solely on this framework may not make much sense for the industry. (forbes.com)
  • This phosphogypsum waste is stockpiled and presents a potential threat to the surrounding environment. (tib.eu)
  • Notwithstanding the complexity of their governance and potential moral hazard implications, do we have a solid science and engineering basis to believe that any geoengineering methods could theoretically work to controllably lower temperature, and if so, would that be able to slow down sea ice melt, too? (longitudinal.blog)
  • The CNSC is mandated to protect Canadians from radioactive pollution. (tapcanada.org)
  • On Wednesday, staff at the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) released a long-anticipated white paper titled, "Licensing and Regulating Fusion Energy Systems. (forbes.com)
  • The release of the white paper represents an important early step in this process. (forbes.com)
  • The public health assessment is the substances that have primary public health process that ATSDR uses to been released or discarded into the Identify off-site populations who could have been exposed to hazardous substances, environment. (cdc.gov)
  • The 100-page internal report, released by Sepa to Channel 4 News , concludes that many of the ageing facilities used to process, store and dispose of radioactive waste at Faslane are not fit for purpose. (robedwards.com)
  • Dr. Gordon Edwards and Dr. Linda Harvey, international experts on the risks of nuclear energy and health effects of radiation, will be presenting their perspective on the hazards of radioactive tritium, specifically in regard to the current federal relicensing process for Shield Source Incorporated (SSI), located at the Peterborough airport. (tapcanada.org)