Coping with a big nuclear accident (Closing papers from the NREFS project)
This special issue of the journal Process Safety and Environmental Protection (Volume 112, Part A, Pages 1-198, November 2017) includes ten closing papers from the Management of Nuclear Risk: Environmental, Financial and Safety project (NREFS) on Coping with a Big Nuclear Accident. The papers are as follows:
- P.J. Thomas. Quantitative guidance on how best to respond to a big nuclear accident
- I. Waddington, P.J. Thomas, R.H. Taylor and G.J. Vaughan. J-value assessment of relocation measures following the nuclear power plant accidents at Chernobyl and Fukushima Daiichi
- I. Waddington, P.J. Thomas, R.H. Taylor and G.J. Vaughan. J-value assessment of remediation measures following the Chernobyl and Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant accidents
- D. Yumashev, P. Johnson and P.J. Thomas. Economically optimal strategies for medium-term recovery after a major nuclear reactor accident
- S.F. Ashley, G.J. Vaughan, W.J. Nuttall and P.J. Thomas. Considerations in relation to off-site emergency procedures and response for nuclear accidents
- S.F. Ashley, G.J. Vaughan, W.J. Nuttall, P.J. Thomas and N.A. Higgins. Predicting the cost of the consequences of a large nuclear accident in the UK
- I. Waddington, R.H. Taylor, R.D. Jones and P.J. Thomas. J-value assessment of the cost effectiveness of UK sheep meat restrictions after the 1986 Chernobyl accident
- William J. Nuttall, Stephen F. Ashley and Raphael J. Heffron. Compensating for severe nuclear accidents: An expert elucidation
- P.J. Thomas. Age at death from a radiation-induced cancer based on the Marshall model for mortality period
- P.J. Thomas and I. Waddington. Validating the J-value safety assessment tool against pan-national data