Soil & Groundwater Remediation News

Workers with EM contractor Central Plateau Cleanup Company are preparing to add structural support in Room 18 at the 324 Building at the Hanford Site to allow for the safe removal of contaminated soil under the building.
With Old Man Winter knocking at the door, EM Richland Operations Office (RL) contractor Central Plateau Cleanup Company (CPCCo) is preparing the Hanford Site’s 324 Building to continue important risk-reduction work as the weather turns colder.
Tessa Hermes, assistant project manager and senior geologist with Newport News Nuclear BWXT Los Alamos (N3B) subcontractor TerranearPMC, assesses the excavation of contaminated soil near one of Los Alamos National Laboratory’s Cold War-era underground explosives firing chambers. The site is part of N3B’s Southern External Boundary Campaign to clean up Lower Water Canyon.
The EM Los Alamos Field Office and its cleanup contractor have collected more than 3,100 soil samples and excavated more than 1,000 cubic yards of contaminated soil as they remediate land at the southernmost boundary of Los Alamos National Laboratory.
Paducah Site worker Brandon Hayden signals a crane operator to lower a motor from the C-333 Process Building’s cell floor to the truck alley for removal. The work was done to support the future construction of a material sizing area in the building, which will be used to downsize large components for disposal.
Since the inception of the EM program in 1989, the Paducah Site has made notable achievements in groundwater cleanup, waste removal, and other work advancing its environmental cleanup mission following more than 60 years of uranium enrichment operations.