Description
The characteristics of seas and oceans, including the sea bed, and the processes affecting their potential evolution.
Category
Categorisation as a Feature, Event and/or Process.
Features
are physical components of the disposal system and environment being assessed. Examples include waste packaging, backfill, surface soils. Features typically interact with one another via processes and in some cases events.Events
are dynamic interactions among features that occur over time periods that are short compared to the safety assessment timeframe such as a gas explosion or meteorite impact.- "Processes" are issues or dynamic interactions among features that generally occur over a significant proportion of the safety assessment timeframe and may occur over the whole of this timeframe. Events and processes may be coupled to one another (i.e. may influence one another).
The classification of a FEP as an event or process depends upon the assessment context, because the classification is undertaken with reference to an assessment timeframe. In this generic IFEP List, many IFEPs are classified as both Events and Processes; users will need to decide which of these classifications is relevant to their context and its timeframes.
- Feature
- Process
Comments
The “Comments” field, when present, contains any additional explanation of the IFEP, beyond that implicit in the FEP's description and provided in the “Relevance to Performance and Safety” field. This additional explanation may include, where appropriate, the IFEPs characteristics, the circumstances under which it might be relevant and its relationship to other (especially similar) IFEPs.
Marine features include oceans, ocean trenches, shallow seas, and inland seas. Processes operating on these features such as erosion, deposition, thermal stratification and salinity gradients, determine the behaviour and the development of the marine system.
Relevance to Performance and Safety
The “Relevance to Performance and Safety” field contains an explanation of how the IFEP might influence the performance and safety of the disposal system under consideration through its impact on the evolution of the repository system and on the release, migration and/or uptake of repository-derived contaminants.
Both humans and non-human biota can be subject to exposure from contamination that has reached marine features from the repository. Exposure pathways include external exposure from immersion in the water, and consumption of foods produced in marine water. Furthermore, water from contaminated marine features may be abstracted, desalinated and used for purposes such as crop irrigation, drinking water for humans and/or livestock, and bathing.
2000 List
A reference to the related FEP(s) within the 2000 NEA IFEP List.
Related References
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H.D.Livingston (), Radioactivity in the Environment, Volume 6, Marine Radioactivity, Pergamon, 6, 310, https://www.elsevier.com/books/marine-radioactivity/livingston/978-0-08-043714-9, 16 September 2004