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History made at Sellafield as waste removed from 70-year-old plant

by Cumbria Crack
16/08/2023
in Business, Latest, News
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Picture: Sellafield Ltd

History has been made at Sellafield this week as waste has been removed from the site’s oldest store.

The plan to remove waste from the Pile Fuel Cladding Silo has been decades in the making, the firm said, and this week was a momentous milestone.

After weeks of preparation and checks, the retrievals team gathered around the monitors in the control room of the 70-year-old plant to witness the moment a robotic arm reached into the silo to remove and repackage waste for the first time.

Built in the 1950s to store cladding from used nuclear fuel from the Windscale Piles – the first nuclear reactors to be built at Sellafield – the vast concrete silo was designed as a locked vault with no plan for how to retrieve its contents or decommission the building.

Cladding is the term used for the metal casing that surrounded the uranium fuel rods that were loaded into nuclear reactors.

After the rods had been used in the reactors the cladding was peeled away so the fuel inside could be reprocessed. Today, this cladding is classed as intermediate-level nuclear waste.

After almost 20 years of operations, the silo’s six compartments were filled and it stopped receiving waste in the early 1970s.

In the years that followed the building underwent several upgrades to ensure it could continue to store its contents safely while a plan for retrievals was developed.

Sellafield Limited said it was one of the most complex and difficult decommissioning challenges in the world and one of the highest priorities for it and the Nuclear Decommissioning Authority.

Picture: Sellafield Ltd

In the last decade, a giant concrete superstructure has been built around the silo and specially engineered shield doors have been installed on each of its six compartments. In 2017 holes were successfully cut in the top of each compartment, allowing access to the waste for the first time in 65 years.

Working with Bechtel Cavendish Nuclear Solutions, Sellafield Ltd designed, manufactured, tested, and installed nine huge modules containing the machinery needed to empty the silo.

Successful testing of the robot grab was carried out earlier this month, paving the way for the historic achievement of the first waste retrievals from the silo.

Operators used the grab to remotely reach into the silo and pick up the waste before loading it into a specially designed stainless-steel box. Once filled the box will be loaded into a shielded flask and transported to a brand new, fit-for-purpose store called the Box Encapsulation Plant Product Store.

It marks a significant step forward in the clean-up and decommissioning of one of the most hazardous buildings on the Sellafield site.

Euan Hutton, CEO of Sellafield Ltd said: “The first retrievals from the Pile Fuel Cladding Silo are a huge step towards delivering our purpose of creating a clean and safe environment for future generations.

“This achievement means that for the first time ever Sellafield is retrieving waste from all four of our legacy ponds and silos.

“This represents the culmination of years of effort by hundreds of people throughout our organisation and contractor community. I am enormously proud of all of them.”

David Peattie, chief executive of the NDA, added: “This is an important milestone, demonstrating tangible progress in delivering our mission and cleaning up some of our most hazardous legacy waste.

“It’s progress that has been years in the making and has been driven forward by skilled, industry leading specialists working collaboratively.

“The ability to now retrieve waste from all four legacy ponds and silos at Sellafield is a huge achievement and I’d like to extend my congratulations and gratitude to everyone involved.”

Mike Higgins, PFCS programme manager for Bechtel Cavendish Nuclear Solutions, said: “Getting to this position, over the last 12 years, is testament to the hard work, dedication and collaboration of the team, our joint venture partners Cavendish Nuclear, alongside our customer and all our supply chain partners.”

 

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