Difference between revisions of "International Nuclear Services"
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It acts as 'the customer interface to over 20 utility customers in the UK and overseas for irradiated fuel management services and the transport of nuclear materials. It has around 140 staff, with offices and facilities in the UK, France, Germany and Japan. | It acts as 'the customer interface to over 20 utility customers in the UK and overseas for irradiated fuel management services and the transport of nuclear materials. It has around 140 staff, with offices and facilities in the UK, France, Germany and Japan. | ||
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==Joins the PM on his 2012 Far East trade lobbying tour== | ==Joins the PM on his 2012 Far East trade lobbying tour== | ||
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:Looking to the future, we want to continue to support the Japanese as they reconstruct the Tohoku region and tackle the challenges of the nuclear clean-up. British companies have significant expertise in nuclear decommissioning and clean-up, with 19 nuclear sites in the UK currently being managed through the process. I really think that concrete experience can be of direct benefit to Japan.' <ref> [http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2127597/Cameron-arrives-Japan-stop-South-East-Asian-trade-mission.html#ixzz25PzvECdS 'Konichiwa Dave': Cameron flies flag for Britain as he arrives in Japan on first stop of South East Asian trade mission], Daily Mail, 10 April 2012 | UPDATED: 12:15 GMT, 10 April 2012 </ref> | :Looking to the future, we want to continue to support the Japanese as they reconstruct the Tohoku region and tackle the challenges of the nuclear clean-up. British companies have significant expertise in nuclear decommissioning and clean-up, with 19 nuclear sites in the UK currently being managed through the process. I really think that concrete experience can be of direct benefit to Japan.' <ref> [http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2127597/Cameron-arrives-Japan-stop-South-East-Asian-trade-mission.html#ixzz25PzvECdS 'Konichiwa Dave': Cameron flies flag for Britain as he arrives in Japan on first stop of South East Asian trade mission], Daily Mail, 10 April 2012 | UPDATED: 12:15 GMT, 10 April 2012 </ref> | ||
+ | ==People== | ||
+ | *[[John Clarke]] - Chairman (current) and former Managing Director until June 2008, when he became the Chief Executive of the [[Nuclear Decommissioning Authority]] (NDA). In this role he managed the transition of INS from a subsidiary of Sellafield Limited to a wholly owned subsidiary of the NDA. He also sits on the board of [[Britain's Energy Coast]], as the NDA's representative member and of [[Pacific Nuclear Transport]] Limited. <ref name="Clarke"> [http://www.britainsenergycoast.co.uk/board-members.html Board Members: John Clarke], Britain’s Energy Coast Board, undated, accessed 20 May 2012 </ref> | ||
+ | *[[Mark Jervis]] - MD | ||
==Contact== | ==Contact== | ||
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[[Category:Nuclear Spin]] | [[Category:Nuclear Spin]] | ||
[[Category:Civil nuclear industry]] | [[Category:Civil nuclear industry]] | ||
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[[Category:Nuclear: UK]] | [[Category:Nuclear: UK]] |
Revision as of 00:32, 4 September 2012
This article is part of the Nuclear Spin project of Spinwatch. |
Contents
Background
International Nuclear Services (INS) is the commercial agency for spent fuel management services in the UK and describes itself as the world's most experienced global shipper of nuclear materials. It is a wholly owned subsidiary of the Nuclear Decommissioning Authority.
It acts as 'the customer interface to over 20 utility customers in the UK and overseas for irradiated fuel management services and the transport of nuclear materials. It has around 140 staff, with offices and facilities in the UK, France, Germany and Japan.
Joins the PM on his 2012 Far East trade lobbying tour
In April 2012, International Nuclear Services MD Mark Jervis joined UK prime minister David Cameron on his travels to Japan, Indonesia and Malaysia as part of a four-day tour of east and south-east Asia. He was travelling with a 40-strong delegation of business representatives to boost trade opportunities for the UK. [1] The group included six defence contractors, along with representatives from the Nuclear Industry Association, the National Nuclear Laboratory, and the Nuclear Decommissioning Authority, as well as the government's Chief Scientific Adviser, Sir John Beddington. [2] Cameron was pushing Britain's expertise in nuclear decommissioning, in the wake of the Fukushima disaster. As Cameron explained:
- Looking to the future, we want to continue to support the Japanese as they reconstruct the Tohoku region and tackle the challenges of the nuclear clean-up. British companies have significant expertise in nuclear decommissioning and clean-up, with 19 nuclear sites in the UK currently being managed through the process. I really think that concrete experience can be of direct benefit to Japan.' [3]
People
- John Clarke - Chairman (current) and former Managing Director until June 2008, when he became the Chief Executive of the Nuclear Decommissioning Authority (NDA). In this role he managed the transition of INS from a subsidiary of Sellafield Limited to a wholly owned subsidiary of the NDA. He also sits on the board of Britain's Energy Coast, as the NDA's representative member and of Pacific Nuclear Transport Limited. [4]
- Mark Jervis - MD
Contact
Website:http://www.innuserv.com/
Notes
- ↑ Nicholas Watt, David Cameron seeks slice of Japanese defence contracts on Tokyo trip, The Guardian, Tuesday 10 April 2012, accessed 3 September 2012
- ↑ Prime Minister's Trip to South East Asia, delegation list
- ↑ 'Konichiwa Dave': Cameron flies flag for Britain as he arrives in Japan on first stop of South East Asian trade mission, Daily Mail, 10 April 2012 | UPDATED: 12:15 GMT, 10 April 2012
- ↑ Board Members: John Clarke, Britain’s Energy Coast Board, undated, accessed 20 May 2012