Cumbria
flooding: Environment Agency issues alert on Drigg nuclear waste site
Following
this month's intense rainfall in the north of England an Environment
Agency alert has highlighted the flood risk to the crumbling nuclear
waste dump adjoining Sellafield in Cumbria, writes Marianne Birkby -
a dump which remains in use despite its condemnation by the EA in
2005 due to its likely destruction by rising seas. Now it really is
time to close the gate on Drigg!
31
December, 2015
It's
no secret that Cumbria in northern England has been repeatedly hit by
torrential
rain and wind
this month.
But
there has been little media focus on what this means for nuclear
waste buried at Drigg, the UKs 'Low
Level Waste Repository',
located near the Sellafield nuclear site on the Cumbrian coast.
Yesterday
the Environment Agency issued a flood alert for the River Irt which
runs alongside the Drigg nuclear dump. The Environment Agency’s
flood map illustrates the River Irt inundating the Drigg site on the
southward side with floodwater also encroaching from the northward
side.
This
has not actually happened yet - the map (right)
illustrates risk, not actual flooding. But it certainly gives cause
for concern as Storm Frank ditches further enormous quantities of
rainfall on the Cumbrian mountains and fells.
On
the same day, 30th December, Cumbrian campaign group Radiation
Free Lakeland sent a letter to Cumbria County Council asking for
Drigg's gates to be locked to any more nuclear waste given the
dangers from flood waters entering the site, eroding the landfill and
contaminating land, river and and sea with radioactive waste.
"To
describe the UKs nuclear waste site as a 'Repository' is putting a
spin on the UKs main nuclear dump for 'low level' waste",
the letter states. "There
is controlled discharge direct to the Irish Sea not to mention run
off to the Drigg Stream and River Irt.
"Discharges
to the air of radioactive gases are ongoing. According to the British
Geological Society the Drigg site is above a regional aquifer. It is
also likely to be destroyed by coastal erosion in 500 to 5,000 years
(computer modelling can be wrong either way). Much of the waste is
long lived and high risk."
Drigg
must stay open, says nuclear industry
Keeping
the Drigg site open for continued dumping and extending the capacity
of the site is something the nuclear industry are keen to do,
seemingly at any cost to the environment. This plan is titled: 'Low
Level Waste Repository Site Optimisation and Closure Works'.
Even
the title of the application is hugely misleading. The date for
'closure' is set at 2079. So Drigg would continue to accept nuclear
waste for more than six decades to come.
The
site would be 'capped'. Again this is misleading: to 'cap' a nuclear
dump is akin to putting a cap on a fizzy lemonade bottle which has
holes in the bottom. Despite a 'cap' the site will continue to leach
aqueous emissions to groundwater and gaseous emissions to air for as
long as the wastes remain dangerous - which in some cases is the half
life of the universe.
The
plan suggests that the waste at Drigg is low risk and short lived.
Neither is true. As the University
of Reading has pointed out:
"The
Drigg site uses two disposal systems:
1) An original system
operated from 1959 (?) to 1988 comprising a series of parallel
trenches excavated into glacial clays, back filled with LLW and
covered with an interim water resistant cap.
2) Current disposal of
compacted waste placed in steel ISO-freight containers, with void
space filled with highly fluid cement based grout. These containers
are then disposed of in a series of open concrete vaults.
"Radionuclides
with highest activities in the inventory include 3H, 241Pu, 137Cs,
234U and 90Sr, 238U and 232Th."
This
represents a cocktail of relatively short-lived, intensely
radioactive species such as the tritium, caesium, strontium and
plutonium with half lives measured in years and decades, with
daughters such as americium 241 that's dangerous for centuries, mixed
in with uranium and thorium isotopes with half lives as long as 14
billion years.
Serious
degradation already under way
But
the waste has been dumped at the site with little or no regard to
either short or long term hazards. From 1940 to 1988 chemical and
radioactive wastes was simply 'tumble tipped' into trenches.
Now
the waste is compacted into steel shipping containers filled with
cement. But the containers, stacked up high on the site, are already
suffering from serious degradation, with widespread cracking and
corrosion, as the LLW
management wrote
in 2013:
"in
containers at the tops of stacks, the external capping grout has
undergone extensive physical degradation and settlement; the lids are
not full of grout, and the grout is generally heavily cracked. The
state of the capping grout in underlying layers is better; most
containers only show sparse cracking. Standing water, sometimes
contaminated with low levels of radioactivity, is present in
approximately half of the containers at the tops of stacks ...
Corrosion, sometimes fully penetrating, is present in some container
lids at the tops of stacks ..."
In
June 2005
the Environment Agency wrote:
"BNFL
(Now the NDA) has not yet demonstrated that the wider benefits to the
UK from continued LLW disposal on this site outweigh the potential
future impacts ...
"We
have concluded that the 2002 safety cases fail to make an adequate or
robust argument forcontinued disposals of LLW because:
(i)
Estimates of doses and risks from existing disposals to members of
the public in the future significantly exceed current regulatory
targets.
(ii) BNFL indicates that the LLWR is likely to be
destroyed by coastal erosion in 500 to 5,000 years.
(iii) The 2002
safety cases include insufficient consideration of optimisation
andrisk management, to demonstrate that impacts will be as low as
reasonablyachievable (ALARA)."
But
they have since revised that position and now take a formal view that
"the
potential for disruption of the site"
(by which they refer to inundation by sea and floodwaters) "is
an acceptable risk."
Radiation
Free Lakeland
agrees with the Agency's 2005 findings that that the real and present
threat of inundation of the Drigg site - which is only about 300m
from the sea and lies just 8 metres above mean sea level - by flood
or by sea is not an acceptable risk to the people of Cumbria or to
our international neighbours.
We
also concur with Greenpeace's 2005 'Comments
on Environment Agency's Assessment Documents on Drigg
in which they highlight the Agency's indications that much of the
nuclear waste dumped at Drigg on the basis of being 'low level'
should have been consider 'intermediate level' owing to the presence
of the long lived isotopes in the mix. As
the EA wrote,
"We
are concerned by the potential for the destruction of the LLWR by
coastal erosion. These concerns appear to be shared by both BNFL and
BNFL's peer review panel (Hilland Irvine 2003). Regardless of the
calculated risks, the potential for the destruction of the LLWR by
coastal erosion means that disposal of long-lived LLW in the LLWR
might be creating undue burdens on future generations."
Tell
it to the birds
Up
until 1958 thousands of black headed gulls eggs from the Drigg and
Ravenglass gullery were harvested at a time in basketfuls and sold in
London. The black headed gull is now on the amber list. The collapse
in the mid 1980s of the largest black-headed gull breeding colony in
Europe on the Drigg dunes has never
been satisfactorily explained.
The
official
explanation
is that a fox did it: "the
concentrations of radionuclides in the foods, body tissues and
general environment were at least three orders of magnitude too low
to have had any effect. The more likely cause of the desertion of the
gullery was the combination of an uncontrolled fox population, the
severest outbreak of myxomatosis amongst the rabbits since 1954 and
the driest May–July period on record, all in the same year (1984)."
Meanwhile
childhood leukemia is officially
blamed
on 'population mixing' due to the influx of workers firstly to the
1940 explosives factory (Royal Ordnance Factory) at Drigg and then
the ROF at Sellafield.
The
irony of this incredible argument is that the plan for three new
nuclear reactors at 'Moorside' a few miles from Drigg ('Moorside' is
at the village of Beckermet) would involve a boom and bust influx of
thousands of workers along with a further tsunami of nuclear wastes
and ever more Driggs.
And
let's not forget the rising sea level problem. The Sellafield site
lies within 100m of the sea and most of it is just a few metres above
sea level. The nuclear site, already one of the most dangerous and
contaminated in Europe, could be inundated by sea water within a
century.
Is
it really wise to go adding to the problem with a massive complex of
three huge new nuclear reactors? When the current problems at the
Sellafield / Drigg site have so manifestly
not been solved?
Marianne
Birkby
is spokesperson for Radiation
Free Lakeland
(RFL). RFL is a voluntary organisation of local activists giving
their own time and expertise freely. Any donations go directly to
campaigning for nuclear safety.
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