Sellafield - major report

Posted: 24th October 2024

Decommissioning Sellafield: managing risks from the nuclear legacy. Sellafield is the UK’s most complex and challenging nuclear site with highly hazardous materials stored there from across the UK’s nuclear industry. It also holds a legacy of contaminated buildings, untreated waste and ageing facilities. The government considers that some of these buildings and their contents pose an ‘intolerable’ risk – meaning risk reduction must be the overriding factor in the decision-making of the public body in charge of Sellafield, the Nuclear Decommissioning Authority (NDA). While workers at Sellafield have started retrieving and safely storing waste, the NDA expects full site remediation will take until 2125. Sellafield has made progress since we last reported in 2018. It has demonstrated that it is possible to retrieve the most hazardous waste from four of its oldest stores and store it in a way which meets modern safety standards, and the reorganisation of the NDA is bringing benefits. Increasingly, Sellafield is able to draw on expertise from elsewhere in the NDA group and it is taking action to improve performance on major projects. There are also some recent signs that Sellafield is more willing to confront and resolve difficult issues. In spite of these improvements, we cannot yet say that the NDA and Sellafield are achieving value for money – by which we mean outcomes commensurate with the considerable expenditure on the site. Large projects are still being delivered later than planned and at higher cost. Sellafield has made slower progress in reducing site risks than it would have liked and must now significantly accelerate the pace at which it is retrieving waste from its oldest storage facilities. Simultaneously, it needs to address the deteriorating condition of key assets and develop credible plans for maintaining the analytical capabilities the site depends upon and improving (and sustaining) its workforce’s capability. It still lacks a comprehensive measure to assess progress in reducing risk. If it underperforms, the cost of completing its mission will increase considerably, and ‘intolerable’ safety risks will persist for longer.

 

National Audit Office 23rd Oct 2024

https://www.nao.org.uk/reports/decommissioning-sellafield-managing-risks-from-the-nuclear-legacy/


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