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AGENDA 21 OBLIGATIONS
Chapter 22
SAFE AND
ENVIRONMENTALLY SOUND MANAGEMENT OF RADIOACTIVE WASTES
Promoting the safe and environmentally
sound management of radioactive wastes
Objective
22.3. The objective of this programme area
is to ensure that radioactive wastes are safely managed, transported,
stored and disposed of, with a view to protecting human health and the
environment, within a wider framework of an interactive and integrated
approach to radioactive waste management and safety.
Activities
(a) Management-related activities
22.4. States, in cooperation with
relevant international organizations, where appropriate, should:
·
Promote policies
and practical measures to minimize and limit, where appropriate, the
generation of radioactive wastes and provide for their safe processing,
conditioning, transportation and disposal;
·
Support efforts
within IAEA to develop and promulgate radioactive waste safety standards
or guidelines and codes of practice as an internationally accepted basis
for the safe and environmentally sound management and disposal of
radioactive wastes;
·
Promote safe
storage, transportation and disposal of radioactive wastes, as well as
spent radiation sources and spent fuel from nuclear reactors destined
for final disposal, in all countries, in particular in developing
countries, by facilitating the transfer of relevant technologies to
those countries and/or the return to the supplier of radiation sources
after their use, in accordance with relevant international regulations
or guidelines;
·
Promote proper
planning, including environmental impact assessment where appropriate,
of safe and environmentally sound management of radioactive waste,
including emergency procedures, storage, transportation and disposal,
prior to and after activities that generate such waste.
(b) International and regional
cooperation and coordination
22.5. States, in cooperation with relevant
international organizations, where appropriate, should:
·
Strengthen their
efforts to implement the Code of Practice on the Transboundary Movements
of Radioactive Waste and, under the auspices of IAEA, in cooperation
with relevant international organizations dealing with different modes
of transport, keep the question of such movements under active review,
including the desirability of concluding a legally binding instrument;
·
Encourage the
London Dumping Convention to expedite work to complete studies on
replacing the current voluntary moratorium on disposal of low-level
radioactive wastes at sea by a ban, taking into account the
precautionary approach, with a view to taking a well informed and timely
decision on the issue;
·
Not promote or
allow the storage or disposal of high-level, intermediate-level and
low-level radioactive wastes near the marine environment unless they
determine that scientific evidence, consistent with the applicable
internationally agreed principles and guidelines, shows that such
storage or disposal poses no unacceptable risk to people and the marine
environment or does not interfere with other legitimate uses of the sea,
making, in the process of consideration, appropriate use of the concept
of the precautionary approach;
·
Not export
radioactive wastes to countries that, individually or through
international agreements, prohibit the import of such wastes, such as
the contracting parties to the Bamako Convention on the Ban of the
Import into Africa and the Control of Transboundary Movement of
Hazardous Wastes within Africa, the fourth Lom Convention or other
relevant conventions, where such prohibition is provided for;
·
Respect, in
accordance with international law, the decisions, as far as applicable
to them, taken by parties to other relevant regional environmental
conventions dealing with other aspects of safe and environmentally sound
management of radioactive wastes.
Means of
implementation
(a) Financing and cost evaluation
22.6. The costs at the national level of
managing and disposing of radioactive wastes are considerable and will
vary, depending on the technology used for disposal.
22.7. The Conference secretariat has
estimated the average total annual cost (1993-2000) to international
organizations to implement the activities of this programme to be about
$8 million. Actual costs and financial terms, including any that are
non-concessional, will depend upon, inter alia, the specific strategies
and programmes Governments decide upon for implementation.
(b) Scientific and technological means
22.8. States, in cooperation with
international organizations, where appropriate, should:
·
Promote research
and development of methods for the safe and environmentally sound
treatment, processing and disposal, including deep geological disposal,
of high-level radioactive waste;
·
Conduct research
and assessment programmes concerned with evaluating the health and
environmental impact of radioactive waste disposal.
(c) Capacity-building, including human
resource development
22.9.
States, in cooperation with relevant international organizations, should
provide, as appropriate, assistance to developing countries to establish
and/or strengthen radioactive waste management infrastructures,
including legislation, organizations, trained manpower and facilities
for the handling, processing, storage and disposal of wastes generated
from nuclear applications. |