Sellafield partly closed after 'above normal' radiation

In summary, the BBC is reporting that there are "above normal levels" of radiation at a perimeter detector, and that all non-essential workers have been told to stay home until Monday. It's unknown at this time if the radiation is naturally occurring or if there is a problem with the plant.
  • #1
Bandit127
Gold Member
278
35
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-cumbria-25975785

They have/had "above normal levels" at a perimeter detector. As far as I know this would detect airborne radiation. And presumably at far lower levels than the source.

"A spokesman stressed there was no risk to the public or workforce." Really? So they tell all non essential people to stay home on a whim? That is not a reaction to no risk. It is a reaction to some risk.

Am I adding two twos and getting five to think that there is a significant leak somewhere within the plant. (By significant I mean a release that is a result of a failure of three safety systems - defense in depth usually means three layers of safety systems).

Perhaps I am just bitching about a spokesman who thinks we are stupid and doesn't mind stretching the truth.
 
Engineering news on Phys.org
  • #2
Did you even read the second sentence of the article?

"The company later said it was naturally occurring background radiation and not attributable to any issue or problem with any operation on site."

"Rory O'Neill, director of stakeholder relations, said: "One of the 20-odd site perimeter monitors that we have is registering above normal levels of radiation."

"Overnight the monitoring system initially indicated elevated levels of activity. Following investigation and analysis, we can now confirm these levels to be naturally occurring background radon."

"Day personnel, agency staff and contractors have been told to stay at home until Monday."

I presume the reason why day workers were sent home today (a Friday) and told not to report back until Monday was because... it's the weekend.

The article borders on the absurd in terms of trying to cause panic over absolutely nothing.
 
  • #3
I read the whole article in detail at about 10:00 this morning and they hadn't attributed it to naturally occurring radiation at the time. It has been updated since - I should have checked before I posted the link.

Thanks.
 
  • #4
One thing I have a question on, is what percentage of workers called off had rad-worker type qualifications?

If there is an indication of an issue on-site, all non-qualified rad-workers are not allowed to show up. So if they did the call off, and it was mostly non-rad-workers, that would make a LOT of sense.
 
  • #5
A belated comment.
Does it not surprise that 'naturally occurring background radon' would manifest for the first time at one site after more than 60 years of monitoring? Seems implausible to me.
 
  • #6
etudiant said:
A belated comment.
Does it not surprise that 'naturally occurring background radon' would manifest for the first time at one site after more than 60 years of monitoring? Seems implausible to me.

I don't think it's the first time, it's probably just the first time we've heard about it.

The plant's I've worked in get radon spikes from time to time. It's particularly bad if you have a combination of ventilation issues combined with very cold/dry temperatures. Normally equipment can discriminate radon by looking at the energies and/or the alpha-beta ratio, however with enough radon concentration many radiation detectors will disable their radon disciminator function. I've lost clothing before to false radon alarms because I had too high of a concentration on me (had to go get them a day later when enough decayed).

Just my thoughts.
 

What is Sellafield?

Sellafield is a nuclear fuel reprocessing and decommissioning site in Cumbria, England.

Why was Sellafield partly closed?

Sellafield was partly closed due to higher than normal levels of radiation being detected in one of the on-site facilities.

Is there a risk to public health?

According to the authorities, the radiation levels detected were above normal but well below any level that would pose a risk to public health.

What caused the above normal radiation levels?

The cause of the above normal radiation levels is still being investigated, but it is believed to be a result of an operational issue in one of the facilities.

What measures are being taken to address the issue?

The affected area has been isolated and further testing is being conducted to determine the source of the increased radiation levels. The appropriate authorities have been notified and are working to resolve the issue.

Similar threads

Replies
13
Views
2K
  • Special and General Relativity
2
Replies
40
Views
2K
  • Thermodynamics
Replies
1
Views
5K
Replies
14
Views
8K
  • New Member Introductions
Replies
1
Views
408
  • Quantum Physics
3
Replies
94
Views
24K
Replies
4
Views
8K
Replies
14
Views
2K
  • Aerospace Engineering
Replies
2
Views
7K
  • General Discussion
Replies
4
Views
7K
Back
Top