On June 5, the Government of the United Kingdom announced reprocessing at the
plant in Dounreay will stop in the year 2006. This should not be assessed as a victory: it is the
inevitable. In fact the statement revealed that an US$33 million expenditure must have been
approved to repair part of the plant.
(494/extra.4887) NENIG - The UK Government's announcement on June 5 that no more commercial
reprocessing will be carried out at Dounreay is not what it first appears and, in fact, brings
little for opponents to welcome - as it really only accepts the inevitable - and much to continue
concern about the operation of the plant and its environmental discharges as it gives the plant the
go-ahead to continue work as before.
The Government's apparent sudden turn-around in policy - the Prime Minister and other Ministers
were defending Dounreay's future only days earlier - probably had more to do with the elections for
the new Scottish Parliament in 11 months, and Labour concerns over the political capital the
Scottish Nationalist's were making from Dounreay, than any other reason.
In fact the Government has succeeded in disguising the fact it has approved spending an estimated
GBP40 million (US$66 million) on repairing and improving the two reprocessing plants so work can
continue as planned for at least another eight years. Before work in the main D1206 plant can
re-start reprocessing the remaining 15 tonnes of PFR fuel (the Prototype Fast Reactor) and the
breeder fuel from the DFR (the Dounreay experimental Fastbreeder Reactor) reactor (both located at
the Dounreay site) major repairs have to be made replacing the faulty dissolver which leaked in
September 1996 and closed the plant. These repairs are estimated to cost GBP20 million and the
Government statement revealed this expenditure must have been approved - without having to directly
mention the decision and face any resulting criticism.
The regulators' safety audit currently underway at Dounreay is certain to recommend improvements
and repairs to both D1206 and the D1204 highly-enriched uranium plant. Speaking on Radio Scotland
on June 6, the Dounreay director Dr Roy Nelson said an estimated additional GBP20m will have to be
spent bringing the plants to standard. This expenditure was also implicitly approved in the
governments statement - again without the necessity of a separate announcement.
So the Government has succeeded in regaining the political initiative, at least in the short-term,
and appeared to be taking strong action to protect the environment, when in fact it has approved
huge expenditure - at least GBP40m - to allow reprocessing to continue.
The Government statement said there would be no new commercial reprocessing at Dounreay - but
existing contracts would be honoured. Dr Nelson said that there was about one tonne of spent fuel
waiting to be reprocessed, although he gave no details of the contracts. The reprocessing plants
will close when work on these contracts and Dounreay's own spent fuel has been completed -
estimated to be by 2006. In the meantime reprocessing - and environmental discharges - will restart
once the regulators are happy and repairs completed.
There is yet another aspect of the announcement which shows how shrewd the Government's move was.
Banning any new commercial work at Dounreay means much less than first appears. The only new
commercial work at all likely for the D1204 plant was for 1,000 spent fuel elements at the Lucas
Heights reactor in Australia. Even Dounreay's management accepted that the regulators were unlikely
to agree to the plant staying open for any longer. The Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) had
already rejected UKAEA requests to be allowed to do commercial work in D1206 - at least until all
the fast reactor fuel had been reprocessed after which the DTI was most likely to close the
plant.
In practice, therefore, the Government's announcement to end commercial reprocessing at Dounreay
effectively only confirmed the obvious.
More fuel imported from Georgia as admitted
In the second week of June it was disclosed that UK government ministers were not told that a
total of 14kgs of fuel was imported from Georgia - not 4.2kg of unirradiated highly-enriched
uranium and 0.8kg of irradiated HEU, as Government Ministers, and Dounreay, originally announced
(see WISE
NC 491.4870: International row over waste to Dounreay) The
government has also admitted that more fuel from the former Soviet Union may be taken to Dounreay
for reprocessing. This announcement caused anger among opposition MPs as it was made only days
after Mr Battle announced an end to commercial reprocessing at Dounreay - only the fuel already
on-site would be reprocessed he said only four days earlier. The Government's justification for
importing the fuel from Georgia was a security and proliferation risk involving weapons-grade HEU,
but weapons cannot be made out of low-enriched uranium.
Source: NBase Briefing, 6 & 13 June 1998
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