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Risk Based Approach to NORM

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Title: Risk Based Approach to NORM


1
Risk Based Approach to NORM
  • Dr. Brian Heaton

2
  • When non specialist staff are responsible for
    identifying when a hazard exists the areas of
    concern need to be identified and focussed on.
    Procedures then need to be established which
    allow them to carry out this role.

3
What are these?
  • External-This is from the radiation field that
    exists around contaminated items or inside a
    contaminated vessel. Generally the latter is the
    highest but there are exceptions.

4
What are these?
  • Internal-Follows from the incorporation of
    radioactive material into the body. The main
    routes are by inhalation or ingestion. NORM
    materials are a problem because several of the
    daughters emit alpha particles.

5
Difference between Oil and Gas Operations
  • Only real way of establishing risk is by
    measurement.
  • Generally higher external doserates in oil
    operations because of radium being present in
    scales.

6
Difference between Oil and Gas Operations
  • Care must be taken making doserate measurements
    in gas operations because many doserate
    instruments are based on Geiger tubes which do
    not measure the gamma photon given off by
    lead-210 very efficiently and give a lower
    reading than the correct value.

7
Are external doserates significant
  • Industrial Radiographers and Well Loggers are
    exposed to much higher doserates. These tend to
    be accepted because they are the responsibility
    of the contractors and have been used in the
    industry for many years.

8
Doses Received
  • International Standards allow non-classified
    workers to receive up to 6mSv/y in the course of
    their work. There are no daily limits. Companies
    should however set their own daily or yearly dose
    constraints or action levels.
  • From operations in the North Sea drilling crew
    and production maintenance operators receive no
    recordable external radiation doses. These
    workers are all non-classified workers.

9
Doses Received
  • Vessel cleaning crew can receive up to 2-3 mSv in
    a year external radiation dose. These workers
    are generally classified workers and are subject
    to dosimetry and medical surveillance.

10
Internal Hazard
  • NORM is potentially more hazardous than the
    radionuclides used in Hospitals, Universities and
    Industry because it contains alpha particle
    emitting radionuclides.
  • However the scales and silts/sands that contain
    the NORM isotopes are generally difficult to
    dissolve even using strong acids or alkalis.

11
Internal Hazard
  • The ingestion hazard is therefore not high.
  • The inhalation hazard is potentially high
    particularly for any operation that may produce
    fine dust particles.
  • The specific activity of lead/polonium-210 in gas
    field operations can be very high.

12
Risk in Practice
  • Very little of the sands and silts produced are
    small enough to be breathed in and trapped in the
    lungs. Only when mechanical grinding is being
    undertaken are these likely. (Are deposits in
    produced in waste water lagoons different).
  • Most items are wet when first breached.

13
Risk in Practice
  • Inhalation and ingestion easily controlled by
    either normal hydrocarbon gas protection or
    wearing a P3 grade face mask.

14
Summary
  • The external risk for most NORM operations is
    low. When not low the yearly dose received by
    workers is only a few mSv.
  • The internal risk is potentially high under some
    circumstances but is quite easily controlled by
    following procedures and wearing ppe.
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