快猫短视频

Surprises in store

Just how contaminated are Britain's atomic bomb factories?

NUCLEAR weapons factories in Britain may be much more contaminated with
radioactive and toxic waste than previously thought, according to a confidential
report by British Nuclear Fuels (BNFL) obtained by 快猫短视频. The
report also reveals that the amount of waste stored at the nuclear weapons
plants at Aldermaston and Burghfield in Berkshire and Cardiff in Wales may have
been seriously underestimated by the Ministry of Defence.

State-owned BNFL, recently heavily criticised over lax safety procedures at
its Sellafield reprocessing plant, took over running the three Atomic Weapons
Establishment (AWE) sites for the MoD on 1 April in a consortium with the US
defence company Lockheed Martin and management consultants Serco. While
preparing for the transfer from the previous contractor, Hunting Brae, BNFL
asked its scientists to investigate waste contamination and storage so that they
could plan for its treatment and disposal. The report of their investigation
suggests BNFL may have a difficult job on its hands.

鈥淎reas contaminated with asbestos, plutonium, depleted uranium, beryllium and
tritium have been identified. Until comprehensive surveys have been completed,
the potential extent of the problem will be unclear,鈥 the report says. 鈥淭here
may be accumulations of wastes, both radioactive and toxic, in buildings on the
sites that are not included in any identified inventory.鈥

The report questions the AWE鈥檚 assessment that large amounts of soil and
rubble from the decommissioning of nuclear plants are not contaminated with
radioactivity. It may not be possible to dispose of these materials as ordinary
waste, it cautions, partly because of 鈥減ossible adverse PR issues鈥.

BNFL also disputes the waste inventory for the AWE sites provided by the MoD
last year. Its report says that inventories provided by the AWE didn鈥檛 record
estimates of chemically toxic wastes prior to 2000. The forecast that there will
be only 24 000 cubic metres of low and medium-level radioactive waste by 2010
might be 鈥渦nduly optimistic鈥, it says.

快猫短视频s at BNFL also expressed concern that some estimates of the amount
of radioactive waste stored at the sites appeared to go down between 1998 and
1999. The figure for low-level waste from decommissioning nuclear
plants鈥9464 cubic metres鈥攄ropped by half, while the amount of solid
waste in storage seems to have gone down by 200 cubic metres. An accurate
assessment of the waste inventory is complicated by the 鈥渟ignificant number of
inconsistencies and errors鈥 found by the BNFL team in the 1998 data.

The AWE confirms that the entire Cardiff site, which is in the final stages
of being decommissioned, has been surveyed for contamination, but most of
Aldermaston and Burghfield have yet to be investigated. Some radioactive waste
is 鈥渘ot properly accounted for鈥, says an AWE spokesperson, so managers are now
preparing new inventories. The volume of wastes from dismantling nuclear
facilities is 鈥済reater than was originally estimated鈥, he adds. 鈥淚t does not
present us with a problem, since we have ample storage facilities.鈥

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