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CIVIL NUCLEAR
Britain's AECOM, AWE announce nuclear waste storage partnership
by Ed Adamczyk
Washington (UPI) Jan 23, 2019

British company AECOM will be the lead delivery partner in a nuclear waste depository program, AWE Plc. announced on Wednesday.

AECOM leads a consortium of companies operating U.K. Nuclear Waste Management Ltd., the country's low- and intermediate nuclear waste repositories. A statement on Wednesday said its operations are a "key component of the U.K. government's nuclear deterrence program."

AECOM's initial commitment of $3 million until 2020 is expected to grow to about $500 million in the next 12 years.

The contract includes the decommissioning and demolition of current facilities, the completion of new facilities and the management and transportation of material across sites in Scotland and northern England.

In Britain, low-level nuclear waste is treated and placed in containers before being stored in specially-designed concrete vaults across several locations.

"We are proud to be selected as AWE's delivery partner for this important work in support of the U.K.'s nuclear deterrence program," AECOM CEO Michael S. Burke said Wednesday in a statement.

"For the past several years, we have demonstrated our leading project management and nuclear decommissioning expertise both in the U.S. and internationally, including several key U.S. Department of Energy sites, and are continuing to invest in this business to capitalize on an attractive pipeline of innovative programs, such as this with AWE."


Related Links
Nuclear Power News - Nuclear Science, Nuclear Technology
Powering The World in the 21st Century at Energy-Daily.com


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CIVIL NUCLEAR
Japan's Hitachi freezes British nuclear project
London (AFP) Jan 17, 2019
Hitachi on Thursday froze construction of a nuclear power station in Wales due to financing difficulties, dealing a major blow to Britain's energy strategy and leaving the Japanese firm with a huge bill. Shelving the project at the Wylfa Newydd plant on Anglesey island off the Welsh coast will cost Hitachi 300 billion yen ($2.8 billion), it said in a statement. Britain has put nuclear power at the heart of its low-carbon energy policy, in stark contrast to Europe's biggest economy Germany which ... read more

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