Nuclear waste at ‘eroding’ dump near Sellafield ‘will be disrupted’ – govt agency

22 Apr, 2014 20:24 / Updated 10 years ago

​A site on the Cumbrian coast where 1 million cubic meters of nuclear waste from all over the UK has been buried for the past 55 years has been declared a potential source of contamination – due to coastal erosion and rising sea levels.

The government-run Environment Agency (EA) released a document dated to January this year, saying that the Drigg Low-Level Waste Repository (LLWR) that operates near the Sellafield nuclear power plant, and processes civilian and military refuse, could dislodge “discrete items carrying a significant burden of radioactivity individually” onto nearby beaches.


"It is doubtful whether the location of the LLWR site would be chosen for a new facility for near-surface radioactive waste disposal if the choice were being made now," claims the report, obtained by the Guardian newspaper after a direct request.

The 110 hectare site is located just one hundred yards from the coast, on an elevation of between 5 and 25 meters above sea level.

The repository, which is run by an American-French-Swedish private consortium led by California-based URS Corporation, already asked the EA for additional flood barriers, after a privately commissioned report earlier this year said that some parts of the site were susceptible to flooding.

But the problem is likely to get worse with long-term coastal erosion, though the UK agency’s own experts believe that the timeframe is "a few hundred to a few thousand years from now", while conceding that process in inevitable.

"It's highly probable the coast will erode and the waste will be disrupted,” says the EA.

The LLWR consortium agrees with the report, but says that the impact of any leakage will be lessened due to decay, and the fact that the site stores only mildly contaminated items such as irradiated hazard suits and discarded hospital equipment.

"The radioactivity in the wastes will largely have decayed away by this time,”
said Richard Cummings, the consortium’s head of science and engineering.

The group has also said that it has introduced new restrictions on waste, since the multiple reports highlighting the potential dangers.

"The stringent regulatory requirements we have to meet ensure that even if people in the future forget about the repository and the wastes disposed there, the effects will be insignificant,"
assured Cummings.

Environmental activists say that while procedures for disposal have become more thorough – with all waste processed, boxed and placed in large underground concrete blocks – it was not so in the past. Local group Cumbrians Opposed to a Radioactive Environment said that waste before the 1990s was simply buried in a trench, and not always thoroughly catalogued, meaning that the LLWR trenches contain waste from notorious accidents such as the Windscale Fire of 1957, and Chernobyl in 1986.

URS Corporation has dismissed these allegations.

An official government consultation will begin on the future use of the Drigg site this autumn. If the application is successful, the site will be used for at least 100 more years, and will house another 800,000 cubic meters of radioactive waste.