Nuclear plant clean-up contract win for acquisitive engineering giant
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.