Thursday, June 28, 2012

Idaho Waste Treatment Facility Startup Testing Suspended To Evaluate System

IDAHO FALLS, ID- On Saturday, June 16, startup testing was suspended at the Integrated Waste Treatment Unit (IWTU) located at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Idaho Site. Testing and plant heat-up was suspended to allow detailed evaluation of a system pressure event observed during testing on Saturday.
Facility startup testing has been ongoing for the past month, evaluating system and component operation and response during operating conditions. No radioactive or hazardous waste has been introduced into the facility, pending successful completion of startup testing. Safety systems functioned as designed, and the facility is currently in safe standby mode. The facility is expected to remain in safe standby condition for the next several weeks as the facts surrounding Saturday’s system pressure event are gathered and evaluated.
The IWTU was designed and constructed to treat 900,000 gallons of liquid sodium-bearing waste located at the Idaho Nuclear Technology and Engineering Center’s (INTEC) tank farm. The waste was generated during spent nuclear fuel reprocessing activities performed at INTEC from the 1950s until 1992. Treatment was expected to begin this month, but will be delayed for several weeks pending a thorough evaluation of system performance.
The State of Idaho Department of Environmental Quality, who has regulatory authority for oversight of the IWTU, has been notified.
Editorial Date June 21, 2012
By Brad Bugger
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IWTU testing suspended

POSTED: 05:24 PM MDT Jun 20, 2012 UPDATED: 05:31 PM MDT Jun 20, 2012 
IDAHO FALLS, Idaho -
The U.S. Department of Energy has suspended testing at the Integrated Waste Treatment Unit on the Idaho National Laboratory reservation. A startup test was suspended Saturday after a "system pressure event," according to a news release. In a news release, DOE officials said facility startup testing has been under way for the past month, evaluating system and component operation and response during operating conditions. IWTU was designed and constructed to treat 900,000 gallons of liquid sodium-bearing waste located on the Idaho Nuclear and Technology and Engineering Center's tank farm. Although treatment was originally scheduled to begin this month, no radioactive or hazardous waste has been introduced into the facility, pending successful completion of startup testing. Treatment will be delayed for several weeks pending a thorough evaluation of system performance.
The waste was generated during spent nuclear fuel reprocessing activities performed at INTEC from the 1950's until 1992.  

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