The establishment of a new government unit in charge of radioactive waste management might be a good idea to overcome the procrastination of building final repositories for existing radioactive waste in Taiwan, officials of the Atomic Energy Council (AEC) said yesterday.
"Many European countries, whose sizes are similar to Taiwan's, have established professional agencies governed by public authorities to design and implement appropriate systems for managing radioactive waste generated," Ray Wu (
Wu said the agencies -- such as France's National Radioactive Waste Agency (ANDRA), Switzerland's National Cooperative for the Disposal of Radioactive Waste (NAGRA) and Sweden's Nuclear Power Inspectorate (SKI) -- are co-funded by the government and utilities and are highly efficient in handling high-level and low-level radioactive waste.
AEC officials believe that the delay in relocating 98,000 barrels of low-level radioactive waste stored at a interim repository on Orchid Island could be attributed to Taiwan Power Co's (Taipower) lax efforts in managing radioactive waste, because the nation's only electricity supplier focuses more on power generation.
If a government agency was established, AEC officials said, professional and sufficient staff would process radioactive waste management-related affairs more efficiently than Taipower.
In the draft of the Radioactive Waste Final Disposal Act recently revised by the AEC in June, the idea of forming a government agency to handle radioactive waste professionally was added.
In order to transfer the Cabinet's finalized Radioactive Waste Final Disposal Act to the Legislative Yuan in the next session beginning on Sept. 1, AEC officials said, the draft will be handed into the Cabinet for further finalization within weeks.
The inclusion of the idea to establish a government agency to manage radioactive waste into the draft, however, drew opposition from some high-ranking officials, including Minister Without Portfolio Yeh Jiunn-rong (
Lin Ming-hsiung (
Currently, Lin said, about 60 staff members at the department handle affairs relating to both radioactive waste management and the decommissioning of nuclear plants.
"However, we still are looking for an ideal site to build a final repository for radioactive waste," Lin said.
"The project to build one in Wuchiu (
Lin said that the future of the project would depend on the results of the environmental impact assessment by the Environmental Protection Administration and the feasibility assessment by the Commission of National Corporations under the Ministry of Economic Affairs.
But Lin said two groups formed by the Cabinet in May, the Orchid Island Nuclear Waste Relocation Promotion Committee and the Orchid Island Community Development Committee, had sped up processes to fulfill the government's promise made to people of Orchid Island: setting an acceptable timeframe to relocate radioactive waste.
Taiwan yesterday condemned the recent increase in Chinese coast guard-escorted fishing vessels operating illegally in waters around the Pratas Islands (Dongsha Islands, 東沙群島) in the South China Sea. Unusually large groupings of Chinese fishing vessels began to appear around the islands on Feb. 15, when at least six motherships and 29 smaller boats were sighted, the Coast Guard Administration (CGA) said in a news release. While CGA vessels were dispatched to expel the Chinese boats, Chinese coast guard ships trespassed into Taiwan’s restricted waters and unsuccessfully attempted to interfere, the CGA said. Due to the provocation, the CGA initiated an operation to increase
CHANGING LANDSCAPE: Many of the part-time programs for educators were no longer needed, as many teachers obtain a graduate degree before joining the workforce, experts said Taiwanese universities this year canceled 86 programs, Ministry of Education data showed, with educators attributing the closures to the nation’s low birthrate as well as shifting trends. Fifty-three of the shuttered programs were part-time postgraduate degree programs, about 62 percent of the total, the most in the past five years, the data showed. National Taiwan Normal University (NTNU) discontinued the most part-time master’s programs, at 16: chemistry, life science, earth science, physics, fine arts, music, special education, health promotion and health education, educational psychology and counseling, education, design, Chinese as a second language, library and information sciences, mechatronics engineering, history, physical education
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‘MALIGN PURPOSE’: Governments around the world conduct espionage operations, but China’s is different, as its ultimate goal is annexation, a think tank head said Taiwan is facing a growing existential threat from its own people spying for China, experts said, as the government seeks to toughen measures to stop Beijing’s infiltration efforts and deter Taiwanese turncoats. While Beijing and Taipei have been spying on each other for years, experts said that espionage posed a bigger threat to Taiwan due to the risk of a Chinese attack. Taiwan’s intelligence agency said China used “diverse channels and tactics” to infiltrate the nation’s military, government agencies and pro-China organizations. The main targets were retired and active members of the military, persuaded by money, blackmail or pro-China ideology to steal