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UK's EDF May Expose People To Radiation By Dumping Mud From Hinkley Point - Campaigners
Fakhir Rizvi Published September 19, 2018 | 11:07 PM
Plans by UK energy company EDF to dredge and deposit potentially contaminated mud into Cardiff Bay to make room to expand Hinkley Point nuclear power facilities in Somerset may expose people to radioactive particles, Roy Pumfrey, a spokesman for the campaign group Stop Hinkley, told Sputnik.
LONDON (UrduPoint News / Sputnik - 19th September, 2018) Plans by UK energy company EDF to dredge and deposit potentially contaminated mud into Cardiff Bay to make room to expand Hinkley Point nuclear power facilities in Somerset may expose people to radioactive particles, Roy Pumfrey, a spokesman for the campaign group Stop Hinkley, told Sputnik.
Last week, EDF confirmed it had started to dump mud from the Hinkley Point nuclear power station in the Severn Estuary off Cardiff. The plans have been met by a series of protests with campaigners demanding that Natural Resources Wales - who have approved the scheme - to suspend EDF license.
"That [the dumping of mud] increases the risks that the particles, when dispersed, will end up on the surface of exposed low-tide areas anywhere along the Bristol channel where - if there are radioactive particles there - there is much greater risk of people being exposed to them. One can say that without any fear of qualification," Pumfrey said.
Even though EDF continues to dispute the allegations that the mud itself may be contaminated, having argued what radiation may be in evidence is actually "naturally occurring" and poses no threat, the campaigners doubt that the company has carried out a proper testing.
"They don't appear to have done a proper assessment on what they are intending to do, and we don't think they've actually sampled as thoroughly as they ought to, bearing in mind the quantity of the material they are proposing to shift," Pumfrey underlined.
Neil McEvoy, a member of the National Assembly for Wales, told Sputnik last week that the Welsh government has put business interests higher than the interests of the population and the environment when it had approved EDF plans to dump mud.
Hinkley Point A ceased generating electricity in 2000, with Point B having been operational since 1976. EDF claim they need to dredge mud from the proposed site of Point C to drill six vertical shafts for a future coolant system, a project also sponsored by the China General Nuclear Power Group.
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