No radiation released in tunnel collapse

No one was injured and no radiation released when part of a tunnel carrying rail cars full of nuclear waste collapsed in the northwest of the US.

The waste treatment plant at the Hanford Nuclear Reservation

A tunnel has partly collapsed at a plutonium-handling facility in the northwest of the US. (AAP)

A tunnel has partly collapsed a plutonium-handling facility at the Hanford Nuclear Reservation in Washington state, but there was no indication workers or the public were exposed to radiation, federal officials said.

Workers evacuated or took cover and turned off ventilation systems after damage was discovered in the wall of a transport tunnel about 270 km east of Seattle, officials with the Department of Energy's Hanford Joint Information Center said.

The damage was more serious than initially reported, and the take-cover order was expanded to cover the entire facility after response crews found a 400-square-foot section of the decommissioned rail tunnel had collapsed, centre spokesman Destry Henderson said in a video posted on Facebook.

"The roof had caved in, about a 20-foot section of that tunnel, which is about a hundred feet long," he said.

"This is purely precautionary. No employees were hurt and there is no indication of a spread of radiological contamination," Henderson said of the shelter order.

No spent nuclear fuel is stored in the tunnel, Energy Department officials said. Energy Department Secretary Rick Perry has been briefed on the incident.

Tom Carpenter, the executive director with watchdog organisation Hanford Challenge who has spoken with workers at the site since the incident, called the tunnel collapse worrisome and said the evacuation was the correct call.

"There is a big hole there and radiation could be beaming out," he said.

"It's not clear to me that they know whether particulate radiation has escaped. If there is a cloud of radioactive particulates, then that can have an impact on worker health and the community. It does not take a lot for those particulates to end up in someone's lung."

The site is in southeastern Washington on the Columbia River. Operated by the federal government, it was established in the 1940s and manufactured plutonium that was used in the first nuclear bomb as well as other nuclear weapons. It is now being dismantled and cleaned up by the Energy Department.


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Published 10 May 2017 7:18am
Source: AAP


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