Calder Hall Nuclear Power Station is a former Magnox nuclear power station at Sellafield in Cumbria in North West England. Calder Hall was the world's first full-scale commercial nuclear power station to enter operation,[1] and was the sister plant to the Chapelcross plant in Scotland.[2] Both were commissioned and originally operated by the United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority. The primary purpose of both plants was to produce weapons-grade plutonium for the UK's nuclear weapons programme, but they also generated electrical power for the National Grid.
Calder Hall Nuclear Power Station | |
---|---|
Country | England |
Location | Seascale |
Coordinates | 54°25′07″N 03°29′29″W / 54.41861°N 3.49139°W |
Status | In decommissioning |
Construction began | 1953 |
Commission date | 1956 |
Decommission date | 2003 |
Owner | Nuclear Decommissioning Authority |
Operator | Sellafield Ltd |
Thermal power station | |
Primary fuel | Nuclear |
Cooling towers | 4 (demolished 2007) |
Power generation | |
Units operational | 4 x 60 MWe (1956–2003) |
Make and model | C.A. Parsons & Company UKAEA |
Nameplate capacity | 240 MWe |
Capacity factor | 79% |
Annual net output | 360 GWh |
External links | |
Commons | Related media on Commons |
grid reference NY034036 |
Decommissioning by Sellafield Ltd started in 2005. The site is partially demolished and is expected that only the reactor cores and associated radiation shielding will remain by 2027, when it will enter a period of extended care and maintenance using the "safestore" principle, before final demolition.
Description
editIt was decided by the UK Government to proceed with the civil nuclear power programme in 1952, and construction at Calder Hall began the following year. The station was designed by a team led by Christopher Hinton, Baron Hinton of Bankside,
Calder Hall initially had two cooling towers, with two further added at the opposite end of the power station in 1958 and 1959.[3] Each were 88 metres (289 ft) in height.[4] The four Magnox (magnesium non-oxidising, referring to the alloy used for the fuel element cladding) 180 MWth graphite moderated, carbon dioxide cooled nuclear reactors were fuelled by natural uranium enclosed in magnesium-aluminium alloy cans.[5] The layout was largely emulated at Chapelcross in 1958,[6] though at Calder Hall, the four units are divided by A and B each with their own turbine hall, unlike Chapelcross where all four units share a turbine hall. The Calder Hall and Chapelcross design was codenamed PIPPA (Pressurised Pile Producing Power and Plutonium) by the UKAEA to denote the plant's dual commercial and military role.[7]
The reactors each weighed 33,000 tonnes, had four heat exchangers and 1,696 nuclear fuel channels. 8 x 3,000 rpm turbines, each 75 metres (246 ft) long, 20 metres (66 ft) wide and 25 metres (82 ft) high were installed to generate the electricity.[5] The reactors were supplied by UKAEA, the turbines by C. A. Parsons and Company, and the civil engineering contractor was Taylor Woodrow Construction.[8]
History
editCalder Hall was an early development of the existing Windscale site, and due to its size required considerable extension of the site to the south east across the River Calder. It was named after Calder Hall farm, which had farmed the land it was built on, and bridges were built over the River Calder to link to the existing site. It was divided into two operating units, Calder "A" and Calder "B", each having a turbine hall and two cooling towers shared between reactors 1–2, and reactors 3-4 respectively.[9]
Construction began in 1953[3] and was carried out by Taylor Woodrow Construction and was completed in 1956.[10]
The primary purpose was to produce plutonium for the UK's nuclear weapons programme, for weapons including the WE.177 series. Electricity was always considered to be a by-product.[11][12]
Calder Hall was officially opened on 17 October 1956 by Queen Elizabeth II.[13] It was initially owned and operated by the Production Group of the United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority (UKAEA) until the creation of British Nuclear Fuels Limited (BNFL) in 1971.[14] Restructuring by the British government later resulted in a new company, Sellafield Ltd, gaining responsibility for operations of the Sellafield site.[15]
The two units were originally designed for a life of 20 years from respectively 1956 and 1959. However in July 1996 the plant was granted an operating licence for a further ten years.[16] Its military use, which meant it was shut down for periods of its life, contributed to its long lifetime. Due to embrittlement from years of exposure to radiation, it was decided to close the plant three years sooner than planned.[17]
Closure and decommissioning
editThe station was closed on 31 March 2003, the first reactor having been in use for nearly 47 years.[18] Decommissioning started in 2005. The cooling towers were demolished by controlled implosions on 29 September 2007. A period of 12 weeks was required to remove asbestos in the towers' rubble.[19] The reactors were fully defueled by 2019 and the spent fuel was taken across the Sellafield site to be reprocessed within the Magnox Reprocessing Plant. It is planned that by 2027 only the four reactor buildings will be left, and they will be dismantled to the point where only the concrete bio-shield that contains the reactor core remains. The site is expected to be in safe storage by 2027 or later, using the "safestore" principle, which utilises an extended period of care and maintenance to reduce overall decommissioning costs.[20][21] There had been proposals in 2007 for transforming the station into a museum, involving renovating Calder Hall and preserving the cooling towers, but the costs were found to be too high.[22]
Ownership of all of the site's assets and liabilities was transferred to the Nuclear Decommissioning Authority (NDA), a regulatory body created by the Energy Act 2004. While operations were transferred from BNFL to Sellafield Ltd.[23]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Wydler, John. W. (1981). Oversight of Breeder Reactor Development in the United Kingdom. U.S. Government Printing Office. p. 13.
- ^ "Nuclear Power's Crisis of Confidence". New Scientist. Vol. 92, no. 1280. Reed Business Information. 19 November 1981. p. 516. ISSN 0262-4079.
- ^ a b "Calder Hall Nuclear Power Station". Engineering-timelines.com. Retrieved 3 October 2022.
- ^ "Going, going, gone: towering icons of nuclear power are reduced to rubble". The Guardian. 30 September 2007. Retrieved 3 October 2022.
- ^ a b "Build the world's first commercial nuclear power station". Ice.org.uk. Retrieved 3 October 2022.
- ^ Knowles, P. (July 1958). "Chapelcross Power Station". Nuclear Power. 3. OSTI 4302171.
- ^ "The Nuclear Businesses". Archived from the original on 27 September 2007.
- ^ "Calder Hall Nuclear Power Station". Engineering Times. Archived from the original on 7 March 2012. Retrieved 19 September 2010.
- ^ "Reminiscences of an atom pioneer". H.G. Davey, Works General Manager Windscale and Calder Works 1947-1958. Edited, Margaret Gowing, published Ca 1960 UKAEA, Risley, Lancs.
- ^ Indictment: Power & Politics in the Construction Industry, David Morrell, Faber & Faber, 1987, ISBN 978-0-571-14985-8
- ^ Taylor, Simon (2007). Privatisation and Financial Collapse in the Nuclear Industry. Taylor & Francis. p. 14. ISBN 978-1-134-08348-0.
- ^ Brown, Paul (21 March 2003). "First nuclear power plant to close: Calder Hall was built for the atomic weapons programme and will take 100 years to decommission after decades of radiation damage". The Guardian. p. 14.
- ^ "1956: Queen switches on nuclear power". BBC. 17 October 1956. Retrieved 3 October 2022.
- ^ John Barry; E. Gene Frankland (2014). International Encyclopedia of Environmental Politics. Taylor & Francis. p. 416. ISBN 978-1-135-55396-8.
- ^ Plunkett, Jack (2007). Plunkett's Renewable, Alternative and Hydrogen Energy. Plunkett Research. p. 190. ISBN 978-1-59392-100-2.
- ^ Calder Hall Celebrates 40 Years of Operation. BNFL, 1996 (archived)
- ^ First nuclear power plant to close. The Guardian, 21 March 2003
- ^ Brown, Paul (14 April 2003). "First nuclear power plant to close". The Guardian. London. Archived from the original on 25 October 2021. Retrieved 21 August 2006.
- ^ "Sellafield towers are demolished". BBC News. 29 September 2007. Archived from the original on 25 October 2021. Retrieved 29 September 2007.
- ^ Decommissioning the world's first commercial nuclear power station. NDA, 3 Sep 2019. Archived
- ^ Nuclear Engineering International November 2021
- ^ Feasibility Study with many pictures of the complex: Calder Hall Nuclear Power Station Feasibility Study. NDA/ATKINS, March 2007
- ^ "Energy Act 2004" (PDF). Gov.uk. Retrieved 3 October 2022.
External links
edit- Calder Hall, Nuclear Engineering International wall chart, October 1956
- Short film clip of Queen Elizabeth II inaugurating Calder Hall on October 17, 1956