The Scotsman

Wood gets funding for project to make nuclear decommissi­oning work safer

● Project involving Aberdeen firm is one of five selected from a shortlist of 15

- By SCOTT REID @Woodplc

Wood Group has secured seven-figure government backing to help bring space technology to the field of nuclear decommissi­oning.

The Aberdeen-headquarte­red energy and industrial services heavyweigh­t said it was leading research to make nuclear decommissi­oning “safer, faster and more costeffect­ive” by applying new technologi­es developed in space exploratio­n, car production and medicine.

It has landed funding worth around £1.5 million from the UK’S government’s Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy, the Nuclear Decommissi­oning Authority (NDA) and Innovate UK after winning a major competitio­n to find the best new ideas.

Wood’s project and four others were selected from a shortlist of 15. Each receives funding of about £1.5m.

Wood Group and its supply chain will combine new data and control systems with state-of-the-art robotics to design a demonstrat­or system for cleaning and dismantlin­g highly radioactiv­e rooms or “cells” at Sellafield in Cumbria.

The technologi­es used in the project include material handling systems to reduce the risks of working at height, “mixed reality” headsets, a multi-fingered gripper allowing robots to grasp different objects and a navigation system designed for missions to Mars that enables autonomous mapping where human access is impossible. Wood’s research partners are Airbus Defence and Space, Clicks and Links, Damavan Imaging SAS, Digital Concepts Engineerin­g, Is-instrument­s, I3D Robotics, the University of Lancaster, the University of Salford, Kawasaki UK and TWI.

Bob Macdonald, chief executive of Wood’s specialist technical solutions business, said: “Our innovative proposal for a fully remote solution removes the operator from a hazardous environmen­t and is adaptable enough to tackle different tasks, many of which present unique challenges.

“Wood’s role is as an innovation integrator, bringing together ingenious ideas from industry and academia to define a new approach to the nuclear decommissi­oning challenge.”

Melanie Brownridge, the NDA’S head of technology, said the response had been so promising that the total amount available to the chosen projects has been increased from £3m to £8.5m.

She added: “We were all incredibly excited by the quality and diversity of the submission­s, which came from establishe­d nuclear organisati­ons as well as industries working with us for the first time.”

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