Western Daily Press

Nuclear power station reaches major milestone

- ALAN JONES news@westerndai­lypress.co.uk

A“MAJOR milestone” has been reached in the building of the Hinkley Point C nuclear power station, it has been announced.

Energy giant EDF said workers at its site in Somerset have completed the 49,000-tonne base for the station’s second reactor on schedule, meeting a target date set more than four years ago.

EDF said it was a major milestone, completed by teams who have had to adapt to new coronaviru­s working conditions.

The achievemen­t comes less than a year after completion of the first reactor’s base in June 2019.

And the final concrete pour which ended on Friday set a UK record for a single, continuous pour.

The final pour of 8,991m3 surpassed by 37m3 the previous record set during constructi­on of the base for Hinkley Point C’s first unit in June 2019.

The company said completion of the second reactor base has benefited from experience gained on the first unit, which it added has led to significan­t increases in productivi­ty.

EDF said this will benefit the proposed follow-on project at Sizewell C in Suffolk, which it submitted an applicatio­n for earlier this week.

The coronaviru­s crisis led to a number of changes on the Hinkley site, including reducing the number of workers to enable social distancing, and concentrat­ing on the most critical areas of constructi­on.

Where social distancing is not possible, workers have been using extra protective equipment.

New figures issued last week also show that Hinkley Point C beat its ambition to spend £1.5 billion with regional businesses five years ahead of target.

Hinkley Point C managing director Stuart Crooks said: “I want to thank workers and our union partners for their extraordin­ary efforts to make safe working possible during the pandemic.

“They have adapted to major changes in everyday behaviours and working practices which would have been unimaginab­le a few months ago.

“Hinkley Point C has a strong culture of learning and innovation which is leading to improved productivi­ty as we get ahead building our second identical reactor. This experience is a great basis for further identical reactors at Sizewell C.”

The scheduled date for the first Hinkley unit to be operating is 2025, with the second unit around a year later. The power station, which is costing over £21 billion to build, will supply six million homes.

Minister for Business and Industry Nadhim Zahawi said: “Hinkley Point C will be a crucial part of meeting our energy needs, powering nearly six million new homes while helping achieve our net zero emissions target.

“The completion of the second reactor base marks an important milestone in achieving this, all with the potential to deliver as many as 25,000 new job opportunit­ies throughout its constructi­on, which will contribute towards our economic recovery.”

 ?? Ben Birchall ?? Constructi­on workers stay socially distanced as
they work inside the nuclear reactor on unit 1 at Hinkley Point C nuclear
power station near Bridgwater, Somerset, Europe’s largest building
site, where they are completing a concrete pour into the base of unit 2 nuclear reactor
Ben Birchall Constructi­on workers stay socially distanced as they work inside the nuclear reactor on unit 1 at Hinkley Point C nuclear power station near Bridgwater, Somerset, Europe’s largest building site, where they are completing a concrete pour into the base of unit 2 nuclear reactor
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