An aerial view of the Salt Waste Processing Facility at the Savannah River Site.
AIKEN, S.C. – The Department of Energy transferred the first batch of radioactive waste to the Salt Waste Processing Facility (SWPF) on Oct. 5, officially starting the “hot” commissioning of the facility.
Startup of the SWPF is the last major piece of the liquid waste system at Savannah River Site
(SRS). This represents a leap forward in the Department’s ability to
tackle one of the largest and most challenging environmental risks —
tank waste. Parsons Corporation, which designed and built the
first-of-a-kind facility, will operate it for one year.
Savannah
River Remediation, the SRS liquid waste contractor, transferred the
waste from H Tank Farm following extensive infrastructure modifications
to establish a safe and secure flowpath to the new facility.
The
first batch of 4,000 gallons of waste will take about 10 days to
process as the facility methodically goes through a series of
surveillances and sampling to ensure all aspects of the process work as
designed.
Now that SWPF is operational, it is expected that nearly all of the salt waste inventory at SRS will be processed by 2030.
A video of the first transfer is available on the SRS YouTube channel.
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