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Outlook for Radiation Protection

Outlook for Radiation Protection. Collective Radiation Exposure (PWR) Cycle Median Values, Person-rem per unit. Source: World Association of Nuclear Operators Updated: 4/07. Collective Radiation Exposure (BWR) Cycle Median Values, Person-rem per unit.

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Outlook for Radiation Protection

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  1. Outlook for Radiation Protection

  2. Collective Radiation Exposure (PWR) Cycle Median Values, Person-rem per unit Source: World Association of Nuclear Operators Updated: 4/07

  3. Collective Radiation Exposure (BWR)Cycle Median Values, Person-rem per unit Source: World Association of Nuclear Operators Updated: 4/07

  4. Average Measurable Dose Per Worker 1973-2004 (rem) Annual dose limit under current regulations, Average Radiation Exposure Is 33 Times Lower Than Regulated Limits 5.0 Source: Nuclear Regulatory Commission Occupational Radiation Exposure at Commercial Nuclear Power Reactors and Other Facilities 2004 Updated: 4/06

  5. U.S. Industrial Safety Accident Rate One-Year Industry Values ISAR = Number of accidents resulting in lost work, restricted work, or fatalities per 200,000 worker hours. Source: World Association of Nuclear Operators Updated: 4/07

  6. U.S. Industrial Safety Accident Rate2006 ISAR = Number of accidents resulting in lost work, restricted work, or fatalities per 200,000 worker hours. Electric utilities and manufacturing do not include fatality data. Sources: Nuclear (World Association of Nuclear Operators), Electric Utilities and Manufacturing (2005, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics). Updated: 4/07

  7. Challenges • Evolving scientific understanding of radiation risk • Emerging radiation protection standards • Workforce and infrastructure • Public perception of radiation

  8. RP2020 Mission Reshape radiological protection at nuclear power plants to achieve significant improvements in safety performance and cost-effectiveness.

  9. Partners in Supporting theNuclear Industry NEI EPRI INPO

  10. Strategies • Improve execution of RP fundamentals (INPO) • Standardize RP practices (INPO) • Reform radiation protection regulation (NEI) • Assure future workforce needs are met (NEI) • Improve public knowledge about RP at NPPs (NEI) • Improve RP technologies utilization (EPRI) • Control and minimize radiation dose fields (EPRI)

  11. Policy and Strategy Questions • What is our view on low-dose radiation health effects? • Should we update our regulations and programs to current international standards? • Where are we going in regard to: • Collective and individual dose • Radioactive materials and radioactive waste • Effluents and environmental protection

  12. Opportunities • Inform and influence the shape of emerging policy and regulation • Position the industry to minimize impacts and drive improvements to safety performance and cost-effectiveness • Enhance public (and others) confidence that industry safely monitors and controls radiation and radioactive materials

  13. Significant Potential Retirement Nuclear Generation Radiation Protection Worker 5-Year Attrition 1. Potential Retirees are defined as employees that will be older than 53 with 25+ years of service, or older than 63 with 20 years of service, or older than 67 within the next five years. Source: 2005 NEI Pipeline Survey

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