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LVD type PPEB 2000 Ton x 14000 mm CNC
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12470 mm
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Nuclear waste retrieval begins at UK’s oldest waste store

Posted on 30 Aug 2023. Edited by: John Hunter. Read 2290 times.
Nuclear waste retrieval begins at UK’s oldest waste storeSellafield Ltd engineers, using new equipment designed and installed by a Bechtel-Cavendish Nuclear Solutions Ltd team, have begun retrieving waste from the UK’s oldest waste storage building. The Pile Fuel Cladding Silo (PFCS) at Sellafield nuclear facility in northwest England is a sealed building with six compartments of radioactive material. It was built in the 1950s to store debris from the UK’s oldest nuclear reactors.

This week, a crucial stage was reached when a remotely operated crane reached through one of six shielded access doors and started safely and securely scooping out waste. The milestone is significant in the permanent, safe, and secure disposal of materials, and has Sellafield retrieving waste from all four legacy ponds and silos for the very first time.

Sellafield CEO Euan Hutton 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.”

Retrieval system

Bechtel Cavendish Nuclear Solutions designed, manufactured, tested, and installed the retrieval system for Sellafield Ltd as part of the UK Nuclear Decommissioning Authority’s highest priority risk reduction clean-up programme. A remotely operated telescopic waste retrieval crane is now lifting waste out of the silo and placing it into a stainless-steel waste box. The box will be sealed up before being taken out of the building in a transport package and transferred to a more modern facility on the Sellafield site for long-term safe storage.

Mike Higgins, Bechtel’s project manager at Sellafield, said: “This is another leap forward in the clean-up of one of Europe’s most hazardous buildings that has posed an environmental risk for decades. The rapid and safe retrieval of this waste and repackaging into modern containers is a national priority. 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.”

Leigh Wakefield, Cavendish Nuclear’s business director, said: “We are proud of the truly collaborative approach adopted between Sellafield, Bechtel and Cavendish Nuclear, which has enabled yet another milestone in the decommissioning of a 1950s nuclear waste storage facility to be delivered successfully. Starting retrievals is a fantastic achievement and as a team we are pleased to be supporting Sellafield to retrieve the decades-old waste, package it safely, and dispose of it permanently — reducing the hazard on the Sellafield site to create a safe and secure world, together.”