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DOE awarded the contract to Hanford Tank Waste Operations & Closure, H2C for short, for the first time in April 2023. H2C is made up of BWXT Technical Services , Amentum Environment and Energy ...
The H2C contract is for 10 years, with some work ordered by DOE during that time likely continuing longer. ... $13 billion contract to manage Hanford tank waste to a team headed by BWXT and Fluor ...
At the end of February DOE again awarded the contract to H2C. Hanford award called unlawful. The regulation change to qualify H2C for the contract award is a breach of HTDA’s contractual rights ...
The Department of Energy has awarded a Hanford site contract with an estimated value of up to $45 billion over a decade to a newly formed limited liability company. ... H2C also will be ...
The Vit Plant will first process Hanford's low-activity waste liquids, starting as soon as 2023, as part of the Department of Energy's Direct-Feed Low-Activity Waste (DFLAW) approach. Under DFLAW, waste will be sent from the tank farms to the Vit Plant's Low-Activity Waste Facility for vitrification.
H2C is expected to be required to subcontract 18% of work under its contract to small businesses, but those do not have to be Eastern Washington businesses. H2C owners’ Hanford history
The Hanford Site occupies 586 square miles (1,518 km 2) – roughly equivalent to half the total area of Rhode Island – within Benton County, Washington. [1] [2] It is a desert environment receiving less than ten inches (250 mm) of annual precipitation, covered mostly by shrub-steppe vegetation.
Hanford cleanup $113.6 billion Hanford Vitrification Plant $12 to $16.8 billion [26] WNP-3 and WNP-5 nuclear power plants up to $24 billion estimated to complete (cancelled, WPPSS default) Grand Coulee Dam $5.541 billion in 2017 dollars [27] Third Powerplant (completed 1980) $2.002 billion in 2017 dollars [27]