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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 September 2012
Recent proposals for a new U.S. standard for high-level waste disposal wouldlimit the average dose to individuals in the vicinity surrounding a geologicrepository. This would be a new approach to protecting the public fromenvironmental releases of radioactivity. Heretofore, criteria adopted forgeologic disposal have limited the reasonable maximum exposure to a futurehypothetical individual. Here we present quantitative analyses of therelation between maximum exposure and vicinity-average exposure, resultingfrom future human use of ground water contaminated by radioactive releasesfrom a repository.
Estimating the vicinity-average exposure would require postulates andguesses of location and habits of future people. Exposure probabilitiespostulated by others show that proposed dose limit to the vicinity-averageindividual would be a far more lenient standard than the traditional doselimit to reasonably maximally exposed individuals. The proposedvicinity-average dose limit would allow far greater concentrations ofcontaminants in ground water than would be allowed by normal standards ofground water protection. A safety standard that limits vicinity-averageexposure should also include limits on maximum exposure.