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      United States
      Environmental Protection
      Agency
Radiation  Protection
EPA's  Unique Role

     Radiation exists everywhere in the environment and has since the Earth's formation—
     in rocks, soil, water, and plants. The mining and processing of radioactive materials
for use in medicine, power generation, consumer products, and industry inevitably generate
emissions and waste. Recognizing the potential hazards of these activities, Congress
designated EPA as the primary federal agency charged with protecting people and the
environment from harmful and avoidable exposure to radiation.
                            Key Responsibilities
                               EPA carries out its radiation protection
                            responsibilities with several key,
                            complementary activities.

                            Responding to Emergencies
                               EPA is the lead federal agency for responding
                            to international emergencies involving
                            radioactive material, such as the accident at
                            Chernobyl. EPA also provides support,
                            guidance, and training to other federal and
                            state agencies to prepare for emergencies at
                            U.S. nuclear plants, transportation accidents
                            involving shipments of radioactive materials,
                            and acts of nuclear terrorism. Through
                            emergency drills and exercises, EPA's
                            radiological emergency response team helps
                            states and other agencies test their response
                            plans and hone their skills.

                            Assessing Risks
                               EPA's scientists study both the risk of
                            exposure—the way that  radioactive materials
                            move through the environment and the
                            potential for human contact—and the risks
                                          Responding to Terrorism

                                          EPA's Counterterrorism Program Coordinating
                                          Team is actively involved with other U.S.
                                          government agencies for preparing to respond to
                                          acts of chemical, biological, radiological, and
                                          nuclear terrorism. For terrorist incidents involving
                                          radioactive materials, EPA provides support to the
                                          Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Federal
                                          Emergency Management Agency by: (1)
                                          establishing guidelines for protecting the public
                                          from radiation exposure, such as when to
                                          evacuate or relocate citizens; (2) monitoring and
                                          assessing the radioactivity in the environment
                                          from an incident; and (3) defining the extent of
                                          exposure to the public.
                                         from exposure—how radiation affects human
                                         health. Key risk assessment activities include
                                         monitoring the environment for above-normal
                                         levels of radiation, studying the effects on
                                         human cells from exposure to different kinds
                                         and amounts of radiation, and developing
                                         mathematical models to estimate the effects of
                                         potential exposures.
                             Controlling Lost Radioactive Sources
                             Some devices used for
                             industrial and medical
                             purposes contain radioactive
                             material sealed in a metal
                             casing.  If these devices are
                             lost, stolen, or abandoned,
                             they are called "orphan
                             sources." Every year in the
                             U.S. there are over 200
                             reports  of "orphan"
                             radioactive sources. Each of
                             these uncontrolled sources
                             poses potentially serious
                           risks to public health and the
                           environment.
                              Radioactive sources are
                           often placed in scrap metal
                           destined for recycling. If the
                           protective casing around the
                           source breaks open or is
                           "breached" at a metal
                           processing facility and the
                           radioactive material is
                           released, people and the
                           environment may be
                           contaminated. To date, there
                           have been over 70 meltings
of radioactive sources at
steel mills, which have
contaminated the facilities and
may have exposed workers to
radiation. The average cost to
clean up a contaminated
facility is $10-$12 million.
   EPA's  Orphan Sources
Initiative is helping states
recognize, retrieve, and
safely store and dispose of
these radioactive sources
before they endanger
workers and the  public.

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 Safeguarding Radioactive Waste Disposal
 In 1980 Congress authorized DOE to
 develop the Waste Isolation  Pilot
 Plant (WIPP) as the nation's first deep
 underground facility for the permanent
 disposal of radioactive waste from
 U.S. defense programs. The WIPP is
 located 2,100 feet underground in the
 natural salt formations outside
 Carlsbad,  New Mexico. To protect
 local residents and ground-water
 resources from dangerous
levels of radioactive contamination,
Congress also charged EPA with
finalizing regulations that limit
radioactive emissions from all
disposal facilities, developing criteria
to implement and interpret those
generic regulations specifically for the
WIPP, and certifying the WIPP's
compliance with those criteria.
   After a review of over 100,000
pages of documentation, audits and
inspections, independent testing,
public hearings and meetings, and
over 1,000 public comments,  in 1998
EPA certified that the WIPP is safe to
contain the designated waste for at
least 10,000 years. EPA
continues to use its inspection
authority to confirm that the WIPP is
meeting safety requirements,  and will
shut down the plant if it finds
significant noncompliance.
Setting Protective Limits

   EPA uses its risk assessment results
to set protective limits on radioactive
emissions for all media—air, water, and
soil—and to develop guidance for
cleaning up radioactively contaminated
Superfund sites. In turn, other federal
and state agencies use EPAs standards
to develop their own regulations. For
example, the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission uses EPAs standards to
develop regulations for commercial
nuclear facilities, and the Department of
Energy (DOE) uses them to develop
regulations for facilities  that once
developed and produced nuclear
weapons.
 Protecting U.S. Borders

 EPA is working with the
 U.S. Customs Service to develop
 improved systems for safeguarding
 the nation's borders against illicit or
 inadvertant movement of radioactive
 material into the U.S. Products
 manufactured with contaminated
 metals pose potential health risks to
 the workers who produce them and
 the consumers who buy them.
Looking to the Future

   EPA is working with its partners
to identify future risks of radiation
contamination and exposure and to
meet the public health and
environmental protection challenges
these risks present. Following are some
examples of future challenges in four
important areas.

National Security

'   Disposition of dismantled nuclear
   weapons and materials
•   Nuclear terrorism and nuclear bombs

•   Nuclear proliferation, testing, and use in
   developing countries

•   Large-scale planning for response to
   radiological accidents

Industry and Consumer Products

•   Identification and tracking of new
   industries using radioactive materials
•   Exposure to non-ionizing radiation
   (wireless communications, high-voltage
   power transmission lines,
   electromagnetic fields, lasers)

•   Import of radioactively contaminated
   scrap metals and consumer products
 •  Recovery, tracking, and management of
   uncontrolled radioactive sources

 •  Naturally-occurring radioactive
   materials in building construction

 Health and Medical

 •  Changes in technologies that increase
   medical exposures from frequent
   medical procedures

 •  Training and professional certification
   of health professionals to reduce
   excessive procedures and radiation
   overdoses

 •  Identification of new methods for
   informing  the public and reducing
   radon-related lung cancer

 Energy

 '  Decommissioning and dismantling of
   old nuclear power plants

 •  Wastes and emissions from alternative
   energy sources, such as wind power,
   hydropower, geothermal energy, and
   solar power

 •  Naturally radioactive contamination
   from traditional coal, oil, gas, and
   energy production
                                          EPA Office of Air and Radiation
                                        1200 Pennsylvania Ave., NW, (6608J)
                                              Washington, DC 20460
                                                  (202) 564-9290
                                                EPA#402-F-01-021
                                                    March 2002
                                              www.epa.gov/radiation

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