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Nuclear clean-up costs



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Published Date: 16 October 2008
I wonder why Professor Stephen Salter (Letters, 9 October) mischievously persists in associating the cost of operating nuclear power stations, especially those owned and operated by British Energy, with the "clean-up" cost faced by the Nuclear Decommissioning Authority (NDA).
The latter may eventually supervise decommissioning at British Energy's sites, but at present it is only dealing with the decommissioning at 21 former UKAEA and BNFL sites. These include all the Magnox power station sites, together with Sellafield an
d Dounreay.

More than half the NDA's decommissioning cost is allocated to decommissioning the Sellafield site.

British Energy is not responsible for any sites except its own; it regularly contributes to a fund intended to cover the cost of decommissioning its sites and the disposal of its radioactive waste.

Prof Salter mentions a cost of £73 billion, but the NDA's website gives an estimated total lifetime cost across all the 21 sites, discounted at 2.2 per cent per year, of just over £37 billion. Costs are offset somewhat by income still being generated from some of Magnox sites, by Sellafield and by the Springfields fuel manufacturing plant.

However, this estimated total cost assumes the Thorp reprocessing and vitrification plant will cease operation in 2011, that the Mox (fuel) plant will cease production in 2016 and that the Springfields fuel manufacturing plant will close in 2022. If new stations are built, these may need to operate for much longer and may never be decommissioned (just upgraded). The NDA could also benefit from the sale of some of its sites to new nuclear operators.

STEUART CAMPBELL
Dovecot Loan
Edinburgh




The full article contains 270 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 15 October 2008 9:23 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

James F,

East Ayr 16/10/2008 00:51:19
Dekchairs: Titanic?
2

James F,

East Ayr 16/10/2008 00:51:56
Deckchairs even.
3

nabodican,

Rural Scotland 16/10/2008 07:21:09
There is a lot of truth in what Steuart Campbell says, certainly enough to get the ill informed greenies squealing.
4

Unimpressed one,

16/10/2008 07:52:16
#3, Ever tried convincing a fundamentalist that their religion is boll0cks?
5

John (Again),

Bury St Edmunds 16/10/2008 08:39:17
When the government rescued BE it took over around £5 billion of nuclear liabilities, which it eventually converted to shares in BE held by the Nuclear Liabilities Fund, some of which were sold and the rest will be purchased by Edf if its takeover still goes ahead.

If EdF and Eon build EPR's the fuel will come from France, as does the fuel for Sizewell B, where the spent fuel remains on site. If this practice continues then Sellafield and Springfields will not be needed, which is why NDA is decommissioning them.

There are then questions as to the long-term storage of spent fuel on the station sites, which the GDA team is considering.

The new builders are to pay into the Nuclear Liabilities Fund in a manner still not defined, but likely to include a lump sum up front and a generation levy.

6

Mr. Lachie Todd,

Edinburgh 16/10/2008 11:14:45
What a toxic legacy to pass on to future generations!
Does anyone seriously believe that decommisssioning costs will fall over the next 30, 40 or 50 years?
Some sections of the I, Me, Myself generation couldn't give a hoot about the future!

France has the largest number of nuclear reactors in Europe. A search of the French EDF website shows that
75 percent of the country's electricity is generated by
nuclear power. The French government has an 85 percent stake in EDF. There are 58 nuclear power stations across France but according to EDF 17 of them are closed temporarily for repair and maintenance, or mothballed permanently? The French Government refuses to disclose decommissioning costs?

France has no major sources of natural gas. It is the largest importer of natural gas in the EU. It imports from Algeria, Russia and the Netherlands. It is also the largest importer in the EU of LNG.

 

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