The Fuel Cycle & Waste
From rock in the ground to permanent disposal — and the surprising question of whether "waste" is really waste at all.
A global journey — uranium travels through multiple countries and decades before generating a single watt of electricity
96% of spent fuel isn't waste — it's uranium and plutonium that could be recycled. Only 4% is truly unusable.
The 100,000 year challenge — how do you store something safely for longer than human civilisation has existed?
The Nuclear Fuel Cycle
From mining to disposal — the complete journey
Every kilowatt of nuclear electricity starts with a rock in the ground — and ends, eventually, hundreds of metres below it. Between mining and disposal lies a complex global journey spanning decades and multiple continents.
Explore the interactive diagram below. Toggle between the UK's once-through approach (use fuel once, dispose of it) and the closed cycle used by France (recycle the fuel, minimise waste).
Interactive: The Nuclear Fuel Cycle
Click any stage to learn more
Once-Through Fuel Cycle: Fuel is used once then stored for disposal. This is the UK's current approach — simpler, but ~95% of the fuel's energy potential remains unused.
Mining
Uranium ore is extracted from the ground. The UK has no uranium mining — all uranium is imported, primarily from Kazakhstan (~39%), Canada (~24%), and Namibia (~12%).
🔑 Why This Matters
The fuel cycle isn't just an abstract process — it shapes energy security, waste management, and nuclear economics. Here's what you'll discover in this module:
Mostly from Kazakhstan (39%), Canada (24%), and Namibia (12%). Unlike oil or gas, uranium is abundant and stable in price — but supply chains matter.
Spent fuel generates 7% of full power heat immediately after shutdown. This is why cooling is critical — and why Fukushima happened.
Only 4% is actual waste. The rest is uranium and plutonium that could theoretically be recycled. Different countries make different choices — France reprocesses its fuel, while the UK uses a once-through approach. We'll explore why later.
The total volume from 70+ years of operations equals about one Wembley Stadium. The challenge isn't volume — it's timescale.
The Front End
Following uranium from mine to reactor
The "front end" of the fuel cycle covers everything that happens before uranium enters a reactor. It's a global journey — uranium mined in Kazakhstan might be converted in Canada, enriched in the UK, and fabricated into fuel for a French reactor.
Let's follow the complete journey, step by step.
1
Mining
📍 Kazakhstan (39%), Canada, Australia, Namibia
Uranium ore is extracted from the ground through open-pit mines, underground mines, or in-situ leaching (pumping solution through ore deposits underground).
2
Milling → Yellowcake
📍 Usually at or near the mine site
Crushed ore is chemically processed to extract uranium, producing a bright yellow powder called yellowcake (U₃O₈). This concentrated form is safe to transport internationally.
Yellowcake (U₃O₈): A bright yellow uranium concentrate powder, the standard form for international trade. Despite the name, modern yellowcake can range from yellow to brown or black depending on processing.
3
Conversion → UF₆ Gas
📍 France (Orano), Canada (Cameco), USA
Yellowcake is chemically converted to uranium hexafluoride (UF₆) — a compound that becomes gas when gently heated. This gaseous form is essential for the next step.
Uranium Hexafluoride (UF₆): A compound of uranium and fluorine that sublimes (turns directly from solid to gas) at just 57°C. The only uranium compound suitable for the gas centrifuge enrichment process.
4
Enrichment
📍 Capenhurst, UK (Urenco) — plus France, Germany, Netherlands, USA, Russia
Gas centrifuges spinning at 50,000+ rpm separate the lighter U-235 atoms from heavier U-238. Natural uranium (0.7% U-235) is enriched to 3–5% for reactor fuel.
Enrichment is so important — and so sensitive — that we explore it in detail on the next page.
5
Fuel Fabrication
📍 Springfields, Preston, UK (Westinghouse)
Enriched UF₆ is converted to uranium dioxide (UO₂) ceramic powder, pressed into pellets, and loaded into metal tubes. These fuel rods are bundled into fuel assemblies ready for the reactor.
Inside Springfields: The Fabrication Process
✓ Front End Complete
The fuel assemblies are now ready to be transported to a reactor, where they'll generate electricity for 3–5 years. This marks the end of the front end of the fuel cycle.
Before we explore what happens after the reactor (the back end), let's take a closer look at the most sensitive step: enrichment.
Enrichment
The challenge of separating identical atoms — and why it matters for both energy and security
🔬 A Closer Look at the Critical Step
You've just seen enrichment as step 4 in the fuel cycle journey. But this single step deserves special attention — it's technically challenging, internationally regulated, and central to understanding how nuclear fuel is prepared.
Let's explore how it actually works, and why it's such a sensitive technology.
🎯 The Problem: Natural Uranium Can't Power Most Reactors
Natural uranium is 99.3% U-238 and only 0.7% U-235. But it's U-235 that can sustain a chain reaction — U-238 mostly just absorbs neutrons without fissioning.
For most reactor designs, we need to increase that U-235 concentration to 3–5%. This process is called enrichment.
U-235 can undergo fission with slow (thermal) neutrons, releasing energy and more neutrons. U-238 generally cannot — it absorbs neutrons instead. This is why the proportion of U-235 determines whether a chain reaction can sustain itself.
📊 What Does "Enrichment" Actually Mean?
The enrichment percentage tells you how many U-235 atoms are present compared to U-238. Use the interactive below to visualise what different enrichment levels look like at the atomic scale.
⚛️ Interactive: Inside a Fuel Pellet
Drag the slider to change enrichment. Watch the proportion of fissile U-235 atoms change.
Natural uranium as mined from the earth. Too dilute to sustain a chain reaction in most reactor designs.
⚠️ The Challenge: They're Chemically Identical
U-235 and U-238 are the same element. They have the same number of protons, the same electrons, the same chemical behaviour. You cannot separate them using chemistry.
The only difference: U-238 has 3 extra neutrons, making it about 1.3% heavier.
The solution: Convert uranium to a gas (UF₆), then exploit that tiny mass difference using physical processes — specifically, spinning at extreme speeds.
⚙️ The Solution: Gas Centrifuges
UF₆ gas is fed into a cylindrical rotor spinning at up to 50,000–70,000 RPM — faster than a jet engine turbine. The slight mass difference between U-235 and U-238 molecules causes them to separate under these extreme forces. The enriched stream (higher U-235 concentration) is extracted from one output, whilst the depleted stream (higher U-238) exits from another.
The precise internal mechanics of gas centrifuges — including flow patterns, scoop positioning, and separation physics — remain classified information due to nuclear proliferation concerns. This technology has been subject to international secrecy agreements since 1960.
⚙️ Interactive: Gas Centrifuge Cross-Section
Use the slider to increase spin speed. Watch how particles separate by mass and flow through the extraction tubes.
🔗 Why Thousands of Centrifuges?
Here's the catch: a single centrifuge barely changes the concentration — each pass might increase the U-235 proportion by a fraction of a percent. To go from 0.7% to 3–5%, the gas must flow through hundreds or thousands of centrifuges arranged in a cascade — each stage feeding slightly more concentrated gas into the next, with the enrichment compounding gradually.
🎮 Challenge: Can You Sustain a Chain Reaction?
Now you understand what enrichment means — but can you feel the difference it makes? In the simulator below, red nuclei are U-235 (they fission and release more neutrons) and blue nuclei are U-238 (they absorb neutrons without fissioning).
🎮 Challenge: Sustain a Chain Reaction
🎯 The Goal: Sustain a chain reaction for as long as possible, at the lowest enrichment, with the fewest neutron shots.
- Ideal: Fire once and watch the chain sustain itself — that's efficient power generation!
- Reality: You may need to fire additional neutrons to keep the chain alive.
- Challenge: Lower enrichment = harder to sustain, but more impressive if you can!
- Warning: Push the enrichment too high and the reaction becomes... difficult to control. 😬
- Reset: Chain dies? Click Fire Neutron to start a new attempt. Or hit 🎲 Rearrange to shuffle atoms.
Scoring: Lower enrichment × Longer time × Fewer shots = Better score
🏭 UK Facility: Capenhurst (Cheshire)
Operated by Urenco — UK, Netherlands, Germany joint venture
- One of the world's largest enrichment facilities
- Produces LEU (up to 5%) for power reactors worldwide
- £196 million government investment for HALEU production (up to 20%)
- Will reduce Western dependence on Russian HALEU for advanced reactors
HALEU (High-Assay Low-Enriched Uranium): Uranium enriched between 5–20% U-235. Required for advanced reactor designs including many SMRs. Currently only commercially available from Russia, hence UK investment in domestic capability.
🤔 Curious About Higher Enrichment Levels?
If you've been cautious with the simulator above and stuck around 5% enrichment — good instincts! But if you're curious about what happens when you push the enrichment slider much higher...
Go back up and experiment. Try 50%, 70%, even 90%+. See what happens when you really test the limits. Don't worry — it's just a simulation, and you might learn something surprising about why uranium enrichment is such a sensitive topic worldwide.
Come back here after you've experimented...
The Back End
Managing spent fuel — from reactor to long-term storage
6
In the Reactor
📍 Power stations across the UK and worldwide
Fresh fuel assemblies are loaded into the reactor core, where they'll generate electricity for 3–5 years. During this time, fission transforms the fuel's composition dramatically.
7
Spent Fuel
📍 First stored at reactor site, then may move to Sellafield
After 3–5 years, fuel is "spent" — it can no longer sustain an efficient chain reaction. But it's now highly radioactive and generates significant decay heat. The back end of the fuel cycle begins.
What's in Spent Fuel?
After years of fission, the fuel's composition has changed dramatically:
Only about 4% is actual waste. Countries like France reprocess spent fuel to recover the uranium and plutonium for reuse.
🔗 Connection to the 3 C's
When fuel leaves the reactor, two of the three C's become critical:
- Control: Chain reaction has stopped ✓
- Cooling: Decay heat continues for years — must be actively managed
- Containment: Highly radioactive fission products must stay isolated
The Cooling Challenge
When fuel leaves the reactor, the chain reaction stops — but the heat doesn't. Radioactive decay of fission products continues generating heat for years. This decay heat is why spent fuel management is so critical.
This is why Fukushima was a disaster — when the tsunami knocked out cooling systems, decay heat had nowhere to go. The fuel overheated even though the reactors had already shut down.
Interactive: Decay Heat Over Time
Drag the timeline to see how heat output changes — and what it means in real terms
💧 Wet Storage: Cooling Ponds
5–10 years minimum
Spent fuel assemblies are placed in deep pools of water immediately after removal from the reactor. The water serves two critical purposes:
- Cooling: Absorbs and dissipates decay heat through circulation systems
- Shielding: Just 3 metres of water blocks enough radiation for workers to stand at the pool edge
📦 Dry Storage: Casks
Decades to centuries
Once decay heat has reduced sufficiently, fuel can be transferred to massive sealed containers. These casks are engineering marvels:
- Steel inner vessel: ~25cm thick, welded shut
- Concrete outer shell: ~50cm thick for shielding
- Passive cooling: Natural air convection — no pumps, no power needed
What is Reprocessing?
Spent fuel still contains 96% usable material — uranium and plutonium that could theoretically be recycled into new fuel. Reprocessing is the chemical process to separate these from the waste.
Wait — Where Does Plutonium Come From?
Plutonium doesn't exist in nature in useful quantities. It's created inside the reactor while uranium is fissioning. Here's how:
Remember that natural uranium is 99.3% U-238 (the "unfissile" isotope) and only 0.7% U-235. While U-235 atoms are busy fissioning and releasing energy, some U-238 atoms do something different — they absorb neutrons without fissioning.
How Plutonium is Created
U-238 absorbs a neutron and transforms through beta decay
A U-238 nucleus sits in the reactor, surrounded by neutrons from fission reactions nearby.
💡 Key Insight: Protons Define the Element
You might wonder: how does uranium become plutonium? The answer is beta decay. When a neutron converts to a proton (emitting an electron), the element changes because the number of protons changes:
- 92 protons = Uranium
- 93 protons = Neptunium
- 94 protons = Plutonium
This is how all elements heavier than uranium are made — neutron absorption followed by beta decay. Plutonium doesn't exist naturally because it has to be manufactured this way.
Why Does This Matter?
This explains several things:
- Why spent fuel contains plutonium — it's created during normal reactor operation
- Why reprocessing exists — to extract this valuable fissile material
- Why the UK has 140 tonnes of plutonium — decades of reprocessing extracted it, but we never used it all as fuel
- Why plutonium is a proliferation concern — it can be used for weapons
But What Happens After You Burn Plutonium?
If France recycles plutonium into MOX fuel and burns it in a reactor, what's left? Can they recycle again?
When plutonium fissions, it generates energy — but not all of it fissions. Some absorbs neutrons and becomes heavier plutonium isotopes (Pu-240, Pu-241, Pu-242). After one cycle:
- ~95% uranium remains (can be recycled)
- Plutonium remains, but it's now "degraded" — a mix of isotopes, harder to use
- More fission products (the actual waste)
Can you recycle spent MOX?
In current thermal reactors: 1-2 times maximum. Each cycle degrades the plutonium quality further. France currently recycles once — spent MOX is then stored, not recycled again.
However, fast reactors could change this equation entirely — potentially recycling fuel many times and extracting 60-100x more energy from uranium.
📘 Advanced Topic: Fast Reactors (optional)
Fast Reactor: A reactor that uses high-energy ("fast") neutrons without slowing them down with a moderator. Unlike thermal reactors (all UK reactors), fast reactors can fission almost any heavy isotope — including the "degraded" plutonium and other actinides that thermal reactors can't efficiently use.
This means fast reactors could theoretically burn plutonium stockpiles, consume long-lived waste, and extract 60-100x more energy from uranium. The catch: they're technically challenging (usually requiring liquid sodium cooling), expensive, and have had mixed operational history. Russia operates some, China is building them, but the UK, France, and US have mostly paused development.
The PUREX Process
How spent fuel is chemically separated into its components
PUREX (Plutonium Uranium Reduction Extraction): The standard chemical process for reprocessing spent nuclear fuel. Developed in the 1940s for weapons production, later adapted for civilian use. Uses tributyl phosphate (TBP) dissolved in kerosene to selectively extract uranium and plutonium from dissolved fuel.
Two Countries, Two Choices
France: Closed Cycle
ACTIVELY REPROCESSES
- La Hague plant processes ~1,700 tonnes/year
- Recovered uranium and plutonium made into MOX fuel
- MOX provides ~10% of France's nuclear electricity
- Reduces waste volume requiring disposal
UK: Once-Through
STOPPED REPROCESSING
- THORP closed 2018, Magnox reprocessing ended 2022
- Spent fuel now stored awaiting geological disposal
- 140 tonnes of separated plutonium stockpiled
- Decision: immobilise plutonium, don't reuse
Neither approach is "right" — they reflect different national priorities. France values energy independence; the UK prioritised economics and non-proliferation. Both manage their waste safely.
The UK Plutonium Legacy
Decades of reprocessing left the UK with the world's largest civilian plutonium stockpile — a material that's expensive to store and carries proliferation risks.
January 2025: Government decided to immobilise the plutonium — mixing it with ceramic or glass to make it unusable — rather than attempt to reuse it as fuel. The stockpile will be safely stored until it can be disposed of in the GDF.
🔗 Connection to the 3 C's
The back end of the fuel cycle is all about the second and third C:
- Control: Already achieved — chain reaction stopped ✓
- Cooling: Decay heat managed through wet → dry storage progression
- Containment: Multiple barriers — cladding, water/casks, storage facilities — keep radioactivity isolated
Waste Categories
Understanding what radioactive waste actually is — and isn't
First: What Counts as "Radioactive Waste"?
Not everything from a nuclear site is dangerously radioactive. In fact, most of it isn't. The UK classifies radioactive waste into four categories based on how radioactive it is — not where it came from.
The Paradox: Less Volume = More Danger
Here's something that surprises people: the most dangerous waste takes up the least space. Why?
This is the concentrated waste — fission products extracted from spent fuel and melted into glass blocks. It's intensely radioactive precisely because it's been concentrated into a small volume. Think of it like reducing a sauce — same ingredients, smaller pot, stronger flavour.
This is material that was near radioactive sources or touched them briefly — building rubble, soil, protective clothing. The radioactivity is spread thinly across large amounts of material. Individually, each item is barely radioactive. But there's a lot of it.
The takeaway: Most radioactive waste by volume is barely radioactive at all. The truly dangerous material fits in a relatively small space — which makes it much easier to manage and contain.
The Four Categories
High-Level Waste
Intermediate-Level Waste
Low-Level Waste
Very Low-Level Waste
GDF (Geological Disposal Facility): A permanent underground repository for HLW and ILW, built deep in stable rock. The UK is currently selecting a site — we'll explore this in detail on the next page.
Wait — Where Does Spent Fuel Fit?
Good question. Spent fuel isn't classified as waste — at least not yet. It still contains 96% usable uranium and plutonium, so it's considered a "material" with potential value, not waste.
In the UK, spent fuel from operating reactors is stored at reactor sites or at Sellafield, waiting for eventual disposal in the GDF. If it were ever reprocessed, the fission products would become HLW and the cladding would become ILW. Since the UK has stopped reprocessing, most spent fuel will eventually go directly to the GDF as "spent fuel" — its own category.
Sort the Waste
Drag each item to the correct waste category
Putting It In Perspective
All UK radioactive waste — everything from 70+ years of nuclear power and weapons programmes — would fill about one Wembley Stadium (roughly 4.5 million m³).
The HLW portion? About 2,000 m³ — less than an Olympic swimming pool.
What Does Treated Waste Look Like?
HLW
Glass block inside a stainless steel canister. About 1.3m tall, 0.4m diameter. Contains ~400kg of glass.
ILW
Waste set in cement inside a steel drum or larger box. Solid, stable, stackable.
Geological Disposal
The permanent solution for higher-activity waste
The Challenge
HLW and ILW will remain hazardous for tens of thousands of years. No human institution has ever lasted that long. So we can't rely on future generations to keep maintaining storage facilities indefinitely.
The solution? Put the waste somewhere it will be safe passively — no ongoing human intervention required. That place is deep underground, in stable rock that hasn't moved for hundreds of millions of years.
What is a GDF?
A Geological Disposal Facility is a highly engineered underground repository built 200m to 1km below the surface. It combines human engineering with natural geological barriers to isolate waste from the living environment — permanently.
The Multiple Barrier Concept
A GDF doesn't rely on any single barrier. If one fails, others remain. It's defence in depth — applied to waste disposal.
International Progress — It's Happening
Geological disposal isn't theoretical. Countries are building these facilities right now.
World's first GDF. Began accepting waste in 2024. Built 450m deep in bedrock on Olkiluoto island.
Broke ground January 2025. Uses copper canisters in crystalline bedrock, 500m deep.
Site selected in clay rock. Construction starting. Expected operation from 2035.
These countries have shown it can be done — technically, politically, and socially. The UK is learning from their experience.
UK GDF Programme — Where We Are
The UK's approach is consent-based. No community will have a GDF forced upon it. The process requires both suitable geology and a willing host community.
Two communities remain engaged in the process:
Areas of focus: east of Sellafield, east of Seascale
Area of focus: west of Haverigg (offshore subsurface)
- Allerdale — withdrew 2022 (unsuitable geology)
- Theddlethorpe — withdrew June 2025 (community decision)
What Communities Receive
Engaging with the process brings investment to local areas — regardless of whether a GDF is eventually built there.
Annual community investment, rising as investigations deepen. Community Partnership decides how it's spent.
Major infrastructure, hundreds of skilled jobs for 100+ years, transformational investment over facility lifetime.
Timeline — A Long-Term Project
Geological disposal is measured in decades, not years. This is deliberate — rushing would be irresponsible.
Common Questions
Surface storage requires ongoing maintenance, security, and institutional control. We can't guarantee any institution will exist in 10,000 years. Deep geological disposal is passive — once sealed, it needs nothing from future generations.
GDFs are designed to be reversible during operations. Waste can be retrieved if needed. After closure, the barriers make it very difficult — but that's intentional. We don't want future humans (or anyone else) accidentally digging into it.
GDF sites are chosen specifically because the rock has been stable for hundreds of millions of years — through ice ages, earthquakes, and continental drift. If it's survived all that, it's a good bet for the next 100,000.
🔗 The End of the Line
The GDF represents the final step in managing nuclear waste — from the reactor, through cooling, storage, treatment, and finally permanent disposal. It closes the loop on the fuel cycle we explored at the start of this module.
UK Facilities & Decommissioning
The nuclear landscape, Sellafield's legacy, and careers in cleanup
UK Fuel Cycle Facilities
The UK has a complete nuclear fuel cycle infrastructure, though reprocessing has now ended. These sites represent decades of nuclear expertise.
Urenco enrichment facility — one of the world's largest centrifuge plants
Westinghouse fuel manufacturing — making fuel assemblies for UK and export
Europe's largest and most complex nuclear site — see detailed section below
UK's low-level waste repository — operating since 1959
Sellafield: Britain's Nuclear Heartland
70+ years of history, the world's most complex cleanup
A Site Shaped by History
Built to produce plutonium for Britain's nuclear weapons programme
World's first commercial nuclear power station — electricity and plutonium
Reactor fire releases radioactivity — worst UK nuclear accident. Reactor sealed permanently.
B205 plant opens to reprocess spent fuel from UK's Magnox reactor fleet
Windscale name dropped — fresh start for commercial reprocessing ambitions
Thermal Oxide Reprocessing Plant — handles AGR and overseas fuel
Reprocessing ends — economics no longer viable
B205 completes final campaign after 58 years of operation
Full decommissioning expected to take another century
The Legacy Challenge
Sellafield's early facilities were built for urgency, not longevity. Decisions made in the 1940s-60s created problems we're still solving today.
Open-air storage facilities built in the 1950s-60s. Some described as "the most hazardous industrial buildings in Western Europe." Now being emptied — carefully.
The reactor that caught fire in 1957. Still standing, still containing damaged fuel. Decommissioning not expected until 2050s.
The world's largest civil stockpile. Stored securely, but a long-term question mark. Government decided in 2025 to immobilise rather than reuse.
The estimated total cost of cleaning up Sellafield. This represents the UK's largest environmental remediation project.
The Cleanup Mission Today
Sellafield Ltd, a subsidiary of the Nuclear Decommissioning Authority, employs thousands of people in one of the world's most complex engineering challenges.
Remotely operated machines are extracting decades-old waste from legacy ponds and silos — work that's never been done before anywhere in the world.
Waste is being sorted, characterised, and packaged for long-term storage. Different wastes need different approaches.
Modern facilities being constructed to handle and store retrieved waste safely — building the infrastructure for cleanup.
Cutting-edge robotics, AI, and remote handling being developed — Sellafield is a testbed for nuclear technology.
The Nuclear Decommissioning Authority
Established in 2005, the NDA is the government body responsible for cleaning up the UK's nuclear legacy. It oversees 17 sites across the country.
Operates Sellafield — the largest and most complex site
Decommissioning Magnox reactor sites and Dounreay in Scotland
Developing the GDF and operating LLWR at Drigg
Specialist transport of nuclear materials across the UK
Decommissioning: A Multi-Generational Commitment
"We're not just cleaning up the past — we're building an industry for the future."
Careers in Decommissioning
Multi-decade employment across diverse disciplines
Mechanical, electrical, chemical, civil, nuclear
Developing machines for hazardous environments
Radiochemistry, materials science, environmental
Complex, long-duration programme delivery
Radiation protection and safety
Welding, electrical, mechanical maintenance
Getting started: Sellafield Ltd, NRS, and NDA all offer apprenticeships and graduate schemes. The nuclear industry actively recruits from diverse backgrounds — this is long-term, meaningful work.
Learning from the Past, Building for the Future
Sellafield's challenges have shaped how the entire industry operates today
The difficulties at Sellafield aren't a reason to reject nuclear power — they're a reason to do it better. And that's exactly what's happening. Every new facility built today incorporates hard-won lessons from the past.
Legacy ponds were open-air, with limited records of what went in
Modern spent fuel storage uses sealed containers with complete digital tracking of every item
Decommissioning was an afterthought — "we'll figure it out later"
UK regulations require a full Funded Decommissioning Programme before construction begins. Hinkley Point C has decommissioning plans and funds set aside now — 60 years before they'll be needed
Complex buildings with difficult-to-access areas made cleanup dangerous
Design for Decommissioning is a regulatory requirement. New reactors use modular construction, easier access routes, and materials chosen for simpler dismantling
Different waste types mixed together, poor characterisation
Strict waste segregation from source. Every waste stream characterised, categorised, and routed to appropriate treatment from day one
Secrecy culture — problems hidden, lessons not shared
Independent regulator (ONR), public reporting, international peer reviews. Sellafield itself now shares lessons globally through IAEA and industry networks
"The EPR reactor at Hinkley Point C produces almost a third less long-lived radioactive waste compared with reactors in operation today — and has a complete waste management strategy approved before the first concrete was poured."— EDF Energy, Generic Design Assessment submission
🔗 Why This Matters
The UK's nuclear legacy is a responsibility we've inherited from decisions made decades ago. Understanding Sellafield helps explain:
- Why waste management matters so much to the industry today
- Why new reactors are designed with decommissioning in mind from day one
- Why the GDF (previous page) is so important for final disposal
- Why nuclear offers stable, long-term careers
Quiz
Test your understanding of the fuel cycle and waste management
In the front end of the fuel cycle, what happens during "conversion"?
Why does uranium need to be enriched for most reactors?
Why must spent fuel be cooled in water pools for several years after leaving the reactor?
Why is HLW the smallest volume but contains ~95% of radioactivity?
What is vitrification?
What is the key principle behind geological disposal (GDF)?
What is required before a GDF can be built in a UK community?
What is one key lesson from Sellafield that has changed how new reactors are built today?
Key Takeaways
What to remember from Module 6
The Fuel Cycle is a Complete Journey
From mining → conversion → enrichment → fabrication → reactor → cooling → storage → disposal. Each step prepares uranium for use and then manages it safely afterwards. The UK has facilities for most stages: Capenhurst (enrichment), Springfields (fabrication), Sellafield (storage & legacy).
Decay Heat Drives the Back End
Spent fuel generates heat from radioactive decay even after shutdown — 7% of operating power initially. This is why cooling is essential (the 3 Cs: Control, Cooling, Containment). Wet storage for ~5 years, then dry casks for decades.
Most Waste is Barely Radioactive
The inverse relationship: HLW is ~95% of radioactivity but <0.1% of volume. VLLW (rubble, PPE) is ~76% of volume but almost no radioactivity. All UK waste fits in one Wembley Stadium. The truly hazardous waste fits in less than a swimming pool.
Geological Disposal is the Permanent Solution
Multiple barriers (waste form → container → buffer → rock) provide passive safety for hundreds of thousands of years. Finland's GDF is now operational. The UK is engaging with communities in Copeland — consent is required, and communities can withdraw at any stage.
The Industry Has Learned from the Past
Sellafield's legacy challenges exist because of 1940s-60s decisions made under Cold War pressure. Today: decommissioning plans required before construction, design for decommissioning is mandatory, waste is tracked and segregated from day one. New nuclear is fundamentally different.
Decommissioning = Long-Term Careers
Sellafield alone employs ~11,000 people with a £2.5bn annual budget. Cleanup will take until 2120+. This is multi-generational, skilled employment in engineering, robotics, science, and project management — meaningful work addressing a real challenge.
Module 6 Complete!
You now understand the nuclear fuel cycle from mining to disposal, the UK's waste categories, geological disposal, and why Sellafield matters.
