The Dalgety Bay implementation group will meet on Tuesday to discuss the Ministry of Defence plans for the radiation-strewn beach.
The early meeting of the group was brought together by Fife Council, the MoD, the Scottish Environment Protection Agency and landowners.
The group has been welcomed by Gordon Brown MP who has campaigned for the £10 million improvement of the bay. The group will examine a proposal to remove the sources of radioactive contamination on the beach.
The meeting follows the agreement by the MoD to fund the repair of the area after being named by Sepa as its polluter.
The meeting will discuss plans to replace or reinforce existing coastal armour protection to minimise the potential for erosion and the removal of high-activity radium material from areas of the foreshore.
This may involve limited re-profiling of the beach and foreshore areas to accommodate a rock armour cover system and the placement of a cover system over targeted areas to isolate remaining radium containing material. In the final stages there is a proposal to build a new slipway for the sailing club.
Mr Brown said: “There will be a debate about securing a barrier wall at the headland as the best way of preventing further seepage of radioactive materials when there is coastal erosion.
“We will need the best engineering solutions to prevent further radioactive particles coming to the surface.”