Nuclear Waste Services Working Group provides a platform to begin engagement with the community

Nuclear Waste Services (NWS) has welcomed the formation of a new Geological Disposal Facility (GDF) Working Group in South Holderness, to begin an engagement about whether the area might be suitable for a GDF. The following media release has been issued:

South Holderness GDF Working Group:

The Government’s GDF Siting Process in England and Wales is consent-based and requires NWS to identify both a suitable site and a willing host community.

Establishing a GDF Working Group is simply the starting point for a conversation with a local community and is in no way an indication that a GDF will be built in a particular area. One of the Working Group’s tasks will be to engage people across the community to begin to understand the local area and any issues or questions the community might have.

A GDF is internationally recognised by governments and scientists as the only viable permanent solution for the safe disposal of radioactive waste in the long-term.

It involves isolating the waste deep underground in suitable geological formations, placing it in highly engineered vaults and tunnels, keeping the waste safe and secure over the many thousands of years it will take for the radioactivity to naturally reduce.

NWS is engaged with three other communities across England about what hosting a GDF could mean for them: two in Cumbria, Mid Copeland and South Copeland, and one in Lincolnshire around Theddlethorpe.

“We are delighted to see the formation of the South Holderness GDF Working Group. South Holderness joins three other communities involved in the GDF siting process who are already learning more about this vital project and the benefits and opportunities it could bring, such as the creation of thousands of jobs and opportunities for investment in local infrastructure.

“We are looking forward to meeting local people, providing more information, answering questions, and listening to all views. This is a consent-based process, meaning if the community does not express support for a GDF it won’t be built there.”

NWS CEO Corhyn Parr.

NWS will be a member of the South Holderness GDF Working Group, along with the independent Chair, David Richards, an independent facilitator, Invest East Yorkshire, the Interested Party, and East Riding of Yorkshire Council.

In discussion with Invest East Yorkshire, and based on readily available information about the geology of the area and awareness of existing economic priorities in the region, it is proposed that the Working Group will focus its engagement in the southern parts of Holderness. It will gather information about the area, share information about geological disposal, and begin to understand any issues or questions the local community might have. The first in a series of community engagement events will start in February and information is also available on the dedicated South Holderness GDF Working Group website.

The Working Group’s role is to open up engagement with the community, begin the work to understand the local area and identify an initial search area for further consideration. The Working Group will also identify initial members for a GDF Community Partnership, which would take over from the Working Group and be a more enduring vehicle for community engagement and involvement in the siting process, including developing a community vision and distributing community investment funding.

To learn more about GDF, see:

If the residents of the Potential Host Community do not return a positive Test of Public Support, then the project cannot progress in that location.

Page 12 of the GDF Report.

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