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Magnox

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Schematic diagram of a magnox nuclear reactor showing gas flow. The heat exchanger is outside the concrete radiation shielding. This represents an early Magnox design with a cylindrical, steel, pressure vessel.

Magnox is a type of nuclear power / production reactor that was designed to run on natural uranium with graphite as the moderator and carbon dioxide gas as the heat exchange coolant. It belongs to the wider class of gas-cooled reactors. The name comes from the magnesium-aluminium alloy (called magnesium non-oxidising), used to clad the fuel rods inside the reactor. Like most other generation I nuclear reactors, the magnox was designed with the dual purpose of producing electrical power and plutonium-239 for the nascent nuclear weapons programme in Britain. The name refers specifically to the United Kingdom design but is sometimes used generically to refer to any similar reactor.

As with other plutonium-producing reactors, conserving neutrons is a key element of the design. In magnox, the neutrons are moderated in large blocks of graphite. The efficiency of graphite as a moderator allows the magnox to run using natural uranium fuel, in contrast with the more common commercial light-water reactor which requires slightly enriched uranium. Graphite oxidizes readily in air, so the core is cooled with CO2, which is then pumped into a heat exchanger to generate steam to drive conventional steam turbine equipment for power production. The core is open on one end, so fuel elements can be added or removed while the reactor is still running.

The dual-use capability of the magnox design led to the UK building up a large stockpile of fuel-grade (reactor-grade) plutonium, with the aid of the B205 reprocessing facility. The low-to-interim burnup feature of the reactor design would become responsible for changes to US regulatory classifications after the US–UK reactor-grade plutonium detonation test of the 1960s. Despite improvements to the design in later decades as electricity generation became the primary operational aim, magnox reactors were never capable of competing with the higher efficiency and higher fuel burnup of pressurised water reactors.

In total, only a few dozen reactors of this type were constructed, most of them in the UK from the 1950s to the 1970s, with very few exported to other countries. The first magnox reactor to come online was Calder Hall (at the Sellafield site) in 1956, frequently regarded as the world's first commercial nuclear power station,[1] while the last in Britain to shut down was Reactor 1 in Wylfa (on Anglesey) in 2015. As of 2016, North Korea remains the only operator to continue using magnox style reactors, at the Yongbyon Nuclear Scientific Research Center. The magnox design was superseded by the advanced gas-cooled reactor, which is similarly cooled but includes changes to improve its economic performance.

General description

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An early design magnox fuel rod

Windscale

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The UK's first full-scale nuclear reactor was the Windscale Pile in Sellafield. The pile was designed for the production of plutonium-239 which was bred in multi-week reactions taking place in natural uranium fuel. Under normal conditions, natural uranium is not sensitive enough to its own neutrons to maintain a chain reaction. To improve the fuel's sensitivity to neutrons, a neutron moderator is used, in this case highly purified graphite.[2][3]

The reactors consisted of a huge cube of this material (the "pile") made up of many smaller blocks and drilled through horizontally to make a large number of fuel channels. Uranium fuel was placed in aluminium canisters and pushed into the channels in the front, pushing previous fuel canisters through the channel and out the back of the reactor where they fell into a pool of water. The system was designed to work at low temperatures and power levels and was air-cooled with the help of large fans.[2][3]

Graphite is flammable and presents a serious safety risk. This was demonstrated[dubiousdiscuss] on 10 October 1957 when Unit 1 of the now two-unit site caught fire. The reactor burned for three days, and massive contamination was only avoided due to the addition of filtering systems that had previously been derided as unnecessary "follies".[4]

Magnox

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Calder Hall, United Kingdom – The world's first commercial nuclear power station.[5] First connected to the national power grid on 27 August 1956 and officially opened by Queen Elizabeth II on 17 October 1956.

As the UK nuclear establishment began to turn its attention to nuclear power, the need for more plutonium for weapons development remained acute. This led to an effort to adapt the basic Windscale design to a power-producing version that would also produce plutonium. In order to be economically useful the plant would have to run at much higher power levels, and in order to efficiently convert that power to electricity, it would have to run at higher temperatures.

At these power levels, the fire risk is amplified and air cooling is no longer appropriate. In the case of the magnox design, this led to the use of carbon dioxide (CO2) as the coolant. There is no facility in the reactor to adjust the gas flow through the individual channels whilst at power, but gas flow was adjusted by using flow gags attached to the support strut which located into the diagrid. These gags were used to increase flow in the centre of the core and to reduce it at the periphery. Principal control over the reaction rate was provided by a number (48 at Chapelcross and Calder Hall) of boron-steel control rods which could be raised and lowered as required in vertical channels.

At higher temperatures, aluminium is no longer structurally sound, which led to the development of the magnox alloy fuel cladding. Unfortunately, magnox is increasingly reactive with increasing temperature, and the use of this material limited the operational gas temperatures to 360 °C (680 °F), much lower than desirable for efficient steam generation. This limit also meant that the reactors had to be very large in order to generate any given power level, which was further amplified by the use of gas for cooling, as the low thermal capacity of the fluid required very high flow rates.

The magnox fuel elements consisted of refined uranium enclosed in a loose-fitting magnox shell and then pressurized with helium. The outside of the shell was typically finned in order to improve heat exchange with the CO2. Magnox alloy is reactive with water, which means it cannot be left in a cooling pond after extraction from the reactor for extended periods. In contrast to the Windscale layout, the magnox design used vertical fuel channels. This required the fuel shells to lock together end-to-end, or to sit one on top the other to allow them to be pulled out of the channels from the top.

Like the Windscale designs, the later magnox reactors allowed access to the fuel channels and could be refuelled while operating. This was a key criterion for the design because its use of natural uranium leads to low burnup ratios and the requirement for frequent refuelling. For power use, the fuel canisters were left in the reactor as long as possible, while for plutonium production they were removed earlier. The complicated refuelling equipment proved to be less reliable than the reactor systems, and perhaps not advantageous overall.[6]

The entire reactor assembly was placed in a large pressure vessel. Due to the size of the pile, only the reactor core itself was placed within the steel pressure assembly, which was then surrounded by a concrete confinement building (or biological shield). As there was no water in the core, and thus no possibility of a steam explosion, the building was able to tightly wrap the pressure vessel, which helped reduce construction costs. In order to keep the size of the confinement building down, the early magnox designs placed the heat exchanger for the CO2 gas outside the dome, connected through piping. Although there were strengths with this approach in that maintenance and access was generally more straightforward, the major weakness was the radiation 'shine' emitted particularly from the unshielded top duct.

The magnox design was an evolution and never truly finalised, and later units differ considerably from earlier ones. As neutron fluxes increased in order to improve power densities problems with neutron embrittlement were encountered, particularly at low temperatures. Later units at Oldbury and Wylfa replaced the steel pressure vessels with prestressed concrete versions which also contained the heat exchangers and steam plant. Working pressure varies from 6.9 to 19.35 bar for the steel vessels, and 24.8 and 27 bar for the two concrete designs.[7]

No British construction company at the time was large enough to build all the power stations, so various competing consortiums were involved, adding to the differences between the stations; for example, nearly every power station used a different design of magnox fuel element.[8] Most of the magnox builds suffered time overruns and cost escalation.[9]

For the initial start up of the reactor neutron sources were located within the core to provide sufficient neutrons to initiate the nuclear reaction. Other aspects of the design included the use of flux shaping or flattening bars or controls rods to even out (to some extent) the neutron flux density across the core. If not used, the flux in the centre would be very high relative to the outer areas leading to excessive central temperatures and lower power output limited by the temperature of the central areas. Each fuel channel would have several elements stacked one upon another to form a stringer. This required the presence of a latching mechanism to allow the stack to be withdrawn and handled. This caused some problems as the Nimonic springs used contained cobalt, which became irradiated giving high gamma level when removed from the reactor. Additionally, thermocouples were attached to some elements and needed to be removed on fuel discharge from the reactor.

AGR

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The dual-use nature of the magnox design leads to design compromises that limit its economic performance. As the magnox design was being rolled out, work was already underway on the advanced gas-cooled reactor (AGR) with the explicit intention of making the system more economical. Primary among the changes was the decision to run the reactor at much higher temperatures, about 650 °C (1,200 °F), which would greatly improve the efficiency when running the power-extracting steam turbines. This was too hot for the magnox alloy, and the AGR originally intended to use a new beryllium-based cladding, but this proved too brittle. This was replaced by a stainless steel cladding, but this absorbed enough neutrons to affect criticality, and in turn required the design to operate on slightly enriched uranium rather than the magnox's natural uranium, driving up fuel costs. Ultimately the economics of the system proved little better than Magnox. Former Treasury Economic Advisor, David Henderson, described the AGR programme as one of the two most costly British government-sponsored project errors, alongside Concorde.[10]

Technical information

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Source:[11]

Specification Calder Hall Wylfa Oldbury
Thermal output (gross), MW 182 1875 835
Electrical output (gross), MW 46 590 280
Efficiency, % 23 33 34
Number of fuel channels 1696 6150 3320
Active core diameter 9,45 m 17,4 m 12,8 m
Active core height 6,4 m 9,2 m 8,5 m
Mean gas pressure 7 bar 26,2 bar 25,6 bar
Mean inlet gas temperature °C 140 247 245
Mean outlet gas temperature °C 336 414 410
Total gas flow 891 kg/s 10254 kg/s 4627 kg/s
Material Natural uranium metal Natural uranium metal Natural uranium metal
Mass of uranium in tonnes 120 595 293
Pressure vessel internal diameter 11,28 m 29,3 m 23,5 m
Pressure vessel internal height 21,3 m 18,3 m
Gas circulators 4 4 4
Steam generators 4 1 4
Number of generators 2 2 1

Economics

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Loading magnox fuel at Calder Hall nuclear power station

The first magnox reactors at Calder Hall[12] were designed principally to produce plutonium for nuclear weapons.[13] The production of plutonium from uranium by irradiation in a pile generates large quantities of heat which must be disposed of, and so generating steam from this heat, which could be used in a turbine to generate electricity, or as process heat in the nearby Windscale works, was seen as a kind of free by-product of an essential process.

The Calder Hall reactors had low efficiency by today's standards, only 18.8%.[14]

The British government decided in 1957 that electricity generation by nuclear power would be promoted, and that there would be a building programme to achieve 5,000 to 6,000 MWe capacity by 1965, a quarter of UK's generating needs.[13] Although Sir John Cockcroft had advised the government that electricity generated by nuclear power would be more expensive than that from coal, the government decided that nuclear power stations as alternatives to coal-fired power stations would be useful to reduce the bargaining power of the coal miners' unions,[9] and so decided to go ahead. In 1960 a government white paper scaled back the building programme to 3,000 MWe,[13] acknowledging that coal generation was 25% cheaper.[9] A government statement to the House of Commons in 1963 stated that nuclear generation was more than twice as expensive as coal.[9] The plutonium credit which assigned a value to the plutonium produced was used to improve the economic case,[15] although the operators of the power stations were never paid this credit.

Once removed from the reactor, the used fuel elements are stored in cooling ponds (with the exception of Wylfa which has dry stores in a carbon dioxide atmosphere) where the decay heat is transferred to the pond water, and then removed by the pond water circulation, cooling and filtration system. The fact that fuel elements can only be stored for a limited period in water before the magnox cladding deteriorates, and must therefore inevitably be reprocessed, added to the costs of the magnox programme.[16]

Later reviews criticised the continuing development project by project instead of standardisation on the most economical design, and for persisting with the development of a reactor which achieved only two export orders.[17]

A retrospective evaluation of costs, using a low 5% discount rate on capital, estimated magnox electricity costs were nearly 50% higher than coal power stations would have provided.[18]

Safety

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The reactor buildings of Bradwell magnox nuclear power station

The magnox reactors were considered at the time to have a considerable degree of inherent safety because of their simple design, low power density, and gas coolant. Because of this they were not provided with secondary containment features. A safety design principle at the time was that of the "maximum credible accident", and the assumption was made that if the plant were designed to withstand that, then all other lesser but similar events would be encompassed. Loss of coolant accidents (at least those considered in the design) would not cause large-scale fuel failure as the Magnox cladding would retain the bulk of the radioactive material, assuming the reactor was rapidly shutdown (a SCRAM), because the decay heat could be removed by natural circulation of air. As the coolant is already a gas, explosive pressure buildup from boiling is not a risk, as happened in the catastrophic steam explosion at the Chernobyl accident. Failure of the reactor shutdown system to rapidly shut down the reactor, or failure of natural circulation, was not considered in the design. In 1967 Chapelcross experienced a fuel melt due to restricted gas flow in an individual channel and, although this was dealt with by the station crew without major incident, this event had not been designed or planned for, and the radioactivity released was greater than anticipated during the station design.

Despite the belief in their inherently safe design, it was decided that the magnox stations would not be built in heavily populated areas. The positioning constraint decided upon was that any 10-degree sector would have a population less than 500 within 1.5 miles (2.4 km), 10,000 within 5 miles (8.0 km) and 100,000 within 10 miles (16 km). In addition population around the site in all directions would be less than six times the 10-degree limits. Planning permission constraints would be used to prevent any large growth of population within five miles.[19]

In the older steel pressure vessel design, boilers and gas ducting are outside the concrete biological shield. Consequently, this design emits a significant amount of direct gamma and neutron radiation, termed direct shine, from the reactors.[20] For example, the most exposed members of the public living near Dungeness magnox reactor in 2002 received 0.56 mSv, over half the International Commission on Radiological Protection recommended maximum radiation dose limit for the public, from direct shine alone.[21] The doses from the Oldbury and Wylfa reactors, which have concrete pressure vessels which encapsulate the complete gas circuit, are much lower.

Reactors built

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Sizewell A magnox nuclear power station

In all, 11 power stations totalling 26 units were built in the United Kingdom where the design originated. In addition, one was exported to Tōkai in Japan[22] and another to Latina in Italy.[19] North Korea also developed their own magnox reactors, based on the UK design which was made public at an Atoms for Peace conference.

The first magnox power station, Calder Hall, was the world's first nuclear power station to generate electrical power on an industrial scale[12] (a power station in Obninsk, Russia started supplying the grid in very small non-commercial quantities on 1 December 1954). The first connection to the grid was on 27 August 1956, and the plant was officially opened by Queen Elizabeth II on 17 October 1956.[23] When the station closed on 31 March 2003, the first reactor had been in use for nearly 47 years.[24]

The first two stations (Calder Hall and Chapelcross) were originally owned by the UKAEA and primarily used in their early life to produce weapons-grade plutonium, with two fuel loads per year.[25] From 1964 they were mainly used on commercial fuel cycles and in April 1995 the UK Government announced that all production of plutonium for weapons purposes had ceased.[26]

The later and larger units were owned by the CEGB and operated on commercial fuel cycles.[27] However Hinkley Point A and two other stations were modified so that weapons-grade plutonium could be extracted for military purposes should the need arise.[28][29]

Derating to reduce corrosion

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In early operation it was found that there was significant oxidation of mild steel components by the high temperature carbon dioxide coolant, requiring a reduction in operating temperature and power output.[30] For example, the Latina reactor was derated in 1969 by 24%, from 210 MWe to 160 MWe, by the reduction of operating temperature from 390 to 360 °C (734 to 680 °F).[31]

Last operating magnox reactor

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The Nuclear Decommissioning Authority (NDA) announced on 30 December 2015 that Wylfa Unit 1 – the world's last operating Magnox reactor – was closed. The unit had generated electricity for five years longer than originally planned. Two units at Wylfa were both scheduled to shut down at the end of 2012, but the NDA decided to shut down Unit 2 in April 2012 so that Unit 1 could continue operating in order to fully utilize existing stocks of fuel, which was no longer being manufactured.[32]

The small 5 MWe experimental reactor, based on the magnox design, at Yongbyon in North Korea, continues to operate as of 2016.

Magnox definitions

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Magnox alloy

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Magnox is also the name of an alloy—mainly of magnesium with small amounts of aluminium and other metals—used in cladding unenriched uranium metal fuel with a non-oxidising covering to contain fission products. Magnox is short for magnesium non-oxidising. This material has the advantage of a low neutron capture cross-section, but has two major disadvantages:

  • It limits the maximum temperature, and hence the thermal efficiency, of the plant.
  • It reacts with water, preventing long-term storage of spent fuel under water.

Magnox fuel incorporated cooling fins to provide maximum heat transfer despite low operating temperatures, making it expensive to produce. While the use of uranium metal rather than oxide made reprocessing more straightforward and therefore cheaper, the need to reprocess fuel a short time after removal from the reactor meant that the fission product hazard was severe. Expensive remote handling facilities were required to address this danger.

Magnox plants

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The term magnox may also loosely refer to:

  • Three North Korean reactors, all based on the declassified blueprints of the Calder Hall magnox reactors:
  • Nine UNGG power reactors built in France, all now shut down. These were carbon dioxide-cooled, graphite reactors with natural uranium metal fuel, very similar in design and purpose to the British magnox reactors except that the fuel cladding was magnesium-zirconium alloy and that the bars were disposed horizontally (instead of vertically for magnox).

Decommissioning

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Chapelcross before the cooling towers were demolished in 2007

The Nuclear Decommissioning Authority (NDA) is responsible for the decommissioning of the UK magnox power plants, at an estimated cost of £12.6 billion. There has been debate about whether a 25 or 100-year decommissioning strategy should be adopted. After 80 years short-lifetime radioactive material in the defuelled core would have decayed to the point that human access to the reactor structure would be possible, easing dismantling work. A shorter decommissioning strategy would require a robotic core dismantling technique.[33] The current approximately 100-year decommissioning plan is called Safestore. A 130-year Deferred Safestore Strategy was also considered, with an estimated cost saving of £1.4 billion, but not selected.[34]

In addition the Sellafield site which, amongst other activities, reprocessed spent magnox fuel, has an estimated decommissioning cost of £31.5 billion. Magnox fuel was produced at Springfields near Preston; estimated decommissioning cost is £371 million. The total cost of decommissioning magnox activities is likely to exceed £20 billion, averaging about £2 billion per productive reactor site.

Calder Hall was opened in 1956 as the world's first commercial nuclear power station, and is a significant part of the UK's industrial heritage. The NDA is considering whether to preserve Calder Hall reactor 1 as a museum site.

All the UK's magnox reactor sites (apart from Calder Hall) are operated by Magnox Ltd, a subsidiary of the NDA.

Reactor Sites Management Company (RSMC), a NDA Site Licence Company (SLC), originally held the contract to manage Magnox Ltd on behalf of the NDA. In 2007, RSMC was acquired by American nuclear fuel cycle service provider EnergySolutions from British Nuclear Fuels.[35]

On 1 October 2008, Magnox Electric Ltd separated into two nuclear licensed companies, Magnox North Ltd and Magnox South Ltd.[36]

Magnox North sites

Magnox South sites

In January 2011 Magnox North Ltd and Magnox South Ltd recombined as Magnox Ltd.[37] Following procurement and management issues with the contract, Magnox Ltd will become a subsidiary of the NDA in September 2019.[38][39]

List of Magnox reactors in the UK

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Name Location Location (GeoHack) Number of units Production per unit Total production First grid connection Shut down
Calder Hall near Whitehaven, Cumbria NY025042 4 50 MWe 200 MWe 1956 2003
Chapelcross near Annan, Dumfries and Galloway NY216697 4 60 MWe 240 MWe 1959 2004
Berkeley Gloucestershire ST659994 2 138 MWe 276 MWe 1962 1989
Bradwell near Southminster, Essex TM001087 2 121 MWe 242 MWe 1962 2002
Hunterston "A" between West Kilbride and Fairlie North Ayrshire NS183513 2 180 MWe 360 MWe 1964 1990
Hinkley Point "A" near Bridgwater, Somerset TR330623 2 235 MWe 470 MWe 1965 1999
Trawsfynydd Gwynedd SH690381 2 195 MWe 390 MWe 1965 1991
Dungeness "A" Kent TR074170 2 219 MWe 438 MWe 1966 2006
Sizewell "A" near Leiston, Suffolk TM472634 2 210 MWe 420 MWe 1966 2006
Oldbury near Thornbury, South Gloucestershire ST606945 2 217 MWe 434 MWe 1968 2012
Wylfa Anglesey SH350937 2 490 MWe 980 MWe 1971 2015

Magnox reactors exported from the UK

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Name Location Number of units Production per unit Total production First grid connection Shut down
Latina Italy 1 160 MWe 160 MWe 1963 1987 following Italian referendum on nuclear power
Tokai Mura Japan 1 166 MWe 166 MWe 1966 1998

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Humphrys, John (2011). A Day That Shook the World : First Nuclear Power Station 1956. British Pathe. Retrieved 2 January 2023.
  2. ^ a b "First look at damaged Windscale pile". World Nuclear News. 21 August 2008.
  3. ^ a b "Windscale Pile problems". 27 June 2000.
  4. ^ Leatherdale, Duncan (4 November 2014). "Windscale Piles: Cockcroft's Follies avoided nuclear disaster". BBC News.
  5. ^ "Osborne hails UK nuclear deal with China as 'new dawn'". FT. 17 October 2013. Archived from the original on 10 December 2022. Retrieved 25 October 2014. the country that built the first civil nuclear power station
  6. ^ Robert Hawley (2006). Nuclear Power in the UK – Past, Present & Future. World Nuclear Association Annual Symosium. Archived from the original on 14 December 2008.
  7. ^ Nuclear Installations Inspectorate (September 2000). Report by HM Nuclear Installations Inspectorate on the results of Magnox Long Term Safety Reviews (LTSRs) and Periodic Safety Reviews (PSRs) (PDF) (Report). Health and Safety Executive. p. 27 (Table 3). Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 May 2006. Retrieved 21 March 2010.
  8. ^ The Magnox Story (PDF) (Report). Springfields Fuels Limited. July 2008. Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 June 2011.
  9. ^ a b c d Walls, John (2011). "Nuclear Power Generation – Past Present and Future". In Roy M. Harrison; Ronald E. Hester (eds.). Nuclear Power and the Environment. Royal Society of Chemistry. pp. 8–9. ISBN 9781849731942. Retrieved 8 March 2019.
  10. ^ David Henderson (21 June 2013). "The more things change..." Nuclear Engineering International. Retrieved 2 July 2013.
  11. ^ "Description of the Magnox Type of Gas Cooled Reactor (MAGNOX)" (PDF). www.iaea.org.
  12. ^ a b "Calder Hall Power Station" (PDF). The Engineer. 5 October 1956. Archived from the original (PDF) on 29 October 2013. Retrieved 25 October 2013.
  13. ^ a b c Ten Years of Nuclear Power (PDF) (Report). UKAEA. 1966. Archived from the original (PDF) on 29 October 2013. Retrieved 25 October 2013.
  14. ^ Steven B Krivit; Jay H Lehr; Thomas B Kingery, eds. (2011). Nuclear Energy Encyclopedia: Science, Technology, and Applications. Wiley. p. 28. ISBN 978-1-118-04347-9.
  15. ^ "Atomic Energy (Civil Use)". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). 1 November 1955. Hc Deb 1 November 1955 Vol 545 Cc843-4. Retrieved 23 October 2013.
  16. ^ Radioactive Waste Management Advisory Committee (November 2000). RWMAC's Advice to Ministers on the Radioactive Waste Implications of Reprocessing, Annex 4: Dry storage and disposal of Magnox spent fuel (Report). Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs. Archived from the original on 19 August 2006.
  17. ^ S H Wearne, R H Bird (February 2010). UK Experience of Consortia Engineering for Nuclear Power Stations (Report). School of Mechanical, Aerospace & Civil Engineering, University of Manchester. Archived from the original on 24 October 2009. Retrieved 19 September 2010.
  18. ^ Richard Green (July 1995). "The Cost of Nuclear Power Compared with Alternatives to the Magnox Programme". Oxford Economic Papers. 47 (3). Oxford University Press: 513–24. doi:10.1093/oxfordjournals.oep.a042185. Retrieved 25 October 2013.
  19. ^ a b M.C. Grimston; W.J. Nuttall (October 2013). The Siting of UK Nuclear Power Installations (PDF) (Report). University of Cambridge. CWPE 1344 & EPRG 1321. Retrieved 16 September 2018.
  20. ^ Fairlie, Ian (July 1993). "Magnox gamma shine" (PDF). Safe Energy. 95. Retrieved 18 June 2018.
  21. ^ Director, Environment Health Safety and Quality. "Discharges and Monitoring of the Environment in the UK – Annual Report 2002" (PDF). BNFL. pp. 7–8, 87–88, 119–121. Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 November 2004.
  22. ^ Tsutomu Nakajima, Kazukiyo Okano and Atsushi Murakami (1965). "Manufacture of Pressure Vessel for Nuclear Power Reactor" (PDF). Fuji Electric Review. 11 (1). Fuji Electric Co. Retrieved 17 April 2014.
  23. ^ "Calder Hall Celebrates 40 Years of Operation" (Press release). BNFL. Archived from the original on 22 February 2004. Retrieved 22 February 2004.
  24. ^ Brown, Paul (21 March 2003). "First nuclear power plant to close". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 12 May 2010.
  25. ^ Hayes, Peter (16 November 1993). Should the United States Supply Light Water Reactors to Pyongyang? (Report). Nautilus Institute. Archived from the original on 7 March 2006. Retrieved 21 August 2006.
  26. ^ "Plutonium and Aldermaston – an historical account" (PDF). UK Ministry of Defence. 4 September 2001. Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 December 2006. Retrieved 15 March 2007.
  27. ^ S H Wearne, R H Bird (December 2016). UK Experience of Consortia Engineering for Nuclear Power Stations (PDF) (Report). Dalton Nuclear Institute, University of Manchester. Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 March 2017. Retrieved 25 March 2017.
  28. ^ David Lowry (13 November 2014). "The world's first 'Nuclear Proliferation Treaty'". Ecologist. Retrieved 2 December 2014.
  29. ^ Reginald Maudling (24 June 1958). "Atomic Power Stations (Plutonium Production)". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). HC Deb 24 June 1958 vol 590 cc246-8. Retrieved 2 December 2014. the Central Electricity Generating Board has agreed to a small modification in the design of Hinkley Point and of the next two stations in its programme so as to enable plutonium suitable for military purposes to be extracted should the need arise.
  30. ^ Lobner, Peter (21 May 2016). "Farewell Magnox: 1956 - 2015". The Lyncean Group of San Diego. Retrieved 1 June 2021.
  31. ^ Volterra, E. (1989). "Operating experience with the Latina Magnox reactor". IAEA. IWGGCR-19. Retrieved 1 June 2021.
  32. ^ "World's last operating Magnox reactor closes". World Nuclear News. 31 December 2015. Retrieved 4 January 2016.
  33. ^ "Minutes of the Joint Meeting Held at Oldbury" (PDF). Berkeley Nuclear Licensed Site and Oldbury on Severn Power Station Site Stakeholder Groups. 1 November 2006. p. 7. Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 October 2012. Retrieved 14 November 2007.
  34. ^ Lindberg, John (24 November 2021). "To wait, or not to wait: the question of Safestore". Nuclear Engineering International. Retrieved 6 December 2021.
  35. ^ "EnergySolutions". Archived from the original on 21 October 2011. Retrieved 29 October 2011.
  36. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 4 October 2018. Retrieved 5 June 2008.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  37. ^ "Magnox Limited". Magnox. Archived from the original on 2 April 2012.
  38. ^ "NDA to take over management of Magnox sites". World Nuclear News. 3 July 2018. Retrieved 9 July 2018.
  39. ^ "The Nuclear Decommissioning Authority's Magnox contract". Public Accounts Committee. UK Parliament. 27 February 2018. Retrieved 9 July 2018.
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