|
Showing 1 - 2 of
2 matches in All Departments
With the end of the Cold War, new opportunities for interaction
have opened up between the United States and the countries of the
Former Soviet Union. Many of these important initiatives involve
the US Department of Energy (DOE) and the Ministry of the Russian
Federation for Atomic Energy (MINA TOM). Currently, collaboration
is under way which involves reactor safety, the disposition of
fissile materials from the weapons program, radioactive waste
disposal, and the safety of nuclear warheads. Another fruitful area
of interchange resulted from the radiochemical storage tank
accident at the site of the Siberian Chemical Compound at Tomsk-7
in 1993. DOE and MINATOM agreed to meet and exchange information
about the accident for the purposes of improving safety. A meeting
on the Tomsk tank accident was held in Hanford, Washington in 1993,
followed by a second meeting in st. Petersburg, Russia in 1994 in
which the agenda expanded to include radiochemical processing
safety. A third exchange took place in 1995 in Los Alamos, New
Mexico, and additional papers were presented on nonreactor nuclear
safety. Following a planning session in 1996 in Seattle,
Washington, it was decided to hold a fourth technical exchange on
the broader subject of nuclear materials safety management. Through
a grant from the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)
Disarmament Programme, the meeting took place on March 17- 21,
1997, in Amarillo, Texas as a NATO Advanced Research Workshop (ARW)
through grant no. DISRM 961315.
With the end of the Cold War, new opportunities for interaction
have opened up between the United States and the countries of the
Former Soviet Union. Many of these important initiatives involve
the US Department of Energy (DOE) and the Ministry of the Russian
Federation for Atomic Energy (MINA TOM). Currently, collaboration
is under way which involves reactor safety, the disposition of
fissile materials from the weapons program, radioactive waste
disposal, and the safety of nuclear warheads. Another fruitful area
of interchange resulted from the radiochemical storage tank
accident at the site of the Siberian Chemical Compound at Tomsk-7
in 1993. DOE and MINATOM agreed to meet and exchange information
about the accident for the purposes of improving safety. A meeting
on the Tomsk tank accident was held in Hanford, Washington in 1993,
followed by a second meeting in st. Petersburg, Russia in 1994 in
which the agenda expanded to include radiochemical processing
safety. A third exchange took place in 1995 in Los Alamos, New
Mexico, and additional papers were presented on nonreactor nuclear
safety. Following a planning session in 1996 in Seattle,
Washington, it was decided to hold a fourth technical exchange on
the broader subject of nuclear materials safety management. Through
a grant from the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)
Disarmament Programme, the meeting took place on March 17- 21,
1997, in Amarillo, Texas as a NATO Advanced Research Workshop (ARW)
through grant no. DISRM 961315.
|
|