CEPN is a non-profit organisation created in 1976 to establish a research and development centre in the fields of optimisation of radiological protection and comparison of health and environmental risks associated with energy systems.

The studies are undertaken by a group of a dozen of engineers and economists. The research programme is evaluated by a Scientific Council.

The association currently has three members: the French public electricity generating utility (EDF), the Institute of Radiological Protection and Nuclear Safety (IRSN) and the French Alternatives Energies and Atomic Energy Commission (CEA).

CEPN is a a non-profit organisation created in 1976 to establish a research and development centre in the fields of optimisation of radiological protection and comparison of health and environmental risks associated with energy systems.

Recent publications

Rehabilitating Living Conditions after a Nuclear Accident: Lessons from Experience

LOCHARD J.

Living in a contaminated environment after a nuclear accident is a complex situation generating a lot of questions and concerns among the affected population. The radioactive contamination is a worrying presence for which there are no words in the common language. All dimensions of daily life are

Oral presentation at the International Symposium on Phoenix Leader Education Program for Renaissance from Radiation Disaster, Hiroshima, Japan, 10-11 February 2013.

Abstract

Living in a contaminated environment after a nuclear accident is a complex situation generating a lot of questions and concerns among the affected population. The radioactive contamination is a worrying presence for which there are no words in the common language. All dimensions of daily life are affected and there is a strong uncertainty about the future and particularly the health of children. For each individual, the presence of radioactivity modifies her/his relationship to risk, to other people, to the territory. There is a general feeling among the population of loss of control on daily life, helplessness, abandonment or even exclusion. Such situation cannot be managed with radiation protection considerations alone, and must address all relevant dimensions: health, environmental, economic, social, psychological, cultural, ethical, political, etc.

As far as radiation exposures are concern they are mainly driven by individual behaviours. As a consequence, beyond actions implemented by authorities at the national and local levels, protection strategies to be effective, must also rely on the protective actions that can be undertaken by the affected people themselves. To participate to their own protection, inhabitants from the affected areas must understand where, when and how they are exposed and what can they do to protect themselves in order to regain control on the situation, to become actors of their own protection and to participate actively in the rehabilitation process. It is the responsibility of authorities to provide the conditions and means to maintain an effective radiation monitoring locally, to continuously disseminate detailed information on the exposure situation and the different ways to reduce doses among the population, and to establish an educational program for young people.

Past experience has demonstrated that the involvement of local professionals and inhabitants in the definition and implementation of protection strategies is a key factor to develop a practical radiation protection culture and expertise within the local communities, and to ensure the effectiveness and sustainability of rehabilitation programs. It also showed that the establishment of forums for dialogue and the pluralism of sources of measurement, are important for the dissemination of information and the development of a common language between all involved stakeholders (by public and private, local, regional and national actors) and essential for ensuring public confidence in the progress of the rehabilitation.

The International Commission on Radiological Protection has developed recommendations for the protection of people living in long term contaminated territories that not only include the scientific and technical feedback experience with the management of nuclear accidents but also their human dimensions.

A1167

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Exhibitions / Projects

Vous avez dit Radioprotection ?

Vous avez dit Radioprotection ?

Did you Say Radiation Protection? Stories of X-Rays, Radioactivity, etc …” is a traveling exhibition devoted to radiation protection, that is to say all the means to protect workers, the public and the environment from potentially harmful effects of X-rays and of radioactivity.

La robe et le nuage

Robe et Nuage

La robe et le nuage propose au lecteur une plongée dans le monde de la radioactivité qui n'a rien d'un pensum pour physiciens avertis. Bien au contraire, l'ouvrage, destiné au grand public, s'attache à retracer l'histoire des rayons X et de la radioactivité, ainsi que celle de son nécessaire pendant : la radioprotection. Rédigé par un spécialiste français du sujet et une journaliste scientifique, il aide à mieux comprendre la radioactivité, de La robe de Marie Curie au nuage de Tchernobyl.

ETHOS in Belarus

ETHOS en Biélorussie

Le projet européen ETHOS avait pour but d’améliorer durablement les conditions de vie des habitants des villages dont la vie quotidienne a été fortement affectée par la présence à long terme de contamination radioactive à la suite de l’accident de Tchernobyl. Il s’agissait d’une nouvelle démarche pluridisciplinaire basée sur une implication forte de la population dans l’évaluation et la gestion du risque radiologique en concertation avec les autorités locales, régionales et nationales et des experts biélorusses.