The
Plutonium Gang: CH2M Hill Dismantles the Hanford Nuclear Site
1
August, 2013
Before
entering the shuttered Plutonium Finishing Plant at the Hanford Site,
Jerry Long hangs his identification badge on a board outside the
entrance, so rescue crews can easily figure out who’s inside,
should it come to that. “This is a no-kidding hazardous category 2
nuclear facility,” says Long as he enters a brightly lit room
furnished with rows of metal chairs and benches. The U.S. Department
of Energy reserves that category for sites that might blow up, or, as
they like to call it, experience a “criticality event.”
Rolling
racks of neatly folded cotton coveralls stand against the walls. Long
has a trim goatee and blue eyes that always appear narrowed in
concentration, which is a good quality for a man working in a plant
that contains enough residual plutonium to build 10 bombs the size of
the one that destroyed Nagasaki.
He
and four others carefully pull on coveralls, rubber shoe coverings,
and surgical gloves. They seal the cuffs and seams with masking tape.
Then they check the two cards dangling around their necks. One, which
resembles a thick credit card, tallies exposure to gamma radiation.
The other is called a PNAD, short for personal nuclear accident
dosimeter. It records sudden bursts of neutrons, the kind of
radiation released in atomic blasts and nuclear reactor meltdowns.
The workers call it the “death chip.”
The
Plutonium Finishing Plant at Hanford is one of the most dangerous
workplaces in the world. From 1944 to 1989 it produced 74,000 tons of
weapons-grade plutonium-239. Nearly two-thirds of all the plutonium
in the U.S. military’s nuclear arsenal was refined here, and the
plant is highly contaminated with not only plutonium but also
byproducts such as hexavalent chromium, made infamous by Erin
Brockovich. The Department of Energy (DOE) estimates that over the
years some 450 billion gallons of industrial and radiological
contaminants were dumped directly into the soil. Some of it was
stored, and Hanford’s aging complex of 177 underground tanks
contain 53 million gallons of chemicals and radioactive liquids; 67
of the tanks have together leaked more than a million gallons. The
DOE recently identified six more tanks that have sprung leaks,
further threatening water supplies for millions across the Northwest.
Long
is overseeing the plant closure for CH2M Hill, a 30,000-employee
global engineering company based in Englewood, Colo. CH2M Hill
specializes in projects very few others can manage, from cleaning up
nuclear waste sites to widening the Panama Canal. In 2012 it billed
some $6.4 billion. Hanford, which is CH2M Hill’s biggest job—about
4 percent of total business—may be the trickiest of all. “Every
hazard that you can reasonably think of is present at this facility,”
Long says. “Electrical hazards. Chemical hazards. Radioactivity
hazards. We’ve got your standard ergonomic hazards. We’ve got
industrial hazards. We’re dealing with a small chemical spill right
now.”
Many
rooms in the plant, which has the appearance and dimensions of a
large maximum security prison, contain high levels of airborne
radioactive particles, requiring workers to wear respirator hoods and
air filters. Some rooms, such as the americium recovery room, are so
contaminated, workers can enter them only through portable air locks
and connected to air hoses like astronauts exploring another planet.
Although americium-241 is highly radioactive, minuscule amounts of it
can be found in smoke detectors. In 2004, British authorities
arrested an al-Qaeda operative who was planning to make a
radiological “dirty bomb” from thousands of the detectors.
The
face of the K-East reactor core. The grid in the middle is a series
of aluminum tubes that once held uranium fuel rods
Photograph
by Steve Featherstone
Long
stops in front of a door. Inside this room, he explains, is glovebox
HA-23S. Gloveboxes are common in laboratories; they are sealed,
usually clear boxes in which technicians handle hazardous material
via two gloves attached to holes in the side. But this is not a
normal glovebox. It is 16 feet tall, 4 feet wide, and 11 feet long,
and was used to store containers of plutonium for 38 years. Built of
stainless steel and leaded glass 3/16 of an inch thick, it weighs 10
tons. Hanford, at its peak, used 232 such gloveboxes. There are 55
left to demolish.
HA-23S
is the largest and most complex box that Long’s decontamination and
demolition teams have tackled so far. Workers have spent 18 months
cleaning it, painting it, splitting it in half, wrapping the pieces
in plastic, and finally, hoisting the pieces onto a trolley. From
there, HA-23S will be put in a special container and shipped off-site
to be cut up and buried. “We had zero contamination release and
nothing on the knives we used to cut the plastic,” Long says. “It
took a little time to do that, and it cost a little money, but the
results are undeniable.”
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