UK regulator completes site-based climate change inspections

Monday, 2 December 2024

UK regulator completes site-based climate change inspections
The Sizewell B plant was one of five sites inspected (Image: EDF Energy)

The Chief Nuclear Inspector’s (CNI’s) themed inspections were introduced by the Office for Nuclear Regulation (ONR) in 2017 and are designed to examine regulatory matters that are strategic or broader in nature than its more routine regulatory inspection activities. They also raise awareness of important issues and highlight ONR’s regulatory activities and expectations to a wider audience, in addition to the nuclear industry.

Last year, the ONR asked site operators to complete a self-assessment questionnaire on their arrangements and resilience in relation to climate change effects. This stage aimed to understand the approach currently adopted by licensees for consideration of climate change in safety cases, including climate change projections used to define the design basis for external hazards affected by climate change.

In early-March, the ONR selected five sites – Heysham 2, Sizewell B, Sellafield, Dounreay and the Atomic Weapons Establishment (Aldermaston and Burghfield) – to be taken forward to the inspection stage.

Those inspections – which looked for evidence that recent climate change projections were being included in relevant safety cases and hazard definitions – have now been completed.

Other agencies including the Environment Agency, the Nuclear Decommissioning Authority and the Defence Nuclear Safety Regulator joined ONR on some of the inspections at the five sites in England and Scotland.

The findings from the self-assessment questionnaires and the site-based inspections are now being collated ahead of a final industry engagement day scheduled for February at ONR’s Bootle headquarters.

A full summary report will be published next year outlining all results and conclusions from the CNI themed inspection.

“These are not compliance inspections and no ratings will be provided against licence conditions,” ONR noted. “But ONR will form an overarching judgement on whether its regulatory expectations in relation to climate change have either been met, partially met, or not met.”

“This inspection was commissioned in recognition of the growing challenges that climate change is likely to present,” said ONR Nuclear Safety Inspector Alexandra Edey. “To ensure activities remain safe and secure, we expect licensees to take account, in safety cases, of the reasonably foreseeable impacts of climate change during the lifetime of facilities.

“We’re pleased to have reached this significant point in the themed inspection and look forward to bringing together all our findings to present a comprehensive and informed picture to the industry of where it is positioned in terms of current resilience to climate change.”

   

  • Related Posts

    Sabey considers Natrium deployment at its data centres

    Wednesday, 22 January 2025 A rendering of a Natrium plant (Image: TerraPower) The strategic collaboration includes exploring new Natrium plants in the Rocky Mountain region, as well as Texas, to…

    Korean robot aims for nuclear decommissioning market

    Wednesday, 22 January 2025 (Image: KAERI) The terms of the technology transfer is KRW180 million (USD125,000) and 3% of sales revenue, and the transfer includes the manipulator that acts as the arm,…

    Have You Seen?

    Halliburton Warns of Softer North America Activity Even as Quarterly Profit Beats Estimates

    • January 22, 2025
    Halliburton Warns of Softer North America Activity Even as Quarterly Profit Beats Estimates

    LNG Exporter Venture Global Cuts Target Valuation for US IPO to $65.3 bln

    • January 22, 2025
    LNG Exporter Venture Global Cuts Target Valuation for US IPO to $65.3 bln

    Venture Global Slashes IPO Price Range by More Than 40%

    • January 22, 2025
    Venture Global Slashes IPO Price Range by More Than 40%

    Oil’s Dark Fleet Puts Pressure on Trump to Act Quickly

    • January 22, 2025
    Oil’s Dark Fleet Puts Pressure on Trump to Act Quickly

    Trump’s Tariff Whiplash Is Designed to Sow Chaos, Trudeau Says

    • January 22, 2025
    Trump’s Tariff Whiplash Is Designed to Sow Chaos, Trudeau Says

    Trump Plans to Enact 25% Tariffs on Canada, Mexico by Feb. 1 – Watch the Video Clip

    • January 22, 2025
    Trump Plans to Enact 25% Tariffs on Canada, Mexico by Feb. 1 – Watch the Video Clip

    Trump’s Energy Actions on His First Day

    • January 22, 2025
    Trump’s Energy Actions on His First Day

    Oil Falls as Traders Digest Trump Tariff Reprieve, Stronger Dollar

    • January 22, 2025
    Oil Falls as Traders Digest Trump Tariff Reprieve, Stronger Dollar

    Extreme Cold and Record Snowfall to Test Texas Power Grid

    • January 22, 2025
    Extreme Cold and Record Snowfall to Test Texas Power Grid

    US Energy Mergers May Slow in 2025 as Deal Sizes Shrink, says Enverus

    • January 22, 2025
    US Energy Mergers May Slow in 2025 as Deal Sizes Shrink, says Enverus