Recycling Nuclear Waste: Addressing Nuclear Waste in the 21st Century
Senator Carper Hosts Nuclear Recycling Roundtable at MIT
Speaker: U.S. Senator Tom Carper
Date:Monday, May 18th
Time:10:00 AM - 12:00 Noon
Location: 56-114, 77 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge
Abstract
One of the long-term questions about nuclear energy is how to manage the waste. For many years, U.S. nuclear utilities have paid fees to the federal government for nuclear waste disposal. But work on disposal has come with delays and roadblocks. It is time to responsibly move forward to address the nuclear waste issue.
Senator Carper’s roundtable brings together MIT and Harvard professors to investigate options for handling the United States’ nuclear waste through recycling and reprocessing. Experts in the field will discuss the pros and cons of recycling technologies, providing information Senator Carper will take back to Congress with him during the ongoing congressional debate.
U.S. Senator Tom Carper is the senior senator from Delaware and a long- time supporter of safe nuclear energy. He believes nuclear power provides solutions to critical problems facing America today, including helping to reduce our reliance on foreign oil, and reducing air pollution that damages our environment and causes global warming. As chairman of the Senate subcommittee that oversees our nation's civilian nuclear operations, Senator Carper wants to ensure that the benefits of nuclear energy are realized in a way that responsibly protects the public's health and security, as well as the environment.
Host
Senator Tom Carper, D-DE, Member Environment and Public Works Committee; Chairman, Subcommittee on Clean Air and Nuclear Safety; Member, Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs; Member, Senate Finance Committee; Chairman of the Senate Nuclear Caucus and the Senate Recycling Caucus
Panelists
Dr. Charles Forsberg, Executive Director of the Fuel Cycle Study, Department of Nuclear Science and Engineering, MIT
Dr. Matthew Bunn, Associate Professor of Public Policy, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University
Dr. Ernest Moniz, Director, MIT Energy Initiative and Laboratory for Energy and the Environment, Cecil and Ida Green Professor of Physics, MIT
Dr. Andrew Kadak, Professor of the Practice of Nuclear Engineering, Department of Nuclear Science and Engineering, MIT


