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About Uranium
Nuclear Power: Nuclear Waste
Radioactive
waste is produced through the generation of electricity using nuclear fission.
It also arises through coal fired electricity generation and is released into
the environment through oil exploration.
What
makes the nuclear power industry virtually unique though when it comes to
dealing with its waste products is that the costs of waste disposal are
incorporated into the electricity sold. The costs of
managing and disposing of wastes from nuclear power plants represent about 5%
of the total costs of electricity generated. Nuclear power is the only bulk
energy producing technology that takes full responsibility for all its wastes
even though the amount of these wastes is very small relative to those produced
by using fossil fuels for electricity generation.
Every
part of the nuclear fuel cycle produces some radioactive waste and the cost of
managing and disposing of this 'radwaste' is built
into the process. Uranium mining for example generates fine sandy tailings,
which contain virtually all the naturally occurring radioactive elements found
in the uranium ore.
What is radiation?
Everyone
is constantly exposed to radiation. When considering radioactive materials and
especially wastes the objective is to avoid increasing that exposure
significantly. At high levels radiation is dangerous and hence it is important
to shield such radiation from people.
Radiation
occurs naturally from the decay of particular forms of some elements (radioisotopes)
and there are three main types of radiation alpha, beta and gamma. Radioactive
emission takes place as an atom disintegrates. As the number of radioactive
atoms is reduced by each disintegration, the rate of
radioactive emission is said to decay or lessen with time. The half-life of a
radioisotope is the time taken for half of its atoms to decay. So something
with a long half-life such as uranium 238 (a half life of 4.5 billion years)
gives out very low levels of radiation albeit over a geological time scale.
Something with a short half life such as radon 220 (half life 56 seconds) emits
very much more radiation over a shorter time.
Categories of radioactive waste:
A
large portion of radioactive waste produced from the nuclear fuel cycle has
radiation levels similar to, or not much higher than, the natural background
level. This waste is relatively easy to deal with. Only a small proportion is
highly radioactive and requires isolation from people. The general
considerations for classifying radioactive wastes are; how long the waste will
remain at a hazardous level, what the concentration of the radioactive material
in the waste and whether the waste is heat generating.
The
persistence of the radioactivity determines how long the waste requires management.
The concentration and heat generation dictate how the waste should be handled.
These considerations also inform suitable disposal methods. The classification
varies slightly from country to country. However in general the internationally
accepted categories are:
Very low level waste or exempt waste.
These categories contain negligible amount amounts of radioactivity and may be
disposed of with domestic refuse.
Low-level Waste comprises the bulk of waste from the
nuclear fuel cycle. It comprises paper, rags, tools, clothing, filters etc which contain small amounts of mostly
short-lived radioactivity. It does not require shielding during handling and
transport and is suitable for shallow land burial. To reduce its volume, these
wastes are often compacted or incinerated before disposal. Disposal sites for
low-level waste are in operation in many countries. Worldwide they make up 90%
of the volume but have only 1% of the total radioactivity of all radioactive
wastes.
Intermediate-level Waste contains higher amounts of
radioactivity and normally requires shielding. Shielding can be barriers of
lead, concrete or water to give protection from penetrating radiation such as
gamma rays. Intermediate-level wastes typically comprise resins, chemical sludges and metal fuel cladding, as well as contaminated
materials from reactor decommissioning. It may be solidified in concrete or
bitumen for disposal. Generally short-lived waste (mainly from reactors) is
buried, but long-lived waste (from fuel reprocessing) will be disposed of
underground.
High-level Waste (HLW) contains the fission products and transuranic elements generated in the reactor core which
are highly radioactive and hot. High-level waste accounts for over 95% of the
total radioactivity produced though the actual amount of material is low, 25-30
tonnes of spent fuel. or
three cubic metres per year of vitrified waste for a
typical large nuclear reactor (1000 MWe, light water
type).
Spent
fuel is generally removed from the reactor core under water, and transferred to
large water filled pools where the fuel is held on racks underwater. The water
both shields the radiation and cools the spent fuel which may be destined
either long term storage or reprocessing.
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