DocumentCode
886675
Title
Environmental impacts of nuclear power: past experience and future prospects
Author
Maul, P.R. ; Turner, W. ; Glendenning, I.
Author_Institution
Technol. Div., Nucl. Electr. plc, Berkeley, UK
Volume
140
Issue
1
fYear
1993
fDate
1/1/1993 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
13
Lastpage
19
Abstract
The environmental impacts of nuclear power generation are considered for the whole fuel cycle, from the mining of uranium to provide fuel for nuclear reactors right through to the disposal of radioactive wastes and the decommissioning of power stations. This is done for existing reactor types and possible future developments. The radiological impact of routine low level discharges of activity into the environment is small compared with that from natural background radioactivity, although risks to operators arising from exposure to ionising radiation are comparable with those experienced in other safe industries. The quantities of water produced by the nuclear industry are modest compared with many other industries, and the disposal of most of it is a routine operation; the decommissioning of nuclear power stations at the end of their useful lives can be seen as a large waste management exercise. The potential for an accident in the UK, on the scale of the Chernobyl incident, is remote. Overall nuclear power is well controlled and can be seen to have environmental benefits compared with other forms of power generation.
Keywords
accidents; fission reactor decommissioning; fission reactor safety; nuclear power; radioactive pollution; radioactive waste; UK; accident; decommissioning; disposal; environmental impacts; mining; nuclear power generation; nuclear reactors; radioactive pollution; radioactive wastes; radiological impact;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Science, Measurement and Technology, IEE Proceedings A
Publisher
iet
ISSN
0960-7641
Type
jour
Filename
210741
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