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Spent Nuclear Fuel Removed From Abandoned Soviet-Era Ship in ‘Major Milestone’

Rogue Valley

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Spent Nuclear Fuel Removed From Abandoned Soviet-Era Ship in ‘Major Milestone’

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The Russian icebreaker fuel-tender Lepse.

8/14/20
An international cleanup effort has helped remove spent nuclear fuel from a service ship abandoned after an accident in northwestern Russia, the Norwegian environmental organization Bellona announced Wednesday. The Lepse served the Soviet Union’s nuclear icebreaker fleet from 1934 until the 1980s, when it encountered rough seas and spilled highly radioactive waste inside its cargo hold. Decommissioning of the ship began in 2012. The nuclear fuel posed “a serious danger to the people and the environment of the Barents Sea region,” said the European Bank of Reconstruction and Development (EBRD), which funds the effort. The Lepse held 639 damaged and distorted spent nuclear fuel assemblies when it was taken out of service. Bellona and the EBRD’s Northern Dimension Environment Partnership (NDEP) fund hailed the removal of spent fuel from the Lepse last month as a critical milestone in dismantling the decommissioned vessel.

“The successful final shipment of fuel is the culmination of over a decade of international collaboration to address the legacy of the Lepse,” EBRD’s director for nuclear safety Balthasar Lindauer said in a July 22 statement.“This has been a technically complex and challenging task given the uncertainties associated with both the conditions of the old storage facility and spent nuclear fuel,” Lindauer said. The EBRD said the spent fuels will be transferred to the Mayak nuclear facility in the Chelyabinsk region 3,500 kilometers to the southeast of the Arctic city of Murmansk. The EBRD’s NDEP manages six other nuclear decommissioning funds, including the Chernobyl Shelter Fund. The fund draws contributions from the European Union, Britain and Canada, as well as Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, the Netherlands and Norway.

Another Russian nuclear accident is neutered. Congrats to Norway, the European Union, the EBRD, and the Nerpa shipyard at Murmansk.

A special train will take the radioactive containment casks to the Mayak reprocessing plant in the Chelyabinsk region in the South-Urals.
 
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