nuclear waste in English

noun
1
radioactive waste material, for example from the use or reprocessing of nuclear fuel.
She has no objection to the process as such of discharging nuclear waste; obviously nuclear waste has to be dealt with.

Use "nuclear waste" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "nuclear waste" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "nuclear waste", or refer to the context using the word "nuclear waste" in the English Dictionary.

1. High-Level Nuclear Waste Policy: Interim Storage.

2. Where you put all your nuclear waste.

3. Much of the coast has been contaminated by nuclear waste.

4. The safe disposal of nuclear waste is a major problem.

5. Abyssal sequestration of nuclear waste and other types of hazardous waste

6. The government faces implacable opposition on the issue of nuclear waste.

7. Activists have raised a stink about the shipments of nuclear waste.

8. Subject: Galician coast affected by nuclear waste from the Atlantic Trench

9. 4 Much of the coast has been contaminated by nuclear waste.

10. The legislature passed a law to prohibit the dumping of nuclear waste.

11. Key words: nuclear waste isolation, clay, low porosity, thermal strain, adsorbed water.

12. (See also Acid Rain; Chemicals; Ecology; Nuclear Waste; Poisons; Toxic Leaks; Toxic Wastes)

13. 1 The government is having difficulty finding a safe depository for nuclear waste.

14. Belgium has advanced technologies for nuclear energy generation, nuclear waste disposal and management.

15. The nuclear waste has been entombed in concrete many metres under the ground.

16. In fact, Borosilicate is so chemical resistant that it's used to store nuclear waste.

17. Deployment of such advanced fuel-cycle technologies would substantially reduce nuclear waste and simplify its disposition.

18. Deployment of such advanced fuel-cycle technologies would substantially reduce nuclear waste and simplify its disposition

19. 15 The nuclear waste is encased in concrete before being sent for storage in disused mines.

20. This has been seriously assessed as a way of disposing of nuclear waste, but not toxic waste.

21. Some holding tanks built to contain nuclear waste became so hot from radioactive heat that they cracked.

22. The banning of the annual sea dump brought the issue of nuclear waste disposal into even sharper focus.

23. The dispute over nuclear waste is a hangover from the last hours of the Conservative government in 19

24. Brucite has become significant to waste isolation projects owing to its use as engineered barriers for nuclear waste repositories

25. "Keep Cumbrian Coal in the Hole and Nuclear Waste Out" Big Thanks to ALL donating and sharing

26. The health Concerns and safety issues associated with nuclear waste present important constraints on the widespread use of nuclear energy

27. The ultimate question, however, was what would happen to the steadily accumulating stockpiles of nuclear waste in the long term.

28. Containing nuclear waste Anti-nuclear campaigners sometimes claim that nuclear fission and its dangerous products are a purely manmade phenomenon.

29. “Nuclear and Other Biodegradabilities,” examines remains, including such by-products and disintegrations of human culture as nuclear waste, environmental destruction, and species extinctions

30. The treaty prohibits military activities and mineral mining, prohibits nuclear explosions and nuclear waste disposal, supports scientific research, and protects the continent's ecozone.

31. The Borehole technology was developed by the gas and oil industry, but Deep Isolation realized it could help dispose of nuclear waste just as well.

32. Period 1 Bill 5: Nuclear Waste Disposal in the Ocean Many of the institutions we have today are founded based on the Communalized idea of protecting

33. ·nuclear fuel irradiation experiments investigating the reduction of the radiotoxicity of nuclear waste; minor actinide transmutation technological issues (i.e. fission products retention capabilities, dust-free process, helium swelling);

34. Nuclear waste entombed after WIPP leak Fire-retardant materials have also been developed for other applications in mines such as ventilation ducting, Brattice cloth (sheets used for ventilation control) and

35. Acquiring fundamental knowledge of properties of Actinide‐based materials is a necessary step to create new possibilities for addressing the current challenges in the nuclear energy and nuclear waste sectors

36. There is an agreement that Bhabha Atomic Research Centre (BARC) and its Belgian counterpart have signed in 2012 covering cooperation in the management of nuclear waste, advanced research reactor system, and collaboration in connection with IAEA projects.

37. Here are a few of the atrocities resulting: acid rain, global warming, holes in the ozone layer, dangerous pesticides, toxic dumps, garbage glut, nuclear waste, oil spills, raw-sewage dumping, dead lakes, destroyed forests, polluted groundwater, species endangered, human health damaged.

38. Even a partial list of man’s desecrations is saddening: acid rain and greedy logging practices that destroy whole forests; careless dumping of nuclear waste, toxic chemicals, and raw sewage; weakening of the protective ozone layer; and careless use of herbicides and pesticides.

39. A Bacterium is a unicellular microorganism which represents one of the most basic and primitive forms of life. Bacteria are everywhere, from pools of nuclear waste to deep inside the Earth's crust, and it is believed that bacteria were the first living organisms on Earth.

40. ‘But this is a problem which Bedevils political thought everywhere.’ ‘I'd say that what Bedevils Pop now is its lack of artiness.’ ‘Uncertainty over what to do with nuclear waste Bedevils nuclear power.’ ‘It is time to put a stop to the crisis management that Bedevils our health system.’

41. Here are some of the atrocities resulting: acid rain, global warming, holes in the ozone layer, garbage glut, toxic dumps, dangerous herbicides and pesticides, nuclear waste, oil spills, raw-sewage dumping, species endangerment, dead lakes, polluted groundwater, destroyed forests, polluted soil, lost topsoil, and smog causing damage to trees and crops as well as to human health.