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Challenging the EPA’s Legal Authority Set Strict Limits on Low Dose Radiation

May 19, 2017 by Rod Adams

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The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has been seeking input on regulations that should be repealed, replaced or modified. The comment window opened on April 13 and closed on May 15.

In response to the request, members of Scientists for Accurate Radiation Information (SARI) prepared a document containing scientifically supported arguments for eliminating regulations that contain strict limits on exposures to low doses of radiation and small quantities of radioactive material. The document, titled Radiation Hormesis Should be the Basis for Establishing Radiation Protection Standards, was properly submitted before the comment window closed.

The document asserts that our understanding of the true health effects of low dose radiation has advanced to the point where the logical conclusion is that the EPA’s legal authority to limit radiation exposure no longer exists. Based on current peer-reviewed science, existing regulations have a negative impact on public health. In accordance with the directives given to the Agency by Congress and by Executive Orders, the radiation protection standards should be abolished because they harm us. They do not protect us from a danger; they limit access and add costs to many beneficial uses of radiation and radioactive materials.

EPA’s Statutory Radiation Responsibility

When Richard Nixon reorganized federal environmental regulators into a single agency called the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), the new organization inherited radiation protection authorities and responsibilities that had been given by laws existing at the time to a variety of federal entities.

From the Atomic Energy Commission, the EPA inherited part of the following directive from Section 161(b) of the Atomic Energy Act of 1954.

…to establish by rule, regulation, or order, such standards and instructions to govern the possession and use of special nuclear material, source material, and byproduct material as the Commission may deem necessary or desirable to promote the common defense and security or to protect health or to minimize danger to life or property.

The new agency also inherited The Bureau of Radiological Health from the Department of Health, Education and Welfare and it inherited the standard setting role previously assigned to the Federal Radiation Council.

Assumption, Not Science

In all cases, the EPA’s role in radiation protection was described as a responsibility to establish rules aimed at protecting [public] health and minimizing danger to life or property. That responsibility included a scientific assignment to perform and support research that would allow the agency rule writers to have a solid basis for their directives.

Unfortunately, the EPA never had or sought sufficient research funding to determine the effects of radiation. Instead, it relied on conclusions drawn from scant evidence and accepted the notion that better answers would take too long or be too expensive to obtain.

The “conservative” paradigm that the regulators at EPA have used has always been that every dose of radiation, down to a single gamma ray, alpha particle or freely moving neutron carries with it the possibility of causing harm to human health.

With the [unproven] assumption that all radiation is hazardous the EPA adopted the regulatory posture of setting strict numerical limits based on keeping doses to the lowest technologically achievable level, even if a small reduction in dose added a substantial cost.

The current result of attempting to protect the public from an assumed harm is a complex set of regulations and statutory limits on exposures from a variety of pathways to various radioactive isotopes.

One example of the absurdity of some of the limits is the fact that the EPA standard for exposure to the most exposed person during the first 10,000 years of storing used fuel in an underground repository is 15 mrem (0.15 mSv) per year. That is 1/20th of the average background exposure for an American if medical exposures are ignored. Sadly, that number was the result of at least a half a dozen years of discussions with the NRC; without the slightly moderating influence of the NRC, the EPA limit would have been 10 mrem/yr.

Effect of accepting hormesis

SARI’s document includes a suggested regulatory approach that might sound radical and wildly unrealistic at first glance.

Radiation protection would become very much simplified with the use of radiation hormesis as the basis of the regulations. Since there is no harm from low radiation doses, there should be no regulations for low radiation doses. For higher doses that are carcinogenic, there should be regulations to prevent such doses from occurring.

But the authors of SARI’s document are not radicals. Each of them has devoted a considerable portion of their careers to public health and safety and feel deep personal responsibility for getting it right. Here is how they explain how their prescription is analogous to current protective models in other fields.

With medicines which are beneficial at low doses but would be dangerous at high doses, we do not specify a dose limit, but we do guide the public not to exceed some dose levels, e.g. “do not take more than 10 caplets in 24 hours”. There are no license requirements to buy such over-the-counter drugs and there is no regulator monitoring how many caplets we have taken or asking us to document our usage of the medicine.

Since there is a vast gap between the low radiation doses that are beneficial and the threshold dose for increased cancer risk, beneficial uses of radiation are unlikely to result in doses approaching the cancer threshold. Therefore, little regulation would be needed for beneficial uses of low-dose radiation. However, if some use of low-dose radiation could result in high enough doses to be of cancer-causing concern, caution should be advised and such use of low-dose radiation should be regulated to ensure its safe use.

If you have not read the full document already, please click here to open and read SARI’s well-justified suggestion for a new regulatory paradigm for radiation exposure.

There have been several articles published in the past couple of weeks that have pointed to the fact that there is a pervasive fear of nuclear that vastly exceeds the measured harm caused by nuclear energy uses in the 60 plus years of its commercial operation. However, authors of those articles have failed to consider the fact that unjustified fears can and should be be overcome.

Progress has always depended on the process of determining actual hazards so that we can address irrational fears and use new, effective tools that make us more comfortable, more prosperous, more creative, more powerful and give us greater control over our surroundings.

Disclosure: I am a member of SARI and one of the signers of the document.

The post Challenging EPA’s legal authority set strict limits on low dose radiation appeared first on Atomic Insights.

Photo Credit: TexasGOPVote.com via Flickr

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Rod Adams

Rod Adams gained his nuclear knowledge as a submarine engineer officer and as the founder of a company that tried to develop a market for small, modular reactors from 1993-1999. He began publishing Atomic Insights in 1995 and began producing The Atomic Show Podcast in March 2006. Following his Navy career and a three year stint with an SMR design project (B&W mPower), he turned Atomic Insights into an LLC and began devoting his full efforts to publishing, writing, and producing.

Filed Under: Communications and Messaging, Energy, Environment, Environmental Policy, Fuels, Nuclear Power, Politics & Legislation, Public Health, Rare Earth Minerals, Storage, Sustainability, Tech, Utilities Tagged With: environmental protection agency, epa, legal authority, public health risk, public safety, radiation, regulation

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Ike
Member
Ike
May 22, 2017 01:28

Hormesis (i.e., beneficial dosage) needs to be a part of all regulations that control substances. The poison is in the dose. Current practice at EPA has been to assume some toxicity down to absolute zero dosage for everything, and to assume actual harm is the extreme maximum boundary of possibility for all situations where there is no reliable science to prove otherwise. This is how we now have a reportable limit of 7 parts per TRILLION (one drop in 13,000,000 gallons) for teflon (PFOA/PFOS) — one of the most benign and least reactive substances in existence — and have had manufacturers pressured to remove it from all products despite its manifold benefits, despite having not a single clinical study documenting any harm.

I applaud SARI scientists trying to turn the EPA from its abusive campaign of ideological scientology back to true science in its important missions of protecting the environment and human health.

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Bentvels
Member
Bentvels
May 22, 2017 22:44

Research shows that even radiation increases of ~10% of normal background radiation (0.2mSv/a) already result in increased serious health damage to fetuses hence newborn.

Furthermore that the frequency of those serious birth defects increase linear with the radiation, for levels from 0.2 – 0.8mSv/a (normal background ~2mSv/a).

The linear relationship being: (% are per 1mSv/a increase):
– Heart malformations: ~80% (P=0.002)
– Stillbirth: ~30% (P=0.0003)
– Deformities of skull, face, jawbone, neck, spinal column, hip joint, long bones of the legs, and feet: ~120% more per mSv/a increase in radiation (P=0.00004)!

It implies that LNT is shown to exist by scientific research at levels of 10% of natural background radiation!*)

Regarding genetic health, even much smaller increases of radiation cause already highly significant genetic damage.
A serious issue as such increased genetic damage is transferred to next generations.

German govt closed its prime nuclear waste store (Gorleben; sheets 16-19) when due diligence research by pro-nuclear scientists showed even more genetic damage to newborn up to 40km away than the original research shown in the link.
They closed the storage facility (dry casks stored in an huge building with 0.5meter thick walls situated on a terrain surrounded by an high dike with radiation measurement instruments everywhere, all in the woods) despite that it was still 70% empty!

It’s about care for health and intelligence of our children / grand-children / grand- grand-children, etc.

______
*) Note that compared with adults the sensitivity for health damage due to increased radiation is:;
n times bigger for children
nn times bigger for babies
nnn times bigger for fetuses
nnnnn times bigger for sperm during production in the testicles;
because those have so much higher cell division rates and at cell division DNA is single stranded and cannot be repaired.

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Nathan Wilson
Member
Nathan Wilson
May 23, 2017 03:58

Bentvels, once again, you’ve cited propaganda from so-called researcher Hagen Scherb (who’s always an outlier, ignored by mainstream science), claiming to have found birth defects associated with low level radiation.

For example, around the time that Scherb was claiming to have found radiation-related birth defects around Fukushima, the World Health Organization, in this WHO report was saying:

The estimated dose levels in Fukushima prefecture were also too low to affect fetal development or outcome of pregnancy and no increases, as a result of antenatal radiation exposure, in spontaneous abortion, miscarriage, perinatal mortality, congenital defects or cognitive impairment are anticipated.

You and Scherb are welcome to hold whatever “opinion” you like, but to imply that opinion is “science” is dishonest.

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Bentvels
Member
Bentvels
May 23, 2017 11:05

Scherb etal found undisputed facts; highly significant increase of perinatal deaths, and publicized it in peer reviewed scientific journal. Results in line with many other found facts and many similar.
Facts simple to check by other scientists by asking the birth registers in the concerned prefectures!*)
But feel free. Would be a nice scientific publication if you could find something wrong. You can start by asking his Japanese scientists co-authors as we can assume that they gathered the raw data.

So that estimation of the WHO was wrong. Again a gross under-estimation of the effects of increased low level radiation.

E.g. WHO also adhered the Chernobyl forum 4,000 death estimate following nuclear promotion organization IAEA**) due to its 1989 agreement with the IAEA which stopped a.o. all critique on the atmospheric nuclear bomb testing.

While they now recognize at least 16,000 death due to cancers alone, which implies >20,000 deaths as increased radiation cause ~30% other deadly diseases as found by a.o. the RERF studies.

Btw. WHO expert committee estimate up to 7% more cancers for the Fukushima evacuated children in later life….
______
*) Note that only frequency of peri-natal deaths is researched,
I assume because the Japanese birth registers don’t register other serious birth defects such as abnormal limbs, Down syndrome, heart malformations.

**) Official target IAEA: promotion of peaceful nuclear.

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Thorkil
Member
Thorkil
May 25, 2017 17:43

Contrary to all expectations there has not been seen any more birth defects among children born to survivors of the nuclear attacks in Japan.

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Thorkil
Member
Thorkil
May 25, 2017 17:39

People have lived, without harm, in areas with rather high levels of natural radiation.
There is sufficient evidence to show that minor radiation is beneficial.
You may get some information, if you have a look at http://wp.me/p1RKWc-6e

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