Overview of Radioactive Waste Disposal at Sea |
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Authors: | Dominique Calmet |
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Affiliation: | 1. International Atomic Energy Agency, Division of Nuclear Fuel Cycle and Waste Management , P.O. Box 100, Wagramerstrasse 5, A-1400, Vienna, Austria;2. CEA/IPSN/DPEI, Laboratoire de Mètnologie de l'Environnement et d'Intervention , Bat 501, Bois des Rames 91400, Orsey, France |
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Abstract: | For hundreds of years, the seas have been used as a place to dispose of wastes from human activities. Although no high level radioactive waste has been disposed of into the sea, variable amounts of packaged low level radioactive wastes have been dumped at 47 sites in the northern part of the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. in 1946 the first sea dumping operation took place at a site in the North-East Pacific Ocean. the last dumping operation was in 1982, at a site off the European continental shelf in the Atlantic Ocean. Between these two dates, an estimated 46 PBq (1.24 MCi) of radioactive waste coming from research, medical, military and industrial activities have been disposed of at sea. the present trend, through the Convention for the Prevention of Marine Pollution by Dumping of Wastes and other Matter and other Regional Conventions, points towards the prohibition of the dumping of any radioactive waste into the marine environment. |
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Keywords: | Ocean dumping radioactive wastes Atlantic Pacific oceans |
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