New simulator will train Savannah River’s remote crane operators

May 21, 2025, 9:30AMRadwaste Solutions
Simulator instructor Marc Widener at the controls of a new crane simulator for the Savannah River Site’s Defense Waste Processing Facility.

The Department of Energy’s Office of Environmental Management said it will use a new simulator to help train operators on the safe and efficient movement of a remotely operated crane at the Defense Waste Processing Facility (DWPF) at the Savannah River Site in South Carolina. The DWPF, where Savannah River’s liquid high-level radioactive waste is vitrified and placed into storage containers, uses an unmanned bridge crane system to install and replace equipment in the high-humidity, high-radiation, and harsh chemical environment of the facility’s processing cells.

Since DWPF began processing highly radioactive liquid waste in 1996, crane operators have learned their skills through on-the-job training. However, the main processing cell (MPC) crane, which they will use following simulator training, is extremely important to the overall work performed inside the DWPF canyon where processing occurs, according to DOE-EM.

New generation of operators: The MPC crane carries several tools, including hoists designed for lifting items weighing from 1 ton to 117 tons. Eleven cameras mounted to the crane frame allow the operator to position the crane and its hoists wherever needed over the canyon. Another camera is used to get close-up views of anything in the canyon.

Manipulating a powerful crane by way of a video screen through the facility’s canyon full of equipment proved challenging for new hires, according to DOE-EM. With the site’s aging workforce and the need to train a new generation of operators, the office decided it needed to find a capable training device.

Video game tech: DOE-EM said its liquid waste contractor, Savannah River Mission Completion, identified an appropriate simulator in 2022 that would be so realistic, trainees could be thoroughly trained on everyday duties as well as unusual events in a comparably short time. The simulator, which provides a 3D representation of the facility’s canyon, uses the same type of crane operator console coupled with a simulation model that uses high-resolution imaging and physics-based video game technology.

MPC simulator instructor Marc Widener said he believes this new video instructional tool will prove to be invaluable over time.

“We can create personalized scenarios for crane operators to help them hone their skills,” Widener said. “We can develop scenarios specifically designed to help them in problem areas they personally experience, instead of a blanketed approach to cover everyone. This simulator enables us to adjust parameters within the program to fine-tune movements and tune their capabilities.”

Additional comments: “In the future, we have plans to replace the melter, which is a DWPF process vessel that heats a mixture of molten glass and concentrated high-activity radioactive waste at 2,100 degrees Fahrenheit,” said Wyatt Clark, SRMC’s chief operations officer. “This is no small task, and it is certain to present numerous challenges to operators who have never performed this work before. With this simulator, we believe we can train our operators to prepare to overcome many of these challenges.”

Tony Robinson, DOE–Savannah River acting assistant manager for waste disposition, added, “The safety of the SRS workforce is dependent on good training and the ability to perform our jobs well and efficiently. “By employing new technologies like this simulator, it is likely that operators will be better prepared to recognize and respond to challenges they might face. This preparation helps our workforce perform better and with more confidence.”


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