Reprocessing facilities
 regularly release radionuclides such
 as krypton-85, argon-41, tritium, and
 carbon-14, into the atmosphere, and
  others, such as tritium, strontium-90,
 cesium-137, and plutonium-241, to
   surface waters. France and the UK
 have reduced the volume of released
 effluents since the 1990s.
 The bulk of the volume of wastes associated
 with nuclear power originates
 from mining and processing the uranium
 ore for fabrication into fuel. The
 largest and most problematic wastes
 associated with mining are uranium
 mill tailings, which are the rock residue
 from the extraction of uranium from the
 ore. The problem is that all the uranium
 daughter products, in particular radium
 (Ra-226) and its daughter radon (Rn-
 222), from millions to billions of years
 of decay, remain with the residual rock.
 These pose risks from windblown dust
 exposure, radon emissions, and leaching
 into groundwater. Currently there
 are over 900 million cubic meters of
 tailings covering almost 5800 hectares
 at uranium mines and mills around the
 globe.44 The mill tailings are generally
 kept in large sludge ponds on site. Like
 coal mine impoundments, these structures
 can fail, with catastrophic results
 to surrounding communities and the
 environment.