Transcript
JEM STANSFIELD
After 35 years of service, Dounreay power station was finally decommissioned in 1994. But nearly 20 years later, it's still full of radioactive waste.
Nuclear reactors always produce radioactive waste, and this can range from the contents of the actual core, where the reaction happens, to really anything in the entire plant that becomes contaminated with radiation. Now, current figures show that right now in the UK, we've got well over 160,000 tonnes of the stuff, and something needs to be done with it.
Here at Dounreay, a 2.9 billion pound cleanup is well underway. But after six years, they're still dealing with the lowest level waste. Contaminated paper, rags, tools, which all must be sealed into steel drums and painstakingly analysed.
There's far more low-level waste here than anything else, and some of it's barely radioactive. But inside the reactor itself lies a far more serious challenge.
Literally where I'm walking now below my feet is the Dounreay reactor. Now, it's not in use anymore, but inside the core just down there is some very hazardous radioactive material that still remains - uranium, and plutonium. And the big challenge is to get all that stuff out and make it safe.
This final stage of the cleanup is due to start next year. Handling this waste will be so hazardous, they're now installing robots ready to do the entire job remotely.
MIKE BROWN
The core on this reactor is going to be radioactive for hundreds and hundreds of years. First thing you would do is remove the fuel from the reactor. This is a very sophisticated mast, and it has 14 different tools on it. Tools can go into the reactor and cut free the elements.
JEM STANSFIELD
So it's like a big Swiss army knife of multi-tools that can rotate on a mast.
MIKE BROWN
It's a huge Swiss army knife that is designed to work remotely and reliably. That gets rid of all the fuel that's in the system.
JEM STANSFIELD
Once extracted, the fuel rods will be transferred into a cell containing an automated dismantling robot. For now the robot's practising with dummy fuel rods, but once active, it'll be handling the plant's most radioactive waste.
So once it's on, once it starts, you're in production as it were, that's it. Nobody will be in here again.
MIKE BROWN
Unlikely we'll ever put anybody in here again.
JEM STANSFIELD
From here, another robot will transfer the individual fuel pellets into stainless steel drums, before sealing them in turn inside heavily shielded containers.
MIKE BROWN
These drums of waste would go into an underground repository under very controlled conditions, and they would be stored there forever.