Article

ICRP’s approach to protection of the living environment under different exposure situations

Details

Citation

Pentreath RJ, Larsson C & Copplestone D (2015) ICRP’s approach to protection of the living environment under different exposure situations. Annals of the ICRP, 44 (1 supplement), pp. 288-294. https://doi.org/10.1177/0146645315572308

Abstract
The International Commission on Radiological Protection's (ICRP) system to protect the living components of the environment is designed to provide a broad and practical framework across all exposure situations. The objectives of ICRP are therefore also set in fairly broad terms, recognising that national and local environmental protection requirements may need to be set within them. The framework recognises the need to be able to demonstrate an adequate level of protection in relation to planned exposure situations, whilst also providing an ability to manage existing situations and accidents, as well as emergency situations, in a rational way. The objects of protection are always real biota in real exposure situations, and the scientific basis for their protection needs to be based on data originating from studies on the relationships between exposure and dose, dose and effects, and effects and consequences in real animals and plants. The framework that has been developed has therefore had to take such realities into account to make the optimum use of the data currently available, whilst being sufficiently flexible to accommodate new scientific information as it arises without having to alter the framework as a whole.

Keywords
Biota; Environmental protection; Reference Animals and Plants

Journal
Annals of the ICRP: Volume 44, Issue 1 supplement

StatusPublished
Publication date30/06/2015
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/22198
PublisherSAGE
ISSN0146-6453

People (1)

People

Professor David Copplestone

Professor David Copplestone

Professor, Biological and Environmental Sciences