Abstract

The US program for the management and disposal of commercial spent nuclear fuel and high level waste is in a period of potential programmatic, regulatory, and legislative change. Proposals currently being considered by the US Congress would authorize the development of a storage facility as soon as possible adjacent to the potential repository site at Yucca Mountain. The legislation also would establish regulatory requirements for a permanent repository at an individual dose limit of 1 mSv year −1 (100 mrem year −1) for the average person living near the repository. Concurrently, the fiscal year 1996 appropriation to characterize the Yucca Mountain site has been reduced by approximately 40%. These initiatives portend possible changes in the focus of the US program, including a fundamental shift in priority from permanent disposal to temporary storage, and a change in the approach to licensing a potential repository at the Yucca Mountain site. This paper provides the perspective of the members of the Nuclear Waste Technical Review Board on the impact these developments could have on the future of the US program. It discusses the Board's opinion on how to address the issues these and other developments raise in a way which moves the US civilian radioactive waste management program forward.

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