Return of the HB Line at SRS

March 11, 2026, 5:02PMNuclear News
The HB Line facility at SRS is located on top of the H Canyon chemical separations facility. (Photo: DOE)

The Department of Energy is bringing the HB Line facility at the Savannah River Site back on line to recycle surplus plutonium and produce uranium-plutonium mixed oxide (MOX) fuel for advanced reactors.

Restarting the facility will be a multiyear process and will yield opportunities for increased domestic production of isotopes with scientific and commercial value. The DOE said that once operational, the HB Line will accelerate the Office of Environmental Management’s plutonium disposition mission by 10 to 13 years while reducing the existing cost.

“We are restoring a unique capability that will accelerate our mission, strengthen the domestic nuclear industrial base, and deliver fuel the country needs to power advanced reactors,” said DOE-EM Assistant Secretary Tim Walsh.

History: Built in the early 1980s for plutonium-238 production for the nation’s deep space exploration program, the HB Line also performed operations for producing and processing plutonium and neptunium oxides. The facility is part of H Canyon, the only chemical separations facility of its kind in the United States.

The DOE ordered the HB Line shut down in 2018, and it was placed in reversible shutdown status in 2020. The tasks for shutdown included deinventorying and flushing the facility’s product and cold chemical lines, dispositioning legacy plutonium and uranium materials stored and previously used at the facility, and laying up support systems that were no longer needed. In 2025, the facility was continuing steps to deinventory some unique items that remained and announced the removal of Y-12 uranium that had been in storage at the facility since 2008.

“Savannah River Site has been integral to America’s nuclear mission for more than 70 years, and HB Line is one of the unique capabilities the site has to offer,” said Edwin Deshong, Savannah River Operations Office manager. “Our workforce has the expertise, experience, and dedication to execute the mission safely and successfully.”


Related Articles

DOE releases 2025 NEUP and NSUF funding

March 6, 2026, 1:06PMNuclear News

On March 3, the Department of Energy announced the release of $52.8 million in funds through the Nuclear Energy University Program (NEUP) and the Nuclear Science User Facilities (NSUF)...

Washington legislators look to nuclear

February 26, 2026, 7:19AMNuclear News

It has been an unusually busy week in the world of West Coast nuclear legislative momentum. In California, a bill is aiming to effectively repeal the state’s nuclear moratorium, while in...

Hanford exhaust stack demolished

February 24, 2026, 1:12PMNuclear News

The Department of Energy’s Office of Environmental Management recently announced that, with the help of contractor Central Plateau Cleanup Company, it has completed the safe demolition of...

Ward250 reactor rides cargo to Utah

February 18, 2026, 9:42AMNuclear News

A public-private partnership between the Departments of Defense and Energy and Valar Atomics marked a milestone over the weekend when Valar’s Ward250 microreactor was transported (without...