The challenges facing companies and institutions surrounding civil nuclear decommissioning are diverse and many, none more so than those faced in the United Kingdom. The UK’s Generation I nuclear power plants and early research facilities have left a ‘Nuclear Legacy’ which is in urgent need of management and clean-up. Sellafield is quite possibly the most ill-famed nuclear site in the UK. This complex and challenging site houses much of what is left from the early days of nuclear research in the UK, including early nuclear reactors (Windscale Piles, Calder Hall, and the Windscale Advanced Gas Cooled Reactor) and the UK’s early nuclear weapons programme. Such a legacy now requires careful management and planning to safely deal with it. This task falls on the shoulders of the Nuclear Decommissioning Authority (NDA). Through a mix of prompt and delayed decommissioning strategies, key developments in R&D, and the implementation of site licenced companies to enact decommissioning activities, the NDA aims to safety, and in a timely manner, deal with the UK’s nuclear legacy. Such approaches have the potential to influence and shape other such approaches to nuclear decommissioning activities globally, including in Korea.
CITATION STYLE
Foster, R. I., Park, J. K., Lee, K., & Seo, B. K. (2021, September 1). UK civil nuclear decommissioning, a blueprint for Korea’s nuclear decommissioning future?: Part I - Nuclear legacy, strategies, and the NDA. Journal of Nuclear Fuel Cycle and Waste Technology. Korean Radioactive Waste Society. https://doi.org/10.7733/jnfcwt.2021.19.3.387
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