A SUCCESSFUL RECOVERY
The recovery of the
In planning and carrying through the entire recovery operation, the Dutch consortium Mammoet-Smit engaged quite remarkable levels of ingenuity of approach to this unique problem. Their strategy of building on their experience of their equipment and of salvage operations in general proved to be sound and ultimately successful.
Because there was insufficient time to generate and evaluate a conventional postincident nuclear safety case, members of the Nuclear Coordinating Group had to arrive at judgments drawn from their experience in nuclear safety, weaponry and engineering. Moreover, in doing so they had to cross the divide between East and West, accounting not just for the different approaches to nuclear and engineering technologies, but also how the safety reasoning of the original designs could be integrated into the salvage scheme.
This demanding and unique approach was shown to be sound because there was no radiological release or significant radiation hazard to any of the M-S personnel or contactors during any part of the recovery operations.
REFERENCES AND NOTES
AMUNDSEN Ingar, et al,
NUCLEAR COODINATING GROUP, 1st, 2nd and 3rd Stage Reports of the Nuclear Coordinating Group, Report Ref № R3065-1B/C/D, throughout 2001
PRINZ C. A.,