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Published:
October 26, 2007
Fresh
calls for nuclear power station near to Burnham-On-Sea to close

Anti-nuclear
campaigners have this week backed calls by a top nuclear consultant
for the immediate closure of Hinkley Point power station, near
Burnham-On-Sea.
The
calls on Friday (October 26th) came after a regulator's report
stated that Hinkley's reactor core support system is 'potentially
unsafe'.
Key
structural engineering components supporting Hinkley's cracked
reactor core have been discovered to be more prone to failure
than previously assumed, say the campaigners, and this "could
affect the safety of the reactor, both in normal operation and
in an emergency."
The
Nuclear Installations Inspectorate last week issued a notice stating
"the effects of irradiation embrittlement on core restraint
components are more severe than previously assumed... they may
be degraded to the extent there may be a significant number of
latent failures, which may affect the function of the support
system in normal operation and faults... potentially undermining
the safety case for the graphite core."
The
latest development comes on top of boiler tube problems discovered
at Hinkley last September, which shut the twin reactors until
late May.
The
news has prompted calls for Hinkley's closure from nuclear expert
John Large of Large Associates, who said: "The Hinkley Point
and Hunterston reactors were permitted to continue operating,
albeit at a derated output, with an acknowledged weakened core
and doubtful boiler tube integrity only because the restraint
tank garter system was then believed to be intact and capable
of functioning under abnormal core pressure surges."
"Now
we are informed that this last line of core integrity defence
has weakened over the years and there is uncertainty over how
effectively it would function under adverse conditions. This is
a most unsatisfactory approach to defence in depth and all four
Hinkley and Hunterston reactors should be immediately closed until
the longer term nuclear safety case has been demonstrated to be
adequate."
Jim
Duffy, spokesman for Stop Hinkley, said: "Common sense says
one problem at the heart of an ancient reactor is bad enough,
two is very worrying, three is begging for trouble. Hinkley are
playing down this discovery perhaps to keep their shares from
collapsing any further after this week's tumble when half of their
reactors were off-line. But safety should come first. Let's see
this reactor shut for good, right now."
British
Energy has denied that the issues raised are a cause for concern.
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LINKS:
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call for extra safety at nuclear site
Study
concludes Hinkley Point is safe from global warming
Parents
group calls for permanent closure of Hinkley Point
Hinkley
Point 'may never re-open' say campaigners
Cracks
in boiler pipes force temporary closure of Hinkley Point
Earlier
check-up for Hinkley Point power station
Hinkley
gas release 'posed no risk' to people in Burnham
Hinkley
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New
document reveals hidden fears about Hinkley Point power station
Hinkley
Point gets all-clear after Environment Agency radiation checks
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