Friday, April 19, 2024
ADVT 
Tech

Feds launch nuclear-waste strategy review

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Nov, 2020 06:33 PM
  • Feds launch nuclear-waste strategy review

The federal government has launched a new initiative aimed at finding long-term solutions for the growing quantity of radioactive waste produced by Canada's nuclear reactors.

To that end, the government wants members of the industry, the general public and Indigenous people to weigh in on the topic and potential solutions that have so far proven elusive.

In a letter last week, Natural Resources Minister Seamus O'Regan calls on the federally mandated Nuclear Waste Management Organization to lead the consultation process.

"Over the coming months the government of Canada will be taking steps to review and modernize Canada’s approach to how we manage radioactive waste," O'Regan wrote. "While the strategy must be defined by waste producers and owners who have the best understanding of their wastes and their priorities, it too must be informed by dialogue with stakeholders and Canadians."

For decades, producers have stored their nuclear waste, which can remain toxic for thousands of years, in interim, above-ground facilities, usually at the reactor sites. The industry and governments have spent years working to come up with a permanent disposal solution.

The new initiative follows a failed attempt by Ontario Power Generation to build a multibillion-dollar underground storage bunker for low- and intermediate nuclear waste at the Bruce nuclear power plant near Kincardine, Ont., close to the shore of Lake Huron. Although opposed by myriad communities on both sides of the Canada-U.S. border, the project ultimately foundered on opposition from local Indigenous residents.

A separate proposal for a deep geologic repository to handle high-level nuclear waste — essentially spent fuel bundles — is still in play. So far, the waste organization has narrowed its search to two sites, one in the vicinity of the Bruce power plant, and the other near Ignace in northern Ontario.

Despite assurances that repositories are a safe and effective long-term disposal solution, critics have long argued that burying the waste would pose a centuries-long potential threat to groundwater, the environment and human health. Some have pressed for reusing or recycling the material, something that has proven technologically challenging.

The new initiative aims to review Canada's current storage practices and come up with long-term options that are feasible, safe, environmentally sound, and in line with best international practices.

O'Regan said the new strategy dialogue should not detract from the waste organization's current mandate related to the long-term management of used nuclear fuel.

"That mandate is clear and your progress to date is commendable," he said.

In response to O'Regan's letter, Laurie Swami, head of the Nuclear Waste Management Organization, wrote the agency was pleased to be involved.

"We look forward to lending our expertise to make informed and practical recommendations to the Canadian government on a more comprehensive radioactive waste management strategy.," Swami said. "An integrated strategy will ensure the material continues to be managed in accordance with international best practice over the longer-term."

Ottawa created the self-funded waste management organization in 2002. It comprises nuclear electricity producers, including Ontario Power Generation, N.B. Power and Hydro-Quebec.

MORE Tech ARTICLES

YouTube Offers Creators New Ways To Earn Money, Will Let Them Set Up Paid Channels

YouTube, often criticized for not compensating creators well enough, will allow them to set up paid channel memberships, the company said on Friday.

YouTube Offers Creators New Ways To Earn Money, Will Let Them Set Up Paid Channels

Facebook Wants Users To Give Nude Photos To Stop Revenge Porn

It may sound audacious to some but Facebook thinks that sharing with a trained employee of the company the intimate images that you fear might go viral in the social networking platforms can help it stop their spread, thereby protecting your privacy.

Facebook Wants Users To Give Nude Photos To Stop Revenge Porn

A Beginner’s Guide to Airbnb

A Beginner’s Guide to Airbnb
Since it’s inception in 2008, Airbnb has grown into one of the biggest disrupters of the hotel industry

A Beginner’s Guide to Airbnb

British Columbia Bullish On Indian Tech Firms: Jinny Sims

British Columbia Bullish On Indian Tech Firms: Jinny Sims
Meet Jinny Jogindera Sims, who was born in Jalandhar in Punjab and migrated at age nine to England where she got a B.Ed degree at the University of Manchester.

British Columbia Bullish On Indian Tech Firms: Jinny Sims

Death Of The Password? New Web Standard Trades Passcodes For Biometrics

"Over time I saw there was a convenience there and I was able to learn what was happening," she says.

Death Of The Password? New Web Standard Trades Passcodes For Biometrics

Facebook Deploys ‘Secret Police’ Led By Indian-American Sonya Ahuja To Catch Leakers

Facebook Deploys ‘Secret Police’ Led By Indian-American Sonya Ahuja To Catch Leakers
Mark Zuckerberg hosts weekly meetings where he shares details of unreleased new products and strategies in front of thousands of employees, the report said.

Facebook Deploys ‘Secret Police’ Led By Indian-American Sonya Ahuja To Catch Leakers