Follow Slashdot blog updates by subscribing to our blog RSS feed

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
United Kingdom Power

UK Nuclear Site's Clean-Up Costs Rise To £136 Billion (theguardian.com) 124

The cost of cleaning up the U.K.'s largest nuclear site, "is expected to spiral to £136 billion" (about $176 billion), according to the Guardian, creating tension with the country's public-spending watchdog.

Projects to fix the state-owned buildings with hazardous and radioactive material "are running years late and over budget," the Guardian notes, with the National Audit Office suggesting spending at the Sellafield site has risen to more than £2.7 billion a year ($3.49 billion). Europe's most hazardous industrial site has previously been described by a former UK secretary of state as a "bottomless pit of hell, money and despair". The Guardian's Nuclear Leaks investigation in late 2023 revealed a string of cybersecurity problems at the site, as well as issues with its safety and workplace culture. The National Audit Office found that Sellafield was making slower-than-hoped progress on making the site safe and that three of its most hazardous storage sites pose an "intolerable risk".

The site is a sprawling collection of buildings, many never designed to hold nuclear waste long-term, now in various states of disrepair. It stores and treats decades of nuclear waste from atomic power generation and weapons programmes, has taken waste from countries including Italy and Sweden, and is the world's largest store of plutonium.

Sellafield is forecast to cost £136bn to decommission, which is £21.4bn or 18.8% higher than was forecast in 2019. Its buildings are expected to be finally torn down by 2125 and its nuclear waste buried deep underground at an undecided English location. The underground project's completion date has been delayed from 2040 to the 2050s at the earliest, meaning Sellafield will need to build more stores and manage waste for longer. Each decade of delay costs Sellafield between £500m and £760m, the National Audit Office said.

Meanwhile, the government hopes to ramp up nuclear power generation, which will create more waste.

"Plans to clean up three of its worst ponds — which contain hazardous nuclear sludge that must be painstakingly removed — are running six to 13 years later than forecast when the National Audit Office last drew up a report, in 2018... "

"One pond, the Magnox swarf storage silo, is leaking 2,100 litres of contaminated water each day, the NAO found. The pond was due to be emptied by 2046 but this has slipped to 2059."

Thanks to long-time Slashdot reader AmiMoJo for sharing the news.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

UK Nuclear Site's Clean-Up Costs Rise To £136 Billion

Comments Filter:
  • From the start... (Score:5, Informative)

    by VeryFluffyBunny ( 5037285 ) on Sunday October 27, 2024 @09:50AM (#64897541)
    ...multiple governments in multiple countries have lied to their populations about the real costs & risks of nuclear energy. This is just one example of the lies being exposed. Expect to see a lot more like this in the not-too-distant future. 70 years of nuclear fetishism is costing us dearly.
    • Re:From the start... (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Kernel Kurtz ( 182424 ) on Sunday October 27, 2024 @11:41AM (#64897751)
      Here in Canada every kWh of nuclear energy produced has included a surcharge for future waste handling.

      We'll be happy to explain to the rest of the world how to do it if they ask.

      https://www.nwmo.ca/# [www.nwmo.ca]
      • Re:From the start... (Score:5, Interesting)

        by nukenerd ( 172703 ) on Sunday October 27, 2024 @02:02PM (#64898015)

        Here in Canada every kWh of nuclear energy produced has included a surcharge for future waste handling.

        The UK did that too. But the government raided that fund for other purposes.

      • Here in Canada every kWh of nuclear energy produced has included a surcharge for future waste handling.

        US government charges nuclear power plants a fee for waste disposal as well. They don't actually have any operational program for waste disposal, but the power plants still pay the fee.

        • And this ended up generating a lawsuit by the nuclear plant operators because the promise was 'pay this fee and we'll handle the disposal', with no disposal it is a contract violation by the fed.
          I think the result is that the fed pays for the "temporary" above ground storage caskets for now. But those are actually relatively very cheap.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        We had such funds as well, but they made nuclear power so unattractive that in the end the government had to agree to cover the cost and sold the plants for a token amount.

        The question for Canada is if the fund will cover the true cost of clean-up and long term waste storage.

      • Great, lets also do it for oil and gas.

    • Those same governments lie about other things as well

      Sellafield is one of those places which was operated with no oversight until it was too late - that does not mean that a nuclear facility built today under modern oversight will be as expensive as cleaning up the cockup that is Sellafield.

      For example, in 1966, a coal spoil heap failed and slid down onto the town of Aberfan, killing 116 children and 28 adults. Near 60 years on, there are still dozens of spoil heaps positioned on the hills above Welsh and

    • by Enigma2175 ( 179646 ) on Sunday October 27, 2024 @07:02PM (#64898491) Homepage Journal

      ...multiple governments in multiple countries have lied to their populations about the real costs & risks of nuclear energy. This is just one example of the lies being exposed. Expect to see a lot more like this in the not-too-distant future. 70 years of nuclear fetishism is costing us dearly.

      Why are you whinging about nuclear energy when this article is about a nuclear weapons facility? They did produce power there but the primary purpose for the reactors was to to produce Plutonium for weapons and there was also an extensive nuclear processing plant on the site to enrich Uranium and extract Plutonium. The US has an similar weapons site at Hanford and the cleanup has also been very expensive. Comparing weapons production site decommission costs to nuclear power plants is silly -- there are different processes, experiments, contaminants, etc. at a weapons lab. There were also different regulations for these sites and completely different national priorities when these sites were in operation. I notice that the story fails to mention anything about nuclear weapons as well, using the same tactic as you to equate weapons production with power production. It's pretty sad that every story needs to have an agenda behind it, journalism has died and at at this point the media is just beating a dead horse to see if any more money will fall out.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        It was originally a site for weapons production, after the US screwed us on nuclear research. We assisted the US with the Manhattan Project, on the basis that the technology would be shared with us, but the US reneged on the deal (and did the same with supersonic jets too).

        But later the site was commercialized and switched to generating power. The commercial aspects were supposed to be done properly and avoid these problems getting as bad as they have, but predictably they didn't put the required investment

    • And properly run there aren't any significant risks.

      The problem is we keep privatizing shit that shouldn't be privatized.

      It's always so tempting. Some guy like the monorail man from Simpsons comes along and promises you lower taxes for the same service and more. Then what I actually happens is best case scenario you pay an extra 20 or 30% to get the work done because that's what he's skimming off your tax dollars. Worst case scenario he starts cutting corners on safety and you've got Fukushima.

      S
    • by MoHaG ( 1002926 )

      The waste from the reactors used for weapons production is a significant part of the problem at Sellafield...

  • $136 BILLION and rising, sounds like someone is going to make a LOT of money here, they could bury the whole site under 100 feet of concrete for that much money.
    • they could bury the whole site under 100 feet of concrete for that much money.

      A very tall parking lot is not the desired outcome.

    • The problem is below, not above. Then it still has to go somewhere.

    • Re:Call me skeptical (Score:4, Informative)

      by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Sunday October 27, 2024 @10:19AM (#64897587) Homepage Journal

      Burying it in concrete would be a disaster, because all the waste would leak out of the bottom.

      That's the core of the problem. It's already leaking badly, and it keeps getting worse as the site deteriorates. The people trying to clean it up are at great risk, and progress is slow.

      • Distribute it to millions of locations to solve the long term problem by putting small portions of it in the backyard of everybody who has and continues to advocate for nuclear power as the solution to all our energy problems!

        The never advocate the NEW plants be put in their backyards either...

        Coal on the other hand has exposed all of us to more radiation than nuclear and we've been relatively ok with that. If gas had to be leaded we'd all still be 12 IQ points lower and likely denying global warming...

        • I'd be fine with a nuclear plant in my backyard. Already have a level 4 virology lab a few miles away.

          NIMBY people are why I don't give a shit about climate change. Enjoy. You deserve it.
  • by djp2204 ( 713741 ) on Sunday October 27, 2024 @10:01AM (#64897561)

    Considerable fuel can be recovered from so called nuclear waste products. Much better, lower risk, and cheaper long term that storing it somewhere for the future generations to deal with.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Not economically though, that's the issue.

      And if it was economical, they wouldn't start with with Sellafield because just getting the waste out of there is a hazardous job.

      A lot of it isn't spent fuel, it's other high level waste that can't be recycled.

    • Sellafield is a reprocessing plant. As TFS says, it's the world's largest store of plutonium, and that's because it's one of the world's biggest reprocessing facilities where they extract plutonium from spent nuclear fuel. The waste they're talking about is the really nasty stuff left over after the useful stuff has been extracted using the PUREX process. It's very nasty chemically as well as radioactively, due to all the acids and solvents required to separate the metals (particularly uranium and pluton

      • by HiThere ( 15173 )

        It's all useful, if only for heat. The problem is it isn't economic to use most of it.

        How about this: Melt it into a slurry and cast it into blocks the size of a sugar cube, Embed that cube in an outer layer of glass to double it's size. Bury them at the bottom of the asphalt in a road that you're building. Have a road with built-in deicing, and less environmental damage than spreading salt around. (If this proposal is too dangerous, put down a layer of asphalt before you put down the cubes, and space

        • by Sique ( 173459 )
          Those will be the most expensive roads every built. The problem is that processing radioactive materials is quite deteriorating for the equipment used, as the materials tend to catch alpha particles and neutrons, which slowly introduces impurities into the materials, causing them to lose strength. And then you have to process the defective equipment with new equipment, which also deteriorates etc.pp.. Basically, you generate really, really expensive glass cubes, and glass itself is not very cheap either, an
        • Perhaps you want to read up the properties of Plutonium.

          Facepalm.

        • by _merlin ( 160982 ) on Sunday October 27, 2024 @03:40PM (#64898169) Homepage Journal

          You're seriously underestimating how difficult this stuff is to work with. PUREX reprocessing involves dissolving the fuel in nitric acid, which is nasty at the best of times, let alone when it has fission products dissolved in it. Vitrifying it is slow and expensive at the best of times. There's no way you could just cast it into cubes - that's pure fantasy.

          Anything producing a useful amount of decay heat will also be dangerously radioactive. You can't have it both ways. Even if you could, your road heated by decay heat would be completely impractical. Roads need routine maintenance and resurfacing, and eventual replacement. You've invented a road that you can't dig up because you'd shatter and disperse the nuclear waste from your cubes.

          Nuclear plants increase the amount of radioactive stuff around because all the stuff exposed to neutron flux ends up becoming radioactive. Atoms capture neutrons, transforming stable isotopes into radioactive isotopes. That's why you end up with copious amounts of low-level radioactive waste from all the construction materials. You still need to store it because the radioactive isotopes often decay to radioactive gasses (e.g. Krypton-85) that you don't want to be exposing people to.

          If it was really as simple as you seem to think, we wouldn't have a situation where every reprocessing plant ends up being a total clusterfuck. Sellafield is bad, the Hanford site is worse, and some of the facilities in the former USSR are probably worse again.

    • They have a ton of mixed waste from early reactors and weapon development, not the clean fuel assemblies normal reprocessing plants are build for.

      Maybe for a couple 10s of Billions you could make a reprocessing plant for the slop they have to work with, but will that be cheaper?

    • From used fuel rods, maybe.

      But tons of contaminated/activated lakes full of slightly radioactive, but highly toxic waste from fuel rod production: No. Probably enough "No" for the Bugs Bunny "Nope" meme

  • by oumuamua ( 6173784 ) on Sunday October 27, 2024 @10:15AM (#64897581)
    They just developed a process to handle liquid nuclear waste by melting it in with glass. It would probably cost much less than $176 billion. China opens first HLW vitrification plant: https://www.neimagazine.com/ne... [neimagazine.com]
    • by HiThere ( 15173 )

      That's a proposal dating back to at least the 1950's. But someone showed that eventually some of the stuff would leach out of the glass. The reports I read didn't estimate how much, or how long it would take, or how dilute the radioactive stuff would be. But it wasn't perfect, so people were scared.

      • Re:Send it to China (Score:4, Interesting)

        by angel'o'sphere ( 80593 ) <angelo.schneider ... e ['oom' in gap]> on Sunday October 27, 2024 @03:36PM (#64898155) Journal

        I have a friend who made a dissertation about that.

        Our best friend in Germany, Chancellor Helmut Kohl, asked/ordered her in person to "burn it". Otherwise he would make sure she would not get her PhD.

        That is why we did not exit nuclear power in the early 1990s.

        Waste management, is an completely unsolved thing.

        P.S. she is still working in the nuclear research center in Karlsruhe. And that the asshole Chancellor, we had at that time, tried to ruin her career: is an open secret in European science community.

        In Germany the idea was to store the stuff in old salt mines. The radiation however makes the salt lose its "crystal water" now you have water in a salt mine. Which reacts with salts and creates acids. And those acids eat the glass cubes or concrete casks which are stored there.

        And the morons who always come up with: oh, it has long half time! Can not be so dangerous!!
        Perhaps you want to check this out: https://what-if.xkcd.com/29/ [xkcd.com] ?

        • I'm not sure that a comic that points out that the biggest risk of swimming in a nuclear waste pool would be the guards shooting you as you approach to be all that moving about the risk. Seems handleable by that standard.

          And 40 years of waste in a pool isn't that big of a deal. We don't need to handle it instantly.

          • Germans are very sensitive when one tells them that nuclear isn't historically that bad, or at least that the French have contributed much less per person than the Germans when it comes to CO2, it's how I found out that Slashdot has a fiend or enemy setting, when Gweihir set me as enemy, for pointing that out....
            • France, UK and Germany: all have the same waste problem.

              So. What is your point? How can you call something clean when we have waste we simple do not know how to handle?

              How many thousand years do you want it in "swimming pools"?

              • Who says there cannot ever be a solution? Why is that scientifically impossible? It's not even improbable. Fact is, nuclear isn't clean. Another fact is, burning previously sequestered carbon messes up the climate. One thing needs action now, the other may grant more time to find a permanent solution, and a temporary solution is available. I fully agree that nuclear isn't going to work, but not for technical reasons, just social, political and perhaps economic reasons.
                • Who says there cannot ever be a solution?
                  Laws of physics.

                  One thing needs action now
                  Renewables?

                  • Laws of physics say that there can be a solution, not that there can't. Perhaps laws of economics do though. And renewables, yes, but faster and with better and more storage.
                    • Laws of physics say: nuclear waste is radioactive.
                      That does not go away.
                      If you think otherwise, up to you.

                    • That's not a reason to declare it impossible to use nuclear energy. No nuclear energy is generated with non radioactive materials. So having radioactive materials is not prohibitive. Your argument isn't one. At least, not a scientific one.
                    • No one said it is impossible to use nuclear energy.
                      But it is impossible to get rid of the waste.

    • The problem and cost for this clean-up has nothing to do with where to put the waste and everything to do with handling it. China can't help there.

      In any case you can't just take waste out of a reactor and toss it into a vitrification plant, much less ship it to the other side of the world. The waste is too sensitive for that. There's a reason why even in countries like France where nuclear reprocessing is common sites still store spent waste on site for a long period of time before sending it off.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Can't really send it anywhere, it's liquid high level nuclear waste.

      They would have to buy the Chinese technology, after just deciding to rip out all of Huawei's gear. I have a feeling the Chinese might insist they do the work.

  • by 0xG ( 712423 ) on Sunday October 27, 2024 @10:54AM (#64897645)

    I am - and always have been - in favour of nuclear power. Somewhat.
    But the unbridled enthusiasm ('nuclear for life') displayed by many on /. is demonstrably misguided.

    • Remember, this mess isn't mostly about nuclear power, it is about nuclear weapons manufacturing. It seems around the world that doing things in a way to minimize future problems was thrown out when it came to weapons production. USA, UK, France, Russia, etc... I've seen stuff that indicates they all have huge messes from it.
      Nuclear power is actually a lot cleaner.

  • You can make energy out of it. big wealth!

    • by HiThere ( 15173 )

      Very little of it is Plutonium. I'll agree that not using that is a combination of silly and cautious, but most of the stuff is too low level for any profitable use. But it could be used as a source of low level heat. It wouldn't pay for itself, but it would get rid of the problem.

  • Absolutely maddening (Score:4, Interesting)

    by shilly ( 142940 ) on Sunday October 27, 2024 @03:59PM (#64898201)

    Just to give a sense of what £136bn represents — that would pay for a solar deployment on every home in the UK. Which would not eliminate the UK’s need for power for domestic electricity, especially as demands increase with heat pumps, induction cooking and EVs, but would reduce it by at least 50%, probably higher. Plus there’d be the benefit of lower bills forever.

    But oh no, spending public money on deploying solar in this way is obviously completely absurd, whereas spending it on cleaning up nuclear waste with absolutely no positive benefit, just an absence of horrendous harms, is completely sensible. What an idiotic world we live in.

  • by devslash0 ( 4203435 ) on Sunday October 27, 2024 @06:02PM (#64898377)

    Has warnings all over it saying "do not take anything from this beach with you".

You know you've landed gear-up when it takes full power to taxi.

Working...