Thursday 20 June 2013

Sellafield Ltd fined £700k over Environmental Management System Failures

The company running the UK’s largest nuclear facility has been fined £700,000 after “basic management failures” resulted in low-level radioactive waste being sent to landfill
Sellafield Limited was ordered to pay the fine, plus more than £72,000 in costs, by Carlisle Crown Court after the firm admitted it did not have adequate management systems in place when waste from controlled areas of its site was mistakenly sent to landfill. In April 2010, it was discovered that four bags of low-level radioactive waste, including plastic, paper, clothing, wood and metal, had been sent to the Lillyhall landfill site in Workington. According to the firm, a wrongly configured monitoring system resulted in the bags being labeled as “general waste”, making them exempt from the usual disposal treatment process.
Judge Peter Hughes said the mistakes were the result of “basic management failures” and criticised a lack of procedures to check monitoring equipment.
“This prosecution arises out of the discovery, by chance, that bags of radioactive waste had been wrongly classified as exempt waste and allowed to leave Sellafield and to be transported to a landfill site and deposited there,” he said. “That such a basic mistake could possibly occur in what needs to be an industry managed and operated with scrupulous care for public safety and the environment is bound to be a matter of grave concern.”
He fined the firm £700,000 for seven environment and safety offences, including multiple breaches of the Radioactive Substances Act 1993 and the Environmental Permitting Regulations 2010, and one offence under the Health and Safety at Work etc Act 1974.
The heavy fine was passed despite the waste being retrieved and disposed of correctly, and confirmation from the Environment Agency and the Office for Nuclear Regulation that no contamination has resulted from the waste being sent to landfill.
A statement from the company, which has held an ISO 14001 certification since 1997, said it regretted the incident and had suspended the disposal of waste from the site until it had identified and corrected the error.“Following the event, before waste operations were re-introduced on the site additional monitoring measures were put in place to prevent an incident of this type happening again,” confirmed the statement. “Safety is, and always will be, our number one priority at Sellafield.”
Head of Environment at Corporate Risk Systems commented ‘EMS such as ISO 14001 need to be embedded into organisations’ and their culture. Tick box certification and a badge does not drive the organisation to really look at the impacts of environmental issues on the company and develop an a robust management system based on continual improvement.’
Source Environmentalist

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