India has adopted “closed fuel cycle”, where spent nuclear fuel is regarded as a material of resource and the spent fuel is reprocessed for recovery of Uranium and Plutonium and for recycling them back to reactor as fuel. This finally leads to a very small percentage of residual material present in spent nuclear fuel requiring their management as radioactive waste.
This information was given by minister of state for development of North-Eastern Region, MoS PMO, personnel, public grievances and pensions, atomic energy and space, Jitendra Singh to the Rajya Sabha in a written reply on Tuesday.
Safe management of radioactive waste has been accorded high priority right from the inception of our nuclear energy programme. High level radioactive waste also contains many useful isotopes like Caesium-137, Strontium-90, Ruthenium-106 etc. With the advent of new technologies based on partitioning of waste, emphasis is accorded to separation and recovery of these useful radio-isotopes so as to make use of the waste for various societal applications, the minister stated.
The Department atomic energy has safely implemented initiatives and advancements with respect to partitioning of the waste, successfully enabling recovery of useful radio-isotopes like Caesium-137, Strontium-90, Ruthenium-106 etc and their deployment for societal applications, he informed.
Utmost emphasis is given to waste volume minimisation, effective containment and isolation of radio-activity followed by near zero discharge of radioactivity to the environment. As a waste management philosophy, no waste in any physical form is released / disposed to the environment unless the same is cleared, exempted or excluded from regulations.
A comprehensive radioactive waste management is established taking into account the operational capability for the management of radioactive waste and an independent regulatory capability for its overview. The nuclear waste management practices are at par with international practices following the guidelines of International Atomic Energy Agency, he pointed out.