Hanford Waste Treatment Plant Hands Over First Facility for Commissioning

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Hanford Waste Treatment Plant Hands Over First Facility for Commissioning

The following press release was published by the U.S. Dept. of Energy, Office of Environmental Management on May 1, 2018. It is reproduced in full below.

RICHLAND, Wash. - The EM Office of River Protection ’s (ORP) Waste Treatment and Immobilization Plant (WTP) passed a major landmark last month toward completion when the first building was transferred to plant management for commissioning, the last step before beginning vitrification of Hanford tank waste.

While dozens of systems have been turned over from construction to startup across the project, the handover of the Non-Radioactive Liquid Waste Disposal System (NLD) marks the first transfer of an entire building for commissioning.

“This occasion reinforces the progress being made at WTP and progress toward successfully demonstrating hot commissioning by 2022," said Brian Reilly, WTP project director for ORP contractor Bechtel National, Inc.

The NLD system consists of sumps, pumps, pipes, valves, and instruments, and a 540,000-gallon tank, all of which are designed to collect non-radioactive, non-hazardous effluent from the Low-Activity Waste (LAW) Facility, Analytical Laboratory, and other ancillary support facilities.

NLD is one of many facilities required to achieve EM’s Direct Feed Low-Activity Waste approach to feed waste directly from the Hanford tank farms to the LAW Facility in advance of the court-ordered milestone date of 2023.

“We are continuing to make the shift from construction to startup on many of our systems and facilities," said Delmar Noyes, ORP assistant manager for WTP startup and commissioning. “The transfer of the NLD system to commissioning is another great example of that."

Source: U.S. Dept. of Energy, Office of Environmental Management

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