The unsustainable legacy of the Nuclear Age
Angelo Baracca

TL;DR
The Nuclear Age has left a long-lasting, largely unaddressed environmental and health burden due to radioactive contamination, waste, and military remnants, posing significant risks for future generations.
Contribution
This paper highlights the extensive, often overlooked environmental and societal impacts of nuclear activities, emphasizing the need for acknowledgment and action.
Findings
Radioactive contamination from nuclear tests persists.
Radioactive waste disposal remains unresolved.
Nuclear legacy affects future generations and environments.
Abstract
It is seldom acknowledged the tremendous burden that the Nuclear Age leaves on future generations, and the environment, for an extremely long time. Nuclear processes, and products, are activated at energies millions of times higher than the energies of chemical processes, and consequently they cannot be eliminated by the natural environment on Earth. So it turns out that hundreds of nuclear tests performed in the atmosphere left a huge radioactive contamination; Rosalie Bertell estimated 1,300 millions victims of the Nuclear Age; civil nuclear programs have produced enormous quantities of radioactive waste, whose final disposal has not been solved by any country; decommissioning of tens of shut down nuclear plants shall involve costs which were underestimated in the past; spent nuclear fuel accumulates in decontamination pools, or in dry cask storage, but no final storage has been…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNuclear and radioactivity studies · Nuclear Issues and Defense · Graphite, nuclear technology, radiation studies
