Tuesday, May 9, 2017

Tunnel at plutonium plant in Washington state collapses

 
 
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May 9 (UPI) --The Hanford Nuclear Reservation in southeastern Washington declared an emergency Tuesday after a portion of a tunnel that contained rail cars full of nuclear waste collapsed. No workers were in the tunnel but those …

Tunnel at plutonium plant in Washington state collapses

By Allen Cone   |   May 9, 2017 at 1:39 PM
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The Hanford Nuclear Reservation declared an emergency after a portion of a tunnel that contained rail cars full of nuclear waste collapsed. Railcars with the highly contaminated materials at the closed plant were moved into waste disposal tunnels. Photo by Tobin Fricke/Wikimedia Commons
May 9 (UPI) -- The Hanford Nuclear Reservation in southeastern Washington declared an emergency Tuesday after a portion of a tunnel that contained rail cars full of nuclear waste collapsed.
No workers were in the tunnel but those at the site were evacuated. No actions is required for residents of Benton and Franklin counties, the U.S. Department of Energy said in an advisory.
A KING-TV source said that crews working nearby may have created enough vibration to cause the collapse.
Personnel were told to "secure ventilation in your building" and "refrain from eating or drinking."
At 8:26 a.m., the U.S. Department of Energy's Richlands Operations Office activated the emergency operations center at Hanford.
"There are concerns about subsidence in the soil covering railroad tunnels near a former chemical processing facility," the alert said. "The tunnels contain contaminated materials."
The Hanford Site is a mostly decommissioned nuclear production complex operated by the U.S. government on the Columbia River.
From World War II through the Cold War, Hanford, a 580-square-mile site in Eastern Washington, near Richland, Wash., produced plutonium, including material used in the first nuclear bomb.
The Plutonium Uranium Extraction Plant was built in the 1950s. It processed processed about 70,000 tons of uranium fuel rods, and operated from 1956-72 and again from 1983-88.
Hanford made more than 20 million pieces of uranium metal fuel for nine nuclear reactors along the Columbia River.
Parts of the site remain contaminated with radioactive and hazardous chemical waste.
Last year a new legal deadline required the Department of Energy to work toward assessing the waste disposal tunnels by September of this year.
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