BNFL's role in S. Africa nuke
stuart | 30.06.2003 16:41 | Anti-racism | Ecology | Technology | World
The new reactor is claimed to be much safer than existing designs. The reactor's supporters even claim that the graphite sphere around the fuel can take place of the concrete dome containment building which surrounds reactors like Sizewell B. However, graphite burned in both the 1957 Windscale fire (which led to BNFL's site being renamed Sellafield) and the Chernobyl catastrophe. It is not surprising, therefore, that the whole plan has been described as "a load of balls".
Indeed, an earlier attempt to build a full-size prototype pebble-bed reactor, the THTR Hamm-Uentrop in Germany, was a commercial failure, closed down early after a string of problems.
Already Exelon (the biggest nuclear utility in the USA), has pulled its investment out of the project. Yet BNFL has a reputation of stepping in where fools fear to tread. With UK taxpayer money behind it, it can afford to do so. Indeed, if it were not for UK taxpayer money, BNFL would have been bankrupt years ago following the scandal in which it falsified quality control data for Japanese nuclear fuel.
Earthlife Africa ( http://www.earthlife.org.za) is campaigning against the project. Click on "Campaign Issues" - the PBMR is listed under "Nukes".
The pro-PBMR website is at http://www.pbmr.com
stuart
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