2014 Tour of Hanford Waste Treatment Plant
Take a tour of the Hanford Waste Treatment Plant, under construction by a team led by Bechtel, in southeastern Washington state. This first-of-a-kind plant encompasses 65-acres and, once in operation, will use a process called vitrification to solidify millions of gallons of nuclear waste left over from World War II and Cold War-era defense programs.

▶︎
The Hanford Story: Tank Waste Cleanup

▶︎
Overbudget: Britain's $57BN Nuclear Nightmare

▶︎
Direct Feed Tank Waste Vitrification at Hanford

▶︎
Vitrification for High Level Waste

▶︎
Wasted Breath Silence and Sickness at America's Largest Toxic Waste Dump

▶︎
The Hanford Story: Groundwater

▶︎
Nuclear waste is reusable. Why aren’t we doing it?

▶︎
The Hanford Story - Plutonium Finishing Plant

▶︎
WWII’S HANFORD REACTOR SECRET: How 1,200 Tons of Graphite Made Plutonium

▶︎
Hanford nuclear waste plant now online | FOX 13 Seattle

▶︎
Hanford Sludge Removal Success

▶︎
The Hidden Engineering of Landfills

▶︎
Hanford From The Highway

▶︎
Hanford Vit Plant Overview

▶︎
The Hanford Story: River Corridor

▶︎
Hanford Vitrification Plant

▶︎
How Is Gasoline Made? The Dangerous Process Behind Modern Fuel

▶︎
Britain’s $70BN Battle To Clean Europe’s Most Hazardous Nuclear Building

▶︎
Hanford Plutonium Finishing Plant

▶︎
