| Wood
Crib Fire Test in Progress

Wood crib fire test in progress
SeaRAM is a Department of
Energy program to evaluate the severity of maritime accidents and
the response of radioactive material shipping containers to such
accidents. Significant quantities of nuclear spent fuel are scheduled
to be shipped from Japan to France and the United Kingdom for reprocessing
and returned to Japan. Also, nuclear fuel that was shipped to foreign
countries for use in their experimental research reactors will be
returned to the United States. Accordingly, DOE made a commitment
to Congress and other Federal agencies to conduct a study in collaboration
with public agencies and private companies, both in the United States
and abroad, involved with ensuring continued safe transportation
of radioactive material by sea. DOE is cooperating wih the International
Atomic Energy Agency by sharing results ofthe SeaRAM program.
One component of SeaRAM is to evaluate the effects
of a shipboard fire on a simulated spent fuel cask. The results
will be used in risk analyses that will be valuable in the preparation
of Environmental Assessments and Environmental Impact Statements
for sea transport of radioactive material.
Sandia conducted a series of fire tests in 1995 to
gather information on potential shipboard accident conditions. In
collaboration with the U.S. Coast Guard, the fire tests were conducted
at the Coast Guard Fire and Safety Test Detachment. A series of
fires were set in one of the holds of the test ship Mayo Lykes,
an cargo freighter located at Little Sand Island in Mobile Bay,
Alabama. The responses of simulated cargoes and the ship holds were
monitored. The results will be useful in assessing thermal response
of radioactive material packages for a wide range of shipboard fires.
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