Chalk River can meet possible isotope shortfall: AECL

subscribe

Atomic Energy of Canada Ltd. says the nuclear reactor at Chalk River, Ont., can meet the country's demand for medical isotopes if required.

It emerged that a nuclear reactor in the Netherlands that produces a percentage of isotopes for medical use in Canada has been temporarily shut down.

All five reactors around the world that make the isotopes – including the one at Chalk River – are currently offline for unrelated reasons.

About 20 per cent of Canada's medical isotopes come from overseas.

Dale Coffin of the AECL says if a shortfall occurs, the Chalk River facility can ramp up production to meet Canadian needs.

Chalk River, which supplies about 80 per cent of Canada's medical isotopes, is undergoing scheduled maintenance but is expected to be back up and running by August 29.

Related News

coal plant sunset

Looming Coal and Nuclear Plant Closures Put ‘Just Transition’ Concept to the Test

WASHINGTON - The coronavirus pandemic has not changed the grim reality facing workers at coal and nuclear power plants in the U.S. and Europe. How those workers will fare in the years ahead will vary greatly based on where they live and the prevailing political winds.

In Europe, the retirement of aging plants is increasingly seen as a matter of national concern. Germany this year agreed to a €40 billion ($45 billion) compensation package for workers affected by the country's planned phaseout of coal generation by 2038. Last month the Spanish authorities agreed on a just transition plan affecting 2,300 workers…

READ MORE
paris-finalises-energy-roadmap-for-2025-2035-with-imminent-decree

Paris Finalises Energy Roadmap for 2025–2035 with Imminent Decree

READ MORE

usa generation

Solar + Wind = 10% of US Electricity Generation in 1st Half of 2018

READ MORE

German coalition backs electricity subsidy for industries

READ MORE

renewable power fuel cell

New fuel cell could help fix the renewable energy storage problem

READ MORE