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Specialist divers enter Sellafield’s oldest pond for first time in 64 years

by Cumbria Crack
29/03/2023
in Business, Latest, News
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Specialist diver at Sellafield

A team of specialist divers are helping to clean up Sellafield’s oldest legacy pond.

In December, Josh Everett, of specialist US nuclear diving team Underwater Construction Corporation Ltd, became the first person in 64 years to start work.

The last time a human entered Sellafield’s Pile Fuel Storage Pond was in 1958, when records show a maintenance operator and health physics monitor dived into the newly constructed pond to repair a broken winch.

The Pile Fuel Storage Pond is one of the oldest buildings on the Sellafield site and was built in the 1940s to support the operation of the Windscale Piles.

The 100m long outdoor pond was used for the cooling, storage, and decanning of spent fuel from the reactors as part of the UK’s post-war atomic weapons programme. Operations stopped in the 1960s and in the years that followed sludges formed from the decaying nuclear fuel, algae and other debris.

In the last decade, progress has been made in retrieving and safely storing fuel, bulk sludges and redundant equipment from the pond, but it remains one of the most complex decommissioning challenges in the world.

Divers enter the pond via a specially installed access platform and position themselves on a metal dive stand with a shielded floor. From here they were able to work in shifts of up to three-and-a-half hours at a time to retrieve sludges and debris from the pond floor, corners and other hard to reach areas.

Josh and his team have years of experience in safely diving in radioactive environments around the world, including at Dungeness A and Sizewell A in the UK.

Carl Carruthers, Sellafield Limited’s head of programme delivery for legacy ponds, said: “The project has been five years in the planning and has been a huge success. The team are used to diving in toxic and hazardous environments all over the world, including inside nuclear reactor vessels, but this is a first for us.

“Safety has been our priority throughout, and the divers are monitored and communicating with the dive supervisor at all times. Their work has helped us make real progress in cleaning up the pond and our site mission to deal with the nuclear legacy and create a clean and safe environment for future generations.”

Once all of the waste materials have been removed from the pond the water will be removed, ready for final demolition of the building. Current plans estimate the decommissioning work will cost around £212m and will be completed by 2039, an achievement almost a century in the making.

David Redpath, the Nuclear Decommissioning Authority’s director of performance improvement – Sellafield, said: “The success of the project is an important decommissioning milestone for Sellafield and a really positive example of sharing learning to overcome common challenges on sites across the NDA group.

“It’s a testament to the skill and expertise of both Sellafield and the diving team and demonstrates how we are utilising innovative techniques to ensure the UK’s legacy nuclear waste is dealt with safely and securely.”

Alan Wylie, ONR superintending inspector, said: “Our specialist inspectors assessed Sellafield Ltd’s safety submission and were satisfied that it is safe for divers to enter and work in the pond.

“The use of divers has allowed Sellafield Ltd to make progress with retrieving the remaining material from bays 11 and 12, which existing retrieval techniques are no longer able to do. Our inspectors will continue to monitor the retrievals work from this facility as part of our inspection activities on the site.”

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