Hanford Demolition Paves Way for Cleanup Progress Near River

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Aerial photo of the 100 K Area at the Hanford Site in October 2022, with the "cocooned" K East Reactor on the right, the K West Reactor on the left and the Columbia River in the background. (Department of Energy photo)

A Hanford Site building that was critical to transferring radioactive sludge away from the Columbia River is coming down. Demolition of the K West Reactor Annex is another key step toward completing cleanup at the former plutonium production reactor.

The project includes draining and removing the reactor’s spent-fuel basin where the sludge was stored, then placing the reactor building in interim safe storage.

“The annex building accomplished its mission to support the safe packaging and transfer of sludge from the basin in 2019,” said Mark French, Department of Energy Richland Operations Office division director for Hanford’s Central Plateau Cleanup Project. “Now, removal of the facility allows us to continue the progress we’ve already made to reduce risk in Hanford’s K Area and along the river.”

Crews with contractor Central Plateau Cleanup Company (CPCCo) have been moving and sorting radioactive debris into underwater bins in the 1.2-million-gallon basin since last summer. Workers using underwater cameras and specialized tools place the contaminated material into steel tubes, which will be filled with grout, a concrete-like substance, and removed during basin demolition.

Workers recently finished installing a system to pump out and filter the contaminated water from the basin. They will transfer the water to Hanford’s Effluent Treatment Facility by tanker truck for disposal. Testing activities on the system are currently underway, with the draining of the basin expected to begin by the end of this year.

“While we still have plenty of work to do, it’s exciting to see how far we’ve come,” said Mike Kruzic, CPCCo 100 K Closure Projects manager. “I’m proud of our team and their continued focus on safety over speed.”

Following removal of the spent fuel basin, workers will construct a safe storage enclosure over the main K West Reactor building, a process known as “cocooning.” The enclosure will protect the building while the radioactivity in the deactivated reactor core decays over the next several decades, making it safer to complete disposition of the reactor in the future.

K West will be the eighth and final Hanford reactor to be cocooned following the cocooning of the nearby K East Reactor in October 2022.