106 TRANSURANIC ELEMENTS IN THE ENVIRONMENT 



the ground. The gases will be subjected to the standard off-gas treatments normally used 

 in the plants, and the atmospheric releases will be controlled to below those when the 

 plants were operating. Water releases will also be below established limits. Water 

 inventories from cooling basins, for instance, will be released to the ground in the 

 location of the site but only after suitable analyses are made to ensure that the activity 

 contained in the basin water is below established limits. 



References 



Adam, J. A., and V. L. Rogers, 191%, A Classification System for Radioactive Waste Disposal — What 



Waste Goes Where? Report NUREG-0456 FBDU-224-10, Office of Nuclear Material Safety and 



Safeguards, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission. 

 Energy Research and Development Administration, 1976, Alternatives for Managing Wastes from 



Reactors and Post-Fission Operations in the LWR Fuel Cycle, ERDA Report ERDA-76-43, NTIS. 

 Miida,J.,W. Haiussermann, and S. Mankin, 1977, Nuclear Power Programmes and Medium-Term 



Projections in the OECD Area, in Nuclear Power and Its Fuel Cycle, Symposium Proceedings, 



Salzburg, Austria, 1977, pp. 213-232, STI/PUB/465, Vol. 1, International Atomic Energy Agency, 



Vienna. 

 U. S. Department of Energy, 1978, Report of Task Force for Review of Nuclear Waste Management: 



Draft, DOE/ER-0004/D. 

 , 1979, Technology for Commercial Radioactive Waste Management, Report DOE/ET-0028, NTIS. 



