Work Detail |
Magnox is prepared to begin a decommissioning effort to clean up and demolish four “blower house” superstructures at Berkeley nuclear power station in Gloucestershire. Altrad has been given a £30.8 million contract. Their work includes the design, asbestos removal, deplant, demolition, and building work in and around the blower houses.
Other Celadon alliance businesses will assist Altrad. They include Veolia KDC Decommissioning Services, NSG Environmental, OBR Construction, Mammoet, and Cavendish Nuclear.
It is one of the biggest decommissioning initiatives the Berkeley facility has seen in a while. Magnox’s director of program delivery, Ross McAllister, stated: “It was previously scheduled for the 2070s. However, it is wonderful to move it forward by five decades in our effort to carry out our duty better, faster, and even safer.”
“The blower houses circulated gas via the reactors. It would then channel heat into 310-tonne boilers to produce steam to turn the turbines and generate electricity. The final one of the 15 enormous metal boilers was shipped to Sweden for cleaning, smelting, and recycling in 2013.
The decommissioning work at Berkeley nuclear power station
Before being destroyed, the structures will be completely cleaned of asbestos and any remaining low-level metallic waste before being destroyed. The project will take eight years to complete. Thus, it will be a significant step in the supply chain partners’ sustainable decommissioning of the Berkeley site.
General manager of Altrad for Magnox, Kevin Williamson, stated: “We are delighted to have secured this major decommissioning contract at Berkeley. It encompasses the retrieval and cleaning of the primary circuit ductwork. This is as well as miscellaneous steelwork from the blower houses prior to their demolition. It also includes processing the spring hangers from the lubrication pits, which need to be de-energised and made safe before they can be cleaned.”
The Nuclear Decommissioning Authority’s operational firm, Nuclear Waste Services (NWS), has been given a £13.7 million contract to manage 2,400 tonnes of metallic waste. A waste processing compound will also be established. Thus, the metallic trash can be processed there before leaving the site for treatment. |