Part of Hinkley Point C’s cooling water system, the offshore liners weigh up to 270 tonnes and reaches depths of 25 metres below sea level
The latest development in Hinkley Point C is complete, as Balfour Beatty has successfully installed six offshore liners.
Installed around two miles off the coast in the Bristol Channel, the six liners will play a key role in the power station’s vital cooling water system.
Each of the liners weighs up to 270 tonnes and will circulate 120,000 litres of water per second from the Bristol Channel to the nuclear power station through five miles of underground tunnels to provide cooling to Hinkley Point C’s systems.
The liners were lowered through 40 metre steel casings placed in the seabed earlier in the year, the structures reach depths of 25 metres below sea level.
Each liner was designed with a world first, innovative pre-installed isolation cap, allowing safe, ongoing access to the cooling water tunnels for the remaining construction works prior to being fully removed and stored for use, should tunnel maintenance works be required.
The news marks the latter stages of offshore works
Balfour Beatty’s Hinkley Point C Marine Works project director, Roger Frost, said: “This achievement is a significant step forward in our mission to contribute to the success of Hinkley Point C, a project that stands as a beacon for sustainable energy and engineering excellence.
“I am immensely proud of the progress we have made, and the depth and scale of this installment demonstrates Balfour Beatty’s capability to deliver innovative solutions for critical infrastructure.”
The instalment marks the near completion in the offshore works at Hinkley Point C, with over 1,000 experts from across Balfour Beatty and its supply chain involved in its success.
The final elements of the offshore works are expected to complete in the first half of 2024.