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AbstractAbstract
[en] Technical problems with nuclear waste disposal are largely geological. If these are not solved, curtailment of nuclear power development may follow, resulting in loss of an important element in the national energy supply. Present knowledge and credible advances are capable of solving these problems provided a systems view is preserved and a national development plan is followed. This requires identification of the critical controllable elements and a systematic underground test program to prove those critical elements. Waste migration can be understood and controlled by considering the key elements in the system: the system geometry, the hydrology, and the waste-rock-water chemistry. The waste program should: (1) identify and attack the critical problems first; (2) provide tests and demonstration at real disposal sites; and (3) schedule elements with long lead-times for early start and timely completion
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Source
7 Sep 1979; 33 p; Annual meeting of the American Institute of Professional Geologists; Lafayette, LA, USA; 21 Sep 1979; CONF-790948--1; Available from NTIS., PC A03/MF A01
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Report
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Conference
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