Canada is one of many countries around the world that use nuclear reactors to generate electrical power, in part to reduce our carbon footprint. Yet this energy produces hazardous, long-lived waste that emits dangerous radioactivity for tens of thousands of years.
Nuclear waste, stored temporarily for decades, must be safely disposed of so it will not pose a serious threat to human health and the environment. This means placing it in locations deep underground in granite, sedimentary rock, or clay. Canada’s ideal location is somewhere on the Canadian Shield, the 2.5-billion-year-old crystalline rock that undergirds much of the country. Beginning in 2010 some twenty-two communities, most in Ontario, volunteered to host the repository. In Deep Disposal William Leiss explains the challenges that have arisen in the evaluation of potential sites over the last decade.
High-level nuclear waste is the most hazardous byproduct of an energy source that is incredibly useful and increasingly in demand. Finding the ideal place to store it permanently is an urgent policy crisis facing our country. Deep Disposal reveals the nature of this crisis and how we might overcome it.
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- Montreal, CA
Table of Contents
- Cover 1
- DEEP DISPOSAL 2
- Title 4
- Copyright 5
- Dedication 6
- Contents 8
- Tables and Figures 10
- Abbreviations 12
- Preface 14
- 1 Used Nuclear Fuel Waste around the World 22
- 2 The Deep Disposal Concept in Canada 36
- 3 The Search for a Willing Host Community 57
- 4 Protracted and Outstanding Issues 100
- 5 An Ominous Precedent 138
- 6 New Nuclear, Nuclear Waste, and a DGR 172
- Disclosure and Acknowledgments 202
- References and Sources 206
- Index 232