Wednesday, May 2, 2012

DOE Inspector General Addresses Weld Quality Control Issues at Hanford Vit Plant

DOE Inspector General Addresses Weld Quality Control Issues at Hanford Vit Plant

An audit dated April 25 found inadequate weld maps, testing records and other quality control measures at some hard-to-reach places within the Hanford vitrification plant being built by contractor Bechtel.

The audit by the Department of Energy’s inspector general stems from allegations made two years ago regarding “black cells” Hanford vitrification plant. Source: Bechtel/DOEand other parts of the plant where radiation and a dearth of access will make inservice inspections impossible during the its operational life stabilizing Cold-War-era liquid waste. The components in question, installed prior to mid-2005, faced strict testing and record-keeping requirements under the The American Society of Mechanical Engineer's Quality Assurance Program for Nuclear Facilities and Bechtel’s contract with DOE.

According to the audit, the contractor did not keep complete records of weld maps, non-destructive testing or material tests. Likewise, auditors said they could not find required details on welding proceedures or welder qualifications for some areas.  The audit also indicated ultrasonic inspection was performed to determine weld integrity, rather than radiography as required in the contract.

What’s more, Bechtel was awarded a $30 million incentive payment for the delivery of vessles to the plant. DOE asked for half of that back once it learned some vessels were nonconforming, according to the audit, but neither DOE nor Bechtel could provide evidence that the $15 million was returned.

The agency confirmed some of the issues after they were reported in 2010 and required the contractor to correct them. In its response to auditors, the agency’s Office of Environmental management largely concurred with the audit’s recommendations.

A spokesman for Bechtel pointed out that the audit noted improvements made in recent years and that the document’s concerns involved 10 of about 2,000 welds on the equipment in question.  

Download the DOE inspector general’s report.

No comments:

Post a Comment