Title of article
Assessing potential secondary effects of countermeasures in agricultural systems: a review
Author/Authors
C. A. Salt، نويسنده , , B. Rafferty، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
Pages
16
From page
99
To page
114
Abstract
Secondary effects are defined as any positive or negative impacts resulting from the application of countermeasures other than radiological benefits or direct costs. They are categorised into environmental, radioecological, economic and social effects. Impacts on the environment may include changes in water, air and soil pollution or in the conservation and amenity value of an area. Radioecological effects occur when the countermeasure unintentionally alters the behaviour of the target radionuclide or any other radionuclide present. Economic effects may range from changes in agricultural income to environmental costs (e.g. impact of soil erosion on fisheries). Social effects relate to the acceptability of countermeasures, for example in terms of consumer confidence and animal welfare. Recent research into the identification and assessment of secondary effects is summarised. Non-quantitative and quantitative approaches are explained and formal evaluation procedures involving decision matrices and decision support systems are introduced. Examples of recent experimental and modelling work focusing on radiocaesium are given for the following countermeasures: soil application of potassium, administration of AFCF to livestock and ploughing techniques.
Keywords
Side effects , Environmental effects , Social Effects , Economic effects , Decision support systems , CESER , TEMAS
Journal title
Journal of Environmental Radioactivity
Serial Year
2001
Journal title
Journal of Environmental Radioactivity
Record number
705984
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