News story

Sizewell A delivers groundbreaking turbine hall milestone

Over 700kg of explosives have been used in the first stage demolition of four gigantic concrete plinths as part of work to decommission the turbine hall.

Turbine 1 plinth weakened with explosives

This significant achievement sets a new record for the largest use of explosives on a nuclear site for conventional demolition purposes in decades.聽

Over 1,200 holes were drilled into the plinth structures that bore the weight of two turbo generator units weighing 605 tonnes each.聽 The charges were then set and the plinths wrapped ready for detonation. This method reduced the need for heavy machinery 鈥� saving time, cost, reducing noise and dust levels.聽

Alan Walker, Sizewell A Site Director, commented: 鈥淚t鈥檚 fantastic to see Nuclear Restoration Services (NRS), our contract partners and the Office for Nuclear Regulation (ONR) pushing the boundaries of innovation in de-plant and conventional demolition together.聽聽

Turbine hall concrete plinths before detonation

鈥淭he detailed planning and stakeholder engagement for this were exemplary. Everyone involved has done an outstanding job and this success demonstrates our commitment to achieving safe, efficient decommissioning processes.鈥澛�

The ONR strictly governed the use of explosives. Their presence and oversight gave confidence that every aspect of the set up and execution had been thoroughly checked to ensure maximum safety.聽聽

Andrew Bull, ONR鈥檚 Nominated Site Inspector at Sizewell A, said: 鈥淭his was a great example of joint working between regulator and dutyholder and everybody being open to considering and actioning novel and forward-thinking technological solutions to bring about efficiencies.聽

鈥淥NR鈥檚 stance as a consistently enabling regulator means that we will always support proactive and innovative methods of working provided these are conducted safely and securely.鈥澛�

Large machinery has now removed the weakened material, taking this significant demolition project a huge step forward.聽聽

Excavator removing rubble from weakened turbine plinth

NDA Group Chief Assurance and Performance Officer, Alan Cumming, visited the site this week to see the progress being made and meet the teams involved. He said:聽

鈥淭his is what mission delivery is all about. Decommissioning, knocking stuff down and dispatching the waste. It鈥檚 an incredible achievement and testament to the expertise, capability and innovative mindset each partner brought to the project.聽

鈥淚t showcases the power of collaboration and our capability as a sector to deliver groundbreaking progress, while still maintaining the most rigorous safety standards, paving the way for future advancements.聽

鈥淭his is a substantial step towards completion of the safe, secure and sustainable decommissioning of Sizewell A, leaving a positive legacy for the community and future generations.鈥澛�

Over 7,100 tonnes of metal have been removed 鈥� that鈥檚 more than three London Eyes. This is being recycled and sold on the metals market to generate income.聽 Over 17,000 tonnes of demolition rubble will also be re-used and recycled.聽

The site team with Alan Cumming, NDA, far right

The overall turbine hall structure is expected to be demolished in Spring 2025 creating a footprint the size of a large football pitch.聽 This land will eventually be restored and released for re-use.聽

It follows the sale of 1.2 hectares of land on the site聽 transferred to EDF Nuclear Generation Limited (ENGL) earlier this year. This delivered on a multitude of NDA and NRS strategic objectives - marking tangible progress in the completion of the decommissioning mission and delivering benefit to the local community and the wider economy.

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Published 4 December 2024