• About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact
HK Businesswire
  • Home
  • News
    • All
    • Business
    • Politics
    • PR Newswire
    • Science
    • World
    CS attends games press event in GZ

    CS attends games press event in GZ

    Concrete steps urged on Nexperia as Dutch set to visit

    Concrete steps urged on Nexperia as Dutch set to visit

    CE to attend games opening

    CE to attend games opening

    Public mortuary charge enhanced

    Public mortuary charge enhanced

    iQIYI International Hosts iJOY 2026 Thailand in Bangkok, Unveiling Annual Content Strategy and New International Collaborations

    iQIYI International Hosts iJOY 2026 Thailand in Bangkok, Unveiling Annual Content Strategy and New International Collaborations

    Expanding the Horizon of Collaboration – “2025 ASEAN-Korea Innovative Culture Forum” Successfully Held on November 8 (Sat) in Singapore

    Expanding the Horizon of Collaboration – “2025 ASEAN-Korea Innovative Culture Forum” Successfully Held on November 8 (Sat) in Singapore

    Trending Tags

    • Trump Inauguration
    • United Stated
    • White House
    • Market Stories
    • Election Results
  • PR Newswire
  • Business
  • World
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Tech
    • All
    • Apps
    • Gadget
    • Mobile
    • Startup

    CalPERS Opposes Elon Musk’s $1 Trillion Tesla Pay Package

    OpenAI launches AI browser Atlas

    OpenAI Reportedly Planning $1 Trillion IPO as Soon as 2026

    OpenAI wins US$200mn US defense contract

    OpenAI Reports 0.07% of ChatGPT Users Show Signs of Mental Health Crisis

    AI Empowers Preventive Healthcare: Survey Highlights Rising Public Awareness in Hong Kong

    Ant Group’s AQ Ranks Among China’s Top AI Apps, Adds Features for Chronic Disease and Elderly Care

    Meituan’s Keeta Drone Upgrades Hong Kong Routes with Automated Airport and Multi-Drone Deliveries

    Trending Tags

    • Nintendo Switch
    • CES 2017
    • Playstation 4 Pro
    • Mark Zuckerberg
  • Feature
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • All
    • Business
    • Politics
    • PR Newswire
    • Science
    • World
    CS attends games press event in GZ

    CS attends games press event in GZ

    Concrete steps urged on Nexperia as Dutch set to visit

    Concrete steps urged on Nexperia as Dutch set to visit

    CE to attend games opening

    CE to attend games opening

    Public mortuary charge enhanced

    Public mortuary charge enhanced

    iQIYI International Hosts iJOY 2026 Thailand in Bangkok, Unveiling Annual Content Strategy and New International Collaborations

    iQIYI International Hosts iJOY 2026 Thailand in Bangkok, Unveiling Annual Content Strategy and New International Collaborations

    Expanding the Horizon of Collaboration – “2025 ASEAN-Korea Innovative Culture Forum” Successfully Held on November 8 (Sat) in Singapore

    Expanding the Horizon of Collaboration – “2025 ASEAN-Korea Innovative Culture Forum” Successfully Held on November 8 (Sat) in Singapore

    Trending Tags

    • Trump Inauguration
    • United Stated
    • White House
    • Market Stories
    • Election Results
  • PR Newswire
  • Business
  • World
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Tech
    • All
    • Apps
    • Gadget
    • Mobile
    • Startup

    CalPERS Opposes Elon Musk’s $1 Trillion Tesla Pay Package

    OpenAI launches AI browser Atlas

    OpenAI Reportedly Planning $1 Trillion IPO as Soon as 2026

    OpenAI wins US$200mn US defense contract

    OpenAI Reports 0.07% of ChatGPT Users Show Signs of Mental Health Crisis

    AI Empowers Preventive Healthcare: Survey Highlights Rising Public Awareness in Hong Kong

    Ant Group’s AQ Ranks Among China’s Top AI Apps, Adds Features for Chronic Disease and Elderly Care

    Meituan’s Keeta Drone Upgrades Hong Kong Routes with Automated Airport and Multi-Drone Deliveries

    Trending Tags

    • Nintendo Switch
    • CES 2017
    • Playstation 4 Pro
    • Mark Zuckerberg
  • Feature
No Result
View All Result
HK Businesswire
No Result
View All Result
Home News Science

What should countries do with their nuclear waste?

David Lee by David Lee
5 November 2025
in Science
0
What should countries do with their nuclear waste?
0
SHARES
3
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

One of the highest-risk components of nuclear waste is iodine-129 (I-129), which stays radioactive for millions of years and accumulates in human thyroids when ingested. In the U.S., nuclear waste containing I-129 is scheduled to be disposed of in deep underground repositories, which scientists say will sufficiently isolate it.Meanwhile, across the globe, France routinely releases low-level radioactive effluents containing iodine-129 and other radionuclides into the ocean. France recycles its spent nuclear fuel, and the reprocessing plant discharges about 153 kilograms of iodine-129 each year, under the French regulatory limit.Is dilution a good solution? What’s the best way to handle spent nuclear fuel? A new study by MIT researchers and their collaborators at national laboratories quantifies I-129 release under three different scenarios: the U.S. approach of disposing spent fuel directly in deep underground repositories, the French approach of dilution and release, and an approach that uses filters to capture I-129 and disposes of them in shallow underground waste repositories.The researchers found France’s current practice of reprocessing releases about 90 percent of the waste’s I-129 into the biosphere. They found low levels of I-129 in ocean water around France and the U.K.’s former reprocessing sites, including the English Channel and North Sea. Although the low level of I-129 in the water in Europe is not considered to pose health risks, the U.S. approach of deep underground disposal leads to far less I-129 being released, the researchers found.The researchers also investigated the effect of environmental regulations and technologies related to I-129 management, to illuminate the tradeoffs associated with different approaches around the world.“Putting these pieces together to provide a comprehensive view of Iodine-129 is important,” says MIT Assistant Professor Haruko Wainwright, a first author on the paper who holds a joint appointment in the departments of Nuclear Science and Engineering and of Civil and Environmental Engineering. “There are scientists that spend their lives trying to clean up iodine-129 at contaminated sites. These scientists are sometimes shocked to learn some countries are releasing so much iodine-129. This work also provides a life-cycle perspective. We’re not just looking at final disposal and solid waste, but also when and where release is happening. It puts all the pieces together.”MIT graduate student Kate Whiteaker SM ’24 led many of the analyses with Wainwright. Their co-authors are Hansell Gonzalez-Raymat, Miles Denham, Ian Pegg, Daniel Kaplan, Nikolla Qafoku, David Wilson, Shelly Wilson, and Carol Eddy-Dilek. The study appears today in Nature Sustainability.Managing wasteIodine-129 is often a key focus for scientists and engineers as they conduct safety assessments of nuclear waste disposal sites around the world. It has a half-life of 15.7 million years, high environmental mobility, and could potentially cause cancers if ingested. The U.S. sets a strict limit on how much I-129 can be released and how much I-129 can be in drinking water — 5.66 nanograms per liter, the lowest such level of any radionuclides.“Iodine-129 is very mobile, so it is usually the highest-dose contributor in safety assessments,” Wainwright says.For the study, the researchers calculated the release of I-129 across three different waste management strategies by combining data from current and former reprocessing sites as well as repository assessment models and simulations.The authors defined the environmental impact as the release of I-129 into the biosphere that humans could be exposed to, as well as its concentrations in surface water. They measured I-129 release per the total electrical energy generated by a 1-gigawatt power plant over one year, denoted as kg/GWe.y.Under the U.S. approach of deep underground disposal with barrier systems, assuming the barrier canisters fail at 1,000 years (a conservative estimate), the researchers found 2.14 x 10–8 kg/GWe.y of I-129 would be released between 1,000 and 1 million years from today.They estimate that 4.51 kg/GWe.y of I-129, or 91 percent of the total, would be released into the biosphere in the scenario where fuel is reprocessed and the effluents are diluted and released. About 3.3 percent of I-129 is captured by gas filters, which are then disposed of in shallow subsurfaces as low-level radioactive waste. A further 5.2 percent remains in the waste stream of the reprocessing plant, which is then disposed of as high-level radioactive waste.If the waste is recycled with gas filters to directly capture I-129, 0.05 kg/GWe.y of the I-129 is released, while 94 percent is disposed of in the low-level disposal sites. For shallow disposal, some kind of human disruption and intrusion is assumed to occur after government or institutional control expires (typically 100-1,000 years). That results in a potential release of the disposed amount to the environment after the control period.Overall, the current practice of recycling spent nuclear fuel releases the majority of I-129 into the environment today, while the direct disposal of spent fuel releases around 1/100,000,000 that amount over 1 million years. When the gas filters are used to capture I-129, the majority of I-129 goes to shallow underground repositories, which could be accidentally released through human intrusion down the line.The researchers also quantified the concentration of I-129 in different surface waters near current and former fuel reprocessing facilities, including the English Channel and the North Sea near reprocessing plants in France and U.K. They also analyzed the U.S. Columbia River downstream of a site in Washington state where material for nuclear weapons was produced during the Cold War, and they studied a similar site in South Carolina. The researchers found far higher concentrations of I-129 within the South Carolina site, where the low-level radioactive effluents were released far from major rivers and hence resulted in less dilution in the environment.“We wanted to quantify the environmental factors and the impact of dilution, which in this case affected concentrations more than discharge amounts,” Wainwright says. “Someone might take our results to say dilution still works: It’s reducing the contaminant concentration and spreading it over a large area. On the other hand, in the U.S., imperfect disposal has led to locally higher surface water concentrations. This provides a cautionary tale that disposal could concentrate contaminants, and should be carefully designed to protect local communities.”Fuel cycles and policyWainwright doesn’t want her findings to dissuade countries from recycling nuclear fuel. She says countries like Japan plan to use increased filtration to capture I-129 when they reprocess spent fuel. Filters with I-129 can be disposed of as low-level waste under U.S. regulations.“Since I-129 is an internal carcinogen without strong penetrating radiation, shallow underground disposal would be appropriate in line with other hazardous waste,” Wainwright says. “The history of environmental protection since the 1960s is shifting from waste dumping and release to isolation. But there are still industries that release waste into the air and water. We have seen that they often end up causing issues in our daily life — such as CO2, mercury, PFAS and others — especially when there are many sources or when bioaccumulation happens. The nuclear community has been leading in waste isolation strategies and technologies since the 1950s. These efforts should be further enhanced and accelerated. But at the same time, if someone does not choose nuclear energy because of waste issues, it would encourage other industries with much lower environmental standards.”The work was supported by MIT’s Climate Fast Forward Faculty Fund and the U.S. Department of Energy.

Tags: Science
David Lee

David Lee

Read More

MIT Energy Initiative launches Data Center Power Forum

MIT Energy Initiative launches Data Center Power Forum

7 November 2025
Physicists Take the Imaginary Numbers Out of Quantum Mechanics

Physicists Take the Imaginary Numbers Out of Quantum Mechanics

7 November 2025
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Hasten Sets a New Benchmark for Global Expansion‌ by Building an End-to-End Asia-Pacific Healthcare Commercial Platform

Hasten Sets a New Benchmark for Global Expansion‌ by Building an End-to-End Asia-Pacific Healthcare Commercial Platform

4 November 2025
UK police arrest two after ‘multiple people’ stabbed

UK police arrest two after ‘multiple people’ stabbed

1 November 2025
AIIB to set up office in HK

AIIB to set up office in HK

3 November 2025
Aquilius Raises Largest Ever Asia Pacific Real Estate Secondaries Program at $1.1 Billion

Aquilius Raises Largest Ever Asia Pacific Real Estate Secondaries Program at $1.1 Billion

3 November 2025
CS attends games press event in GZ

CS attends games press event in GZ

8 November 2025
Concrete steps urged on Nexperia as Dutch set to visit

Concrete steps urged on Nexperia as Dutch set to visit

8 November 2025
CE to attend games opening

CE to attend games opening

8 November 2025
SAR duo show clean strokes to make women’s final

SAR duo show clean strokes to make women’s final

8 November 2025

Recent News

CS attends games press event in GZ

CS attends games press event in GZ

8 November 2025
Concrete steps urged on Nexperia as Dutch set to visit

Concrete steps urged on Nexperia as Dutch set to visit

8 November 2025
CE to attend games opening

CE to attend games opening

8 November 2025
SAR duo show clean strokes to make women’s final

SAR duo show clean strokes to make women’s final

8 November 2025
HK Businesswire

Stay ahead with the latest insights on Hong Kong’s economy, finance, and investments. From market trends to policy updates, we bring you in-depth analysis and expert opinions.

📩 Subscribe to our newsletter for exclusive updates.
📍 Follow us on social media for real-time news.
📧 Contact us: info@hongkong-invest.com

Follow Us

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact

© 2025 by HKBusinesswire.com

No Result
View All Result

© 2025 by HKBusinesswire.com