Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-wq2xx Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-24T06:23:17.247Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Generic guidance on the lifting of emergency countermeasures

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 September 2010

A.F. Nisbet
Affiliation:
Radiation Protection Division, HPA, Didcot, UK
H. Rochford
Affiliation:
Radiation Protection Division, HPA, Didcot, UK
T. Cabianca
Affiliation:
Radiation Protection Division, HPA, Didcot, UK
A. Oudiz
Affiliation:
IRSN, Fontenay-aux-Roses, France
G. Kirchner
Affiliation:
BfS, Salzgitter, Germany
M. Hoffmann
Affiliation:
BfS, Salzgitter, Germany
V. Bertsch
Affiliation:
IIP, University of Karlsruhe, Germany
M. Merz
Affiliation:
IIP, University of Karlsruhe, Germany
B. Carlé
Affiliation:
SCK·CEN, Mol, Belgium
C. Turcanu
Affiliation:
SCK·CEN, Mol, Belgium
A. Sohier
Affiliation:
SCK·CEN, Mol, Belgium
J. Camps
Affiliation:
SCK·CEN, Mol, Belgium
G. Olyslaegers
Affiliation:
SCK·CEN, Mol, Belgium
Get access

Abstract

Generic guidance on the withdrawal of sheltering, withdrawal of evacuation and evacuation of sheltered populations (displacement) has been developed based on previously unpublished work in the UK and France and on input from stakeholder panels in Germany, Belgium, France and the UK. The guidance is a living document that can be developed further in the future, both in its generic form and also as customised versions in some Member States. The guidance outlines the many factors which influence the withdrawal of emergency countermeasures: official confirmation that any release has stopped; adequacy of monitoring data; radiological criteria; radiological protection advice; availability of resources; social and psychological needs; stakeholder dialogue; and communication strategy. The relative importance placed by decision makers on each of these criteria would vary according to the nature and scale of the accident and also on socio-political, economic and cultural perspectives. In the event of a radiological incident, decision makers will need to be in a position to construct a strategy for managing the withdrawal of emergency countermeasures. For larger scale, longer duration releases involving several nuclides, a management strategy is likely to be complex. The guidance therefore includes a series of checklists which have been developed in conjunction with stakeholders to take into account the main criteria and factors which should be considered.

Type
Article
Copyright
© EDP Sciences, 2010

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

ICRP Publication 103 (2007) Recommandation of the International Commission on Radiological Protection, Ann. ICRP 37 (2-3).
Nisbet, A.F., Brown, J., Howard, B.J., Beresford, N.A., Ollagnon, H., Turcanu, C., Camps, J., Andersson, K., Rantavaara, A., Ikäheimonen, T., Duranova, T., Oughton, D., Kirchner, G., Papachristodoulou, C., Ioannides, K., Kwakman, P. (2010) Decision aiding handbooks for managing contaminated food production systems, drinking water and inhabited areas in Europe, Radioprotection 45, S23-S37.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nisbet A.F., Rochford H., Cabianca T., Oudiz A., Kirchner G., Hoffmann M., Bertsch V., Merz M., Carlé B., Turcanu C., Sohier A., Camps J., Olyslaegers G. (2008) Generic Guidance for Assisting in the Withdrawal of Emergency Countermeasures in Europe Following a Radiological Incident. EURANOS(CAT1)-TN(08)06. Available from http://www.euranos. fzk.de/