The Herald

Nuclear plant clean-up contract win for acquisitiv­e engineerin­g giant

- By Mark Williamson

US engineerin­g giant Jacobs, which employs more than 1,000 people in Scotland, has won a contract to work on an important stage of the clean-up of the site of the former Dounreay nuclear plant in Caithness.

Jacobs will play a key role in co-ordinating the programme to clear and treat radioactiv­e waste in a shaft and silo at the plant near Thurso, under a contract worth around $10 million (£7 million). It won the contract months after buying the nuclear engineerin­g business operated by Aberdeen-based Wood for £250m.

Jacobs has been appointed by Dounreay Site Restoratio­n Limited (DSRL) to provide design services on a project it said aimed to bring about tangible progress toward the clean-up of a site that housed nuclear reactors.

This will involve dealing with solid waste and liquid effluent contained in the shaft and silo, which were used for disposal of intermedia­te-level waste.

DSRL said: “Radioactiv­e waste was historical­ly consigned to the 65-metredeep shaft and the silo, an undergroun­d waste storage vault, over several decades starting in the late 1950s. Now the higher activity waste must be retrieved and repackaged, suitable for longterm storage in a safe modern facility.”

Jacobs said DSRL expects the contract to be worth $10.4m (£8m) over six-and-ahalf years, with potential for additional revenue as additional work packages are identified.

In 2004, Jacobs bought the Glasgow-based Babtie consultanc­y, in a deal it was thought valued the firm at around £90m. Jacobs completed the acquisitio­n of a majority stake in PA Consulting this week.

Power generation stopped at Dounreay in 1994.

 ?? Picture: Andrew Milligan/pa Wire ?? The former Dounreay site
Picture: Andrew Milligan/pa Wire The former Dounreay site

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