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- Deactivation Decommissioning (D D) | Department of Energy
Decommissioning is the final process of closing and securing the facility consistent with established end states, to provide adequate protection from radiation exposure and isolation from the human environment
- Decommissioning definition, process, purpose key considerations
Decommissioning is the planned, safe, and compliant process of taking industrial facilities, plants, or equipment out of operation It can involve anything from retiring a single piece of machinery to closing down an entire factory site
- DECOMMISSION Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
decommission verb de· com· mis· sion ˌdē-kə-ˈmi-shən decommissioned; decommissioning; decommissions transitive verb : to remove (something, such as a ship or a nuclear power plant) from service
- Decommissioning – Nuclear Decommissioning Collaborative
From the NRC perspective, decommissioning means safely removing a facility or site from service and reducing residual radioactivity to a level that permits either of the following actions:
- Sites Undergoing Decommissioning (by Location or Name)
Those agreements authorize individual States to regulate the decommissioning of materials facilities within their borders States that meet these conditions and agree to use the same regulatory standards as the NRC are called Agreement States
- Decommissioning - Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement
Decommissioning When a company signs a lease for offshore oil or gas exploration or production, Right-of-Way or Right-of-Use-and-Easement, that initial agreement includes the process of “decommissioning” the well, that is, safely plugging the hole in the earth's crust, and disposing of the equipment used to support the production
- Decommissioning of nuclear installations | IAEA
Decommissioning refers to the administrative and technical actions taken to remove all or some of the regulatory controls from an authorized facility so the facility and its site can be reused
- Decommissioning → Term
Decommissioning acknowledges that the benefits derived from infrastructure during its operational life come with responsibilities that extend beyond that period, ensuring that future generations do not inherit unmanaged risks, depleted resources, or degraded environments
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