South Wales Echo

Hinkley waste ‘not dangerous’ say tests

-

WASTE which campaigner­s say is “radioactiv­e” and is being dumped in Welsh waters is not dangerous, tests have found.

Natural Resources Wales (NRW) has carried out tests on material which is being dredged from waters near Hinkley Point nuclear power station and will be put into Welsh water.

The material is being dredged from the constructi­on site of the Hinkley Point C power station off the Somerset coast in England and will be put into a disposal site off the coast of Cardiff.

The samples have been checked by independen­t experts, against internatio­nal guidelines, and they have found the chemical and radiologic­al results were within acceptable, safe limits.

NNB GenCo was given a marine licence by NRW to dispose the material in 2014.

Samples of dredged material have to be tested every three years to meet internatio­nal guidelines.

As that three years had passed, the samples had to be retested after March 2016 when the first test had expired.

But, last autumn an expert, Tim DeereJones came forward and said he had concerns and asked the Welsh Government to halt the plans so he could carry out further analysis.

A petition went to an Assembly Committee and experts were asked to give evidence. At that, NRW agreed it would order specific radiation tests. They were carried out on samples taken in 2009.

Both the routine tests, and the extra tests, have also came back as safe.

NRW says it is satisfied there is no risk from the dredged material to people, the environmen­t, or the wildlife that lives there.

Hinkley Point C in north Somerset is a £19.6bn nuclear power station which was approved by the Westminste­r Government in 2016. The sites are close to the older Hinkley Point A nuclear power station, which was decommissi­oned in 2000 after 35 years in operation.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom