What can we do with nuclear waste?

Published: Oct. 2, 2022, 10:30 p.m.

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The race to reduce emissions has more and more nations reaching for the nuclear option. Nuclear power plants are being built around the world, generating carbon-free electricity day and night, windy or calm. But they also generate radioactive waste, some of which can remain deadly for thousands of years. Thousands of tonnes of nuclear waste currently sit in \\u201ctemporary\\u201d sites, some decades old. This has been fuel to critics who have described nuclear power as a scourge for future generations. No country yet has a permanent solution to the problem.

Now, almost 70 years after the first nuclear plant, Finland is set to change that. Engineers have been creating a giant cavern they say will become the world\\u2019s first permanent nuclear waste disposal site. Can it silence the critics or are we just passing on the problem to future generations?

Presenters Graihagh Jackson and Neal Razzell spoke to: \\nProfessor Michael Bluck, director of the Centre for Nuclear Engineering at Imperial College, London. \\nDr Leslie Dewan Nuclear Engineer, CEO and co-founder of Radiant Nano Nuclear Security Company.\\nShaun Burnie Nuclear specialist with Greenpeace East Asia

Reporter: Ilpo Salonen, Finland \\nProducer: Lizzy McNeill, Jordan Dunbar \\nResearcher: Natasha Fernandes \\nSeries Producer: Alex Lewis\\nProduction Co-ordinators: Helena Warwick-Cross, Siobhan Reed\\nSound engineer: Tom Brignall

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