Monitoring radioactive releases during the normal operation of power plants is crucial to ensure compliance with safety limits set by regulatory bodies for environmental safety. In the case of the Barakah nuclear power plant in the UAE, comprehensive multiunit dispersion modelling and radiological safety analysis have been conducted. Utilizing the HotSpot Health Physics Code and GENII (Second-generation environmental dosimetry), assessments were made for both 37 gaseous and 51 liquid source terms generated by GALE. Release rates for source terms were determined using GALE based on APR 1400 specifications. HotSpot employed the Gaussian Plume model to simulate the dispersion of gaseous source terms up to 80 km surrounding the plant, calculating Total Effective Dose Equivalent (TEDE) and Committed Effective Dose Equivalent (CEDE) in rural and urban areas. Findings indicated that neither scenario exceeded the 1 mSv threshold for the general public nor the 20 mSv limit for operational workers. Notably, skin, thyroid, and surface bones exhibited the highest CEDE, primarily influenced by iodide radionuclides. GENII's Surface Water module modelled the effects of liquid source terms, accounting for various contamination and exposure pathways such as external exposure and ingestion across different age groups. The calculated doses remained well below FANR's annual limits, with negligible cancer incidences and fatalities predicted for one year of exposure.
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