Odpady jądrowe – globalny raport Focus Europe

Page 47

WNWR 2019  —  4. RISKS FOR THE ENVIRONMENT AND HUMAN HEALTH

47

the ore is mined and processed. The resulting mining waste and slurries are the first nuclear waste in the nuclear fuel chain. It is widely recognized that exposures to uranium and its decay products are responsible for a major fraction of the total health and environmental impact from the nuclear fuel chain.71 The industry states that global uranium mining has decreased by four percent from 2013-16, but the decline in global uranium mining has accelerated since.72 Practically no uranium mining occurs in the European Union at present, but clean-up and remediation continue at former mines in France, Germany, Portugal, the Czech Republic, and Romania. During mine rehabilitation efforts in the Czech Republic, Germany and Hungary, small quantities of uranium are recovered; it is unclear whether there is still a small quantity being mined (a few dozen tons per year) in Romania at present. HEALTH RISKS FROM EXPOSURES TO URANIUM The health risks associated with exposures to uranium (including depleted uranium73) include kidney disease, respiratory disorders, DNA damage, endocrine disruption, cancers, and neurological defects.74, 75 Populations exposed to environmental uranium should be monitored for increased risk of fertility problems and reproductive cancers.76 Animal and cell studies have indicated that uranium’s health detriments are due to its affinity for DNA77 and to the potential combination of its chemical and radioactive properties, as uranium as a heavy metal has both chemical and radiological effects. It is theorized that these might play tumor-initiating and tumor-promoting roles respectively.78 The report focuses on U-238, which makes up 99.27 percent of natural uranium. The rest is comprised of U-235 (0.72 percent) and U-234, a decay product of U-238 (0.0055 percent). Uranium in ore is invariably accompanied by U-238’s decay progeny.79 Each of the above nuclides individually is estimated to be more dangerous than the parent U-238. Together, these decay products in uranium ore contain about 14 times more radioactivity than the parent U-238. 71 IAEA 2004, “Environmental Contamination from Uranium Production Facilities and Their Remediation.”

72 73

74 75 76

Proceedings Of An International Workshop On Environmental Contamination From Uranium Production Facilities And Their Remediation Organized By The International Atomic Energy Agency And Held In Lisbon, 11–13 February 2004. NEA and IAEA 2016, Uranium 2016: Resources, Production and Demand. NEA Report No. 7301.A, viewed 24 May 2019, https://www.oecd-nea.org/ndd/pubs/2016/7301-uranium-2016.pdf Depleted uranium (DU) is a by-product of uranium enrichment. It is controversial: in some countries it is used for radiation shielding and ammunition by military forces, while in others it is banned. Information about DU and its risks from a 2008 UN Institute for Disarmament Research report is available here: http://www.unidir.org/files/publications/pdfs/uranium-weapons-en-328.pdf Keith, S., Faroon, O., Roney, N., Scinicariello, F., Wilbur, S., Ingerman, L., Llados, F., Plewak, D., Wohlers, D. and Diamond, G. 2013, “Toxicological profile for uranium,” public statement by the US Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry. Wilson, J. and Thorne, M. 2015, “An assessment and comparison of the chemotoxic and radiotoxic properties of uranium compounds,” ASSIST report to RWM Raymond-Whish, S., Mayer, L.P., O’Neal, T., Martinez, A., Sellers, M.A., Christian, P.J., Marion, S.L., Begay, C., Propper, C.R., Hoyer, P.B. and Dyer, C.A., 2007. Drinking water with uranium below the US EPA water standard causes estrogen receptor–dependent responses in female mice, Environmental health perspectives, 115(12), pp. 1711-1716.

77 Miller, A.C., Stewart, M., Brooks, K., Shi, L. and Page, N. 2002, Depleted uranium-catalyzed oxidative DNA

damage: absence of significant alpha particle decay, Journal of inorganic biochemistry, 91(1), pp. 246-252. 78 Miller, A.C., Brooks, K., Smith, J. and Page, N. 2004, Effect of the militarily-relevant heavy metals, depleted uranium

and heavy metal tungsten-alloy on gene expression in human liver carcinoma cells (HepG2), Molecular and cellular biochemistry, 255(1-2), pp. 247-256. 79 Includes thorium-234, protactinium-234m, protactinium-234, thorium-230, radium-226, radon-222, polonium-218, actinium-218, radon-218, lead-214, bismuth-214, polonium-214, thallium-210, lead-210, bismuth-210, polonium-210, thallium-206, and finally lead-206, which is stable.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

Quantities of waste

2hr
pages 97-148

Summary

1min
page 94

Costs and financing

2min
page 93

Waste management policies and facilities

2min
page 92

Financing schemes for interim storage

2min
page 84

Integrated financing schemes

2min
page 87

6.4 Summary

5min
pages 88-89

Financing schemes for disposal

6min
pages 85-86

Quantities of waste

2min
page 91

Decommissioning costs

6min
pages 80-81

Accumulation of the funds

3min
page 78

Overview and nature of the funds

2min
page 77

5.5 Summary

2min
page 75

Extended storage

4min
pages 73-74

Deep borehole disposal

3min
page 70

LILW-repositories

3min
page 67

Host rocks

2min
page 66

5.1 Historical background

16min
pages 58-62

5.2 The context of nuclear waste management

5min
pages 63-64

4.7 Summary

2min
page 57

4.5 Risks from the reprocessing of spent nuclear fuel

5min
pages 53-54

Risks to nuclear workers

3min
page 51

Uranium mine tailings

3min
page 49

Health risks from exposures to uranium

3min
page 47

4.1 Radiation risks of nuclear waste

2min
page 45

Uranium mining

3min
page 48

4.2 Risks from uranium mining, mine tailings, enrichment, and fuel fabrication

2min
page 46

3.4 Summary

4min
pages 43-44

Decommissioning waste

2min
page 34

Uranium mining, milling, processing and fuel fabrication

1min
page 22

Executive summary

28min
pages 11-20

Operational waste

2min
page 32

2.4 Summary

2min
page 30

2.3.1 The IAEA classification

5min
pages 25-26

2.1 Types of waste: the nuclear fuel chain

2min
page 21

Foreword

5min
pages 3-4

Key Insights

2min
pages 9-10
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.