Western Mail

‘Landmark’ point in waste removal reached at Wylfa

- Owen Hughes Reporter owen.hughes@walesonlin­e.co.uk

Wylfa nuclear bosses have passed the halfway stage of removing hazardous waste from the reactors.

When operating, Wylfa’s two reactors together contained nearly 100,000 fuel elements.

Since the end of generation, on December 30, 2015, the site’s main focus has been to empty both reactors and send all the remaining used fuel to Sellafield for reprocessi­ng.

Once the reactors are empty, and all the fuel elements have been dispatched to Sellafield, over 99% of the site’s radiologic­al hazard will have been removed.

The target date for that is autumn 2019, said site operators Magnox and the Nuclear Decommissi­oning Authority (NDA).

Stuart Law, Wylfa site director, said: “This is a landmark achievemen­t for the site, which has involved a lot of hard work and dedication from the highly skilled team at Wylfa.

“It’s a meticulous process and it takes time but we have the skills, the knowledge and the people to safely and securely deliver the Magnox work programme.”

Tim Dunham, Magnox head of nuclear operations, said: “This is a proud moment for the site in its vital contributi­on to closing out the Magnox fuel cycle.

“My congratula­tions go to the team for safely reaching this point.

“We envisage that the defuelling programme will complete in mid to late 2019, with everyone working hard to achieve this target.”

Geoff Suitor, head of the Magnox Programme for the NDA, said: “Removing all the used nuclear fuel from a station, when it finishes generating electricit­y, is the first major step in removing the all the hazards and decommissi­oning the site.

“Passing the halfway stage is a great sign of the progress being made by our colleagues at Magnox.”

This marks a significan­t achievemen­t for Magnox Ltd and the Nuclear Decommissi­oning Authority’s mission of safely cleaning up the legacy from the earliest days of the UK’s nuclear industry.

Britain’s fleet of 11 Magnox reactors were the world’s first commercial nuclear power stations.

The earliest, Calder Hall, came online in 1956 and Wylfa was the last to finish generating low-carbon electricit­y.

In almost 60 years, around five million Magnox fuel elements were manufactur­ed for UK nuclear power stations.

 ?? Matthew Horwood ?? > The defuelling process at Wylfa nuclear power plant has passed the halfway point
Matthew Horwood > The defuelling process at Wylfa nuclear power plant has passed the halfway point
 ??  ?? > Wylfa site director Stuart Law
> Wylfa site director Stuart Law

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