UK nuclear expert John Large probes issue after spate of flights in France
- 15 illegal flights by tiny unmanned vehicles over country's power stations
- UK has 16 operational nuclear reactors generating 18% of our electricity
- Existing plants 'not prepared to counter threat of near-cyborg technology'
- Mr Large cites examples of placing explosives and dropping equipment
Britain’s nuclear power stations are under threat from attacks by drones, it has been claimed.
A London-based nuclear expert investigated the issue after a spate of mysterious and illegal flights by small unmanned vehicles over more than a dozen power stations in France.
And John Large warned that the problems arising there were of equal importance across the English Channel, where the UK has 16 operational reactors generating 18 per cent of our electricity.
Mr Large told the French parliament that existing plants were not prepared to counter the threat of ‘near-cyborg technology’, such as placing explosives and dropping equipment to help a saboteur.
He examined four attack situations, saying the plants ‘fared very badly indeed - if these scenarios had been for real, then there would have been the potential for a major radioactive release’.
e and handed it to the Office for Nuclear Regulation, but have not asked for a copy of the report - however, the expert has urged them to reconsider this.
According to an article by Independent on Sunday journalist Mark Leftly, Mr Large will meet with the Ministry of Defence and France's nuclear and safety regulators next month regarding his report.
Energy Secretary Ed Davey told the newspaper that he ‘would like to see’ the report, although stressed it was ‘unlikely’ that it would tell ministers anything they had not already examined.
Incident scene: Three people were arrested last month near the Belleville-sur-Loire reactor (pictured) in Cher, south of Paris, after using remote-controlled vehicles in a restricted area within 650ft of the plant
It was revealed early last month that authorities in France had tallied at least 15 overflights of nuclear sites since October, culminating on one day with five at separate sites.
Drone attack threat: London-based nuclear expert John Large (pictured) has investigated the issue
Authorities insist that nuclear facilities in France - a country that largely lives off atomic energy - are built to handle seismic and security risks.
State-controlled power firm EDF, which has had 13 sites flown over by drones, said the overflights had not affected plant operations.
Three people were arrested last month near the Belleville-sur-Loire reactor in Cher, south of Paris, after using remote-controlled vehicles in a restricted area within 650ft of the plant.
But they were released when it emerged they were model aircraft fans in the wrong location.
Drones have vaulted into public awareness in recent years, ranging from ones as large as planes used by the CIA to bomb terrorist suspects, to small ones bought for fun.
Greenpeace has in recent years led peaceful incursions into French nuclear facilities to expose security vulnerabilities, but it denies any connection to the drone flights.
French law prohibits individuals from operating drones in crowded areas, near airports, and near sensitive sites like military bases or nuclear plants. Concerns about nuclear plant security were revived most recently after the 2011 Fukushima disaster in Japan.
France gets more than two-thirds of its electricity from nuclear power - the highest proportion in the world - and stepped up nuclear security measures after the Japan debacle.
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2882425/Britain-s-nuclear-power-plants-come-attack-DRONES-drop-explosives-says-expert.html#ixzz3MWcVgpmH
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