At Manchester we’re improving the management of radioactive waste and decommissioning. A successful, sustainable future for nuclear energy must meet the challenges of treating, processing and ...
The Special Act on the Management of High-Level Radioactive Waste (High-Level Radioactive Waste Special Act) will come into effect on September 26. The government plans to accelerate the process of ...
Groundbreaking research from the has brought about significant changes in how the UK's radioactive waste materials are stored safely and extensively influenced national policy decisions around ...
Radiological Hot Isostatic Pressing at The University of Sheffield: A case study by the NucleUS Immobilisation Science Laboratory into the Management of the UK Plutonium Inventory. Our nuclear ...
Increasing cost accuracy through contingency application, risk reduction and global harmonisation. Understand the estimation processes from risk management and uncertainties to global case studies ...
The University's research into the behaviour of radioactive materials has helped the nuclear facility to improve industrial treatment processes and site safety. The legacy ponds research reduced ...
Effective nuclear waste management is a critical global challenge, particularly for countries like the UK looking to expand their nuclear power sectors. The UK has a substantial amount of existing ...
A repeating tone - blip, blip, blip - is the audible reminder that we are in one of the most hazardous nuclear sites in the world: Sellafield. That sound - pulsing from speakers inside the cavernous ...
An International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) team of experts has completed a follow-up mission to assess Spain’s progress in implementing the recommendations and suggestions made during a review of ...
What would it take for you to accept nuclear waste in your backyard? The country has created quite a bit of the stuff and the government is searching for someone willing to take it. Steadily produced ...
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Does nuclear waste ever truly go away
Nuclear waste has become a kind of cultural shorthand for everything people fear about atomic power, from glowing green sludge to warnings that we are burdening distant descendants with our mistakes.
Ghana is in the final stages of adopting a national policy on radioactive waste and spent fuel management after 15 years of its development, as the country positions itself to incorporate nuclear ...
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