Nuclear Waste
Sources and Types
All human activities create waste that needs to be managed
carefully. However, nuclear waste is a form of waste that needs to be given
special consideration.
Nuclear waste, like any waste, needs to be managed to
protect people and the environment. Nuclear waste is radioactive waste that results from the
nuclear industry. It comes from the mining
and processing of uranium, nuclear weapons,
nuclear reactors, and nuclear power
stations. Such waste is classified as either low-level, intermediate level,
or high level, depending on the amount and type of radioactive material
in it.
| Low-level radioactive waste comes from hospitals,
universities, nuclear power stations, nuclear research facilities, government
laboratories, smoke detectors and industry.
It needs to be disposed of in a different manner to household waste. Low-level
radioactive waste should be securely stored above ground in properly engineered
and monitored facilities as close as possible to the site at which it was
produced. Because it remains dangerous for thousands of years and because
of the the possibility of it getting into the ecosystem and then into the
food chain, it should not be buried.
Intermediate level radioactive wastes come from uranium
processing and enrichment plants, from nuclear weapons facilities, and from nuclear
power plants. It usually needs to be shielded. That is,
surrounded by materials such as lead and concrete that protect people from
the ionizing radiation. Intermediate level waste should be encapsulated
and securely stored above ground in properly engineered and constructed
facilities as close as possible to the site at which it was produced.
High level radioactive waste comes from spent
fuel from nuclear reactors, such as those at Lucas Heights near Sydney.
It must be shielded and cooled at the site of the nuclear reactor. |
Management of highly radioactive nuclear waste is a major problem,
which has not been satisfactorily solved by any country. The favoured initial step
in its management is to encapsulate it in glass.
Australian scientists have been very critical of this process and favour
an alternative encapsulation medium called Synroc.
Despite many years of research and development costing many millions of
taxpayer dollars, this preferred process has yet to be commercialized.
A nuclear power station produces about 30 kilogram of
high level nuclear waste per year.
The production of the reactor fuel (uranium enriched in
the fissile isotope U-235) results in much larger quantities of lower level
nuclear waste during mining, conversion of uranium oxide to uranium hexafluoride,
and during enrichment. Finally, the nuclear power station itself becomes
nuclear waste when it is decommissioned.
Once uranium has been used in a nuclear reactor, it becomes
spent
fuel. As this spent fuel is highly radioactive,
it cannot be encapsulated and stored. It is often stored in special ponds
that allow the fuel to cool down and to decrease its radioactivity.
Although the spent fuel can be stored in these special
ponds for fairly long periods of time, space limitation mean that eventually
the fuel needs to be either reprocessed, or encapsulated and stored.
South Australia has
more nuclear waste
sites than any
other State or Territory in Australia.
This includes:
-
Mining of uranium for nuclear weapons at Radium
Hill.
-
Processing of that uranium at Port
Pirie.
-
Testing of nuclear weapons at Maralinga
and Emu Field.
-
Uranium ore testing at Dry Creek and Thebarton.
-
Nuclear waste dumping at Radium Hill.
-
Uranium mining at Roxby Downs,
Beverley
and Honeymoon.
-
Storage of Federal Government contaminated soil and radioactive
instruments at Woomera.
The Federal Government now plans to dump more nuclear waste in
South Australia, including wastes from Lucas Heights.
Greater technical detail can be found on this topic by searching through
the listed briefing papers and education resources at
http://www.ccsa.asn.au/nic/.
| In this section - Nuclear Waste |
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