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Milestones for disposal of radioactive waste at the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant (WIPP) in the United States
Author(s) -
Robert P. Rechard
Publication year - 2000
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/752526
Subject(s) - radioactive waste , human settlement , isolation (microbiology) , engineering , waste management , environmental impact assessment , environmental planning , environmental science , political science , law , microbiology and biotechnology , biology
The opening of the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant on March 26, 1999, was the culmination of a regulatory assessment process that had taken 25 years. National policy issues, negotiated agreements, and court settlements during the first 15 years of the project had a strong influence on the amount and type of scientific data collected up to this point. Assessment activities before the mid 1980s were undertaken primarily (1) to satisfy needs for environmental impact statements, (2) to satisfy negotiated agreements with the State of New Mexico, or (3) to develop general understanding of selected natural phenomena associated with nuclear waste disposal. In the last 10 years, federal compliance policy and actual regulations were sketched out, and continued to evolve until 1996. During this period, stochastic simulations were introduced as a tool for the assessment of the WIPP's performance, and four preliminary performance assessments, one compliance performance assessment, and one verification performance assessment were performed

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