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New research facility bid


BOSSES at the Aldermaston nuclear bomb factory want to build a replacement research facility to help calculate how materials will behave in a warhead.

The Atomic Weapons Establishment (AWE) has applied for planning permission to West Berkshire Council to construct a replacement hydrodynamics research facility on its Aldermaston site.

The proposed development, known as Hydrus, includes an operations building, support building and associated electrical substation, which would facilitate hydrodynamics research. The cost is not being revealed because of “commercial sensitivity”.

Hydrodynamics is the science of forces acting on or exerted by fluids and contributes to the safety and reliability of the UK’s nuclear deterrent, which AWE manufactures and maintains on behalf of the Ministry of Defence.

During the complex phases of a nuclear weapon, solid materials behave like fluids when they are subjected to extreme levels of pressure and shock.

AWE conducts hydrodynamic experiments where small amounts of material are subjected to explosive shocks in specially designed chambers, which are photographed by state-of-the-art X-ray machines. The information captured is used in calculations to predict how materials will behave in the warhead.

The replacement, purpose-built facility would provide a secure environment for continued hydrodynamics operations when existing facilities reach the end of their operational lives. Hydrus will not lead to any new jobs, but about 50 existing members of staff would be relocated there.

Hydrodynamics research will continue in the existing buildings until Hydrus is working. If approved, AWE envisages the project would be built and commissioned by around 2017.

The plans have been submitted with a Defence Exempt Environmental Appraisal, which addresses the principal environmental issues of the planning proposal.

Andrew Jupp, AWE’s infrastructure director, said: “The proposed Hydrus development allows rationalisation of the floor space currently used by existing hydrodynamic operations; creates an opportunity for better working conditions for employees and improved overall environmental performance. It will also ensure AWE’s continued expertise in this important scientific field.”

Comments(4)

Ricecracker says...
1:41pm Sun 25 Jul 10

This new development is state of the art technolocgy which will be used to develop new nuclear weapons. It will cost a fortune to build.

Why are we wasting millions of pounds on projects like this when the rest of the country is facing big cuts in public spending? Most people would prefer to see money spent on saving local services rather than building weapons of mass destruction at Aldermaston.

MsAnneS says...
11:30am Mon 26 Jul 10

This new, extremely costly facility is merely an attempt by the AWE to get around the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty by acting as a substitute for nuclear weapons testing - it will contribute to the proliferation of nuclear weapons and continue to make the UK complicit in breaking international humanitarian law. Local people and concerned citizens throughout the UK can object to the planning permission request by going to http://www.cnd.iparl
.com/lobby/47 and filling in the form. It will only take 30 seconds!

LePhantom says...
2:10pm Mon 26 Jul 10

Go ahead and build it - and be quick about it! With the impending doom we face from nuclear (and wannabe nuclear) aggressors like Pakistan and Iran, I for one want to be sure the we have a device big enough to fire that will wipe that whole region from the map of the world.

Sick of hearing from the weirdo 'peace' kooks. Our town has done very well out of nuclear - long may it continue.

GC31 says...
9:33pm Fri 30 Jul 10

Without getting into the debate about right or wrong - nobody can say that nukes are a good thing - how does this get around a nuclear test ban treaty? It's not like we are being like the French and blowing up some atol in the South Pacific. I assume that this is some sort of simulator and won't won't harm the local environment?


An impression of the proposed Hydrus development An impression of the proposed Hydrus development

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