AMEC 1.2 “A MODULAR MOBILE TREATMENT FACILITY FOR LIQUID RADIOACTIVE WASTE – PROJECT DESCRIPTION AND COMPARISON OF LIQUID LOW-LEVEL RADIOACTIVE WASTE TECHNOLOGIES “IN USE ” OR PLANNED FOR NORTHWEST RUSSIA”

A number of sites have been identified in remote coastal locations in the Russian Northwest Arctic where complex liquid radioactive wastes (LRW) have been stored. These radioactive wastes are mostly stored in tanks under environmentally unsafe conditions within close proximity to the Arctic coast. T...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Carl Czajkowski, Stephen R. Gorin, Jerry V. Fox, Robert S. Dyer
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
Subjects:
Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.561.8376
http://www.wmsym.org/archives/2001/44/44-2.pdf
Description
Summary:A number of sites have been identified in remote coastal locations in the Russian Northwest Arctic where complex liquid radioactive wastes (LRW) have been stored. These radioactive wastes are mostly stored in tanks under environmentally unsafe conditions within close proximity to the Arctic coast. The LRW are the result of nuclear submarine decommissioning activities related to arms reduction during the post-Cold War period. The conditions of storage and general circumstances of the remote coastal naval facilities prevent the off-loading from these storage tanks onto surface ships for transport to the fixed liquid radioactive waste processing facility at Murmansk, Russia. In addition, some of the radio-nuclides, the extremely high salinity content and specific organic contaminants present in some of the LRW are outside the design capabilities of the existing low-level liquid radioactive waste (LLRW) processing capabilities in Russia. Also, the tanks containing the LRW were not intended for long- term storage of such wastes, and many are now in a rapidly deteriorating condition, threatening the nearby marine environment. In addition to the environmental concerns posed by the deteriorating conditions of storage of these LRW, the former Soviet Union routinely dumped LRW and other radioactive waste in the Arctic Seas. Its successor, the Russian Federation, also has dumped LLRW at sea. Although the Russian Federation has refrained from