

Collaboration Delivers Results for Osprey at Hinkley Point C – Video
Many specialist logistics’ milestones have been reached already in the construction of Hinkley Point C (HPC), not least the delivery of the Polar Crane Electrical Girder Beam. Its installation in the reactor building will take place 6 months after build-up.
This critical asset is a milestone. The Polar Crane Main Beams measure up to 44.77 metres long, with the larger of the two weighing 138,000 kilos. To manufacture, move, and install each beam with the greatest of care has required collaboration across the supply chain, with input from a range of key partners such as APCO, NATCO, and Osprey’s own Heavy Lift teams.

The Polar Crane Beam was loaded on to Osprey’s barge at Avonmouth Docks…
The Polar Crane Beams will be pivotal to the function and safety of the nuclear reactor during the entirety of its 60-year operating life. During the current construction phase, the beams will also play a crucial role in the installation of the Reactor Pressure Vessel itself and other components of the nuclear steam supply system. These aren’t assets that can be bought off the shelf, they’re bespoke to HPC, so every millimetre of movement is carefully orchestrated and signed off by a team of engineers, transport, and safety specialists.

…Osprey’s barge with the Polar Crane Beam en route from Avonmouth Docks to Combwich Wharf on the River Parrett… Photograph courtesy of Mendip Media
The transportation of the first beam from Avonmouth to the HPC site is complex. Many environmental factors had to be considered: the weather, marine parameters such as tidal conditions in the Bristol Channel and river conditions in the River Parrett as well as access into EDF’s marine facility at Combwich Wharf, including planning constraints for barge arrivals and considerations towards local residents.

…. and then by road to the power station site…
To move the Polar Crane Beam across the site, Osprey loaded it onto a specialist, four-file 10-axle SPMT. Progress at the right pace is critical to ensuring the integrity and the safety of everyone involved, and this SPMT moved at less than 3 miles per hour during transit, and under fine control during final positioning for unloadig onto storage supports using the SPMT hydraulics at the construction platform.

… arriving at Hinkley Point C.
This approach came about through the Osprey team’s multi-disciplinary experience, working on all kinds of projects around the world. Universally, lifting is a high-risk activity but hy created a solution that removed some of that risk. The direct delivery by SPMT removed a critical lift, thereby improving safety, the delivery programme, and the overall cost.
Nigel Fletcher, CEO of Osprey Group: “Progress on the journey to Net Zero has got to be a team effort. The work that’s going on at Hinkley is such a good example of suppliers coming together, staying totally focused on making sure this important part of our future national infrastructure is staying on schedule. Manufacturers can’t send components this large overland, so we co-ordinate everyone’s input and bring them in via our Shared Services operations. This way, we can use a combination of vessels, barges, cranes, SPMTs – all kinds of transport – to find the best possible options for deliveries of oversized assets coming into the site.”
Video
Featured Title photograph
Ellie Bowsher, Osprey’s QHSE Officer, and the Team
Source Osprey