Spillages cost nuclear firms £2m fines
The operators of two nuclear power plants have each been fined £2m over radioactive spillages, the Nuclear Decommissioning Authority revealed today.
The United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority (UKAEA) was penalised over an incident at Dounreay in Caithness, last September.
And BNG Sellafield was fined for a radioactive leak at its Thorp reprocessing plant in Cumbria, in April last year.
The penalties will be imposed in the form of £2m deductions from money that the authority pays the operators.
In the Dounreay incident 266 litres of hazardous, dissolved spent fuel spilled on to a laboratory floor. The liquid, which is kept in underground tanks, was being pumped to the plant where it is mixed with cement then stored in 500-litre drums. No employees were injured or exposed to radiation during the scare, but it led to the plant being temporarily closed.
The radioactive leak at Sellafield's Thorp reprocessing plant involved enough toxic material to half fill an Olympic-size swimming pool.
No one was injured after the plutonium and uranium fuel dissolved in concentrated nitric acid seeped through a fractured pipe, but the plant had to be shut for several months.
The fines are detailed in the NDA's annual review for 2005/06.
Its report says: "As a consequence of failings that led to incidents at Thorp and Dounreay, the NDA has made a fee deduction of £2m from both BNG Sellafield Ltd and UKAEA respectively."
A spokesman for the UKAEA said: "It shouldn't have happened, but the plant was designed to protect the workforce and the environment in case something like this did happen.
"There was no danger to any of our employees and the necessary steps were taken."
The operators of Dounreay could also face legal action over claims that radioactive particles were released from the plant. The Scottish Environment Protection Agency (Sepa) has submitted reports to prosecutors about the facility.
Sepa is now waiting to see if legal proceedings will be brought against the UKAEA.
Dounreay, a former experimental reactor establishment, was shut in 1994 and is earmarked for a £2.9bn decommissioning by 2033.
More than 1,000 radioactive particles, fragments of spent uranium fuel rods about the size of a grain of sand, have been found on beaches and the sea bed around the facility.
Sepa said it had submitted reports to prosecutors in February this year and November 2004.
Friday, August 11, 2006
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