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Bonne, A.; Crijns, M.J.; Dyck, H.P.
Technologies for the management of radioactive waste from nuclear power plants and back end nuclear fuel cycle activities. Proceedings2001
Technologies for the management of radioactive waste from nuclear power plants and back end nuclear fuel cycle activities. Proceedings2001
AbstractAbstract
[en] An International Symposium on Storage of Spent Fuel from Power Reactors was held in Vienna from 9-13 November 1998. The Symposium was organized by the International Atomic Energy Agency in co-operation with the OECD Nuclear Energy Agency. Of the one hundred sixty participants registered, one hundred twenty-five (including 3 observers) representing 35 countries and 4 international organizations, attended the Symposium. 20 participants from developing countries received Agency's grants. During 4 main Sessions, 44 oral presentations of papers were made and subsequent discussions held. At a poster session 13 papers were presented. This paper will give an overview of the Symposium. The Symposium gave an opportunity to exchange information on the state of art and prospects of spent fuel storage, to discuss the worldwide situation and the major factors influencing the national policies in this field and to identify the most important directions that national efforts and international co-operation in this area should take. It was obvious from the papers presented and the discussions that the handling and storage of spent fuel is continuously taking place safely. Dominant messages retrieved from the Symposium are that the primary spent fuel management solution for the next decades will be interim storage, the duration time of interim storage becomes longer than earlier anticipated and the storage facilities will have to be designed for receiving also spent fuel from advanced fuel cycle practices (i.e. high burnup and MOX spent fuel). It was noted that the handling and storage of spent fuel is a mature technology and meets the stringent safety requirements applicable in the different countries. The changes in nuclear policy and philosophy across the world, and practical considerations, have made interim storage a real necessity in the nuclear power industry. (author)
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International Atomic Energy Agency, Vienna (Austria); International Union of Producers and Distributors of Electrical Energy, Brussels (Belgium); Nuclear Energy Institute, Washington, DC (United States); OECD Nuclear Energy Agency, Paris (France); [627 p.]; Feb 2001; [11 p.]; International symposium on technologies for the management of radioactive waste from nuclear power plants and back end nuclear fuel cycle activities; Taejon (Korea, Republic of); 30 Aug - 3 Sep 1999; IAEA-SM--357/36; ISSN 1562-4153;
; Also available on 1 CD-ROM from IAEA, Sales and Promotion Unit. E-mail: sales.publications@iaea.org; Web site: http://www.iaea.org/worldatom/; 2 tabs

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