Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
I have with me today Mr. Richard Côté, vice-president responsible for AECL's isotope business.
Hugh MacDiarmid, AECL's president and CEO, asked me to express his regret at not being able to be here. Hugh is attending his daughter's wedding in Alberta and hopes you will understand his absence.
I would like to give you an update on progress in the repair of the National Research Universal reactor at the Chalk River facility. As you are aware, we continue to conduct ourselves with the greatest possible transparency. We continue to provide proactive disclosure of our progress on a weekly basis. Last Wednesday, we issued our 25th NRU status report, providing full public disclosure on the status of the repair.
In addition, we continue to use our outage website, nrucanada.ca, which provides a wide range of information on the NRU and the repair. To date, we have posted eight videos on the site addressing different aspects of the repair. I recommend the site and the videos to you.
In our outage status updates, we provide guidance on the duration of the shutdown. This guidance continues to be founded on the best evidence available, including the most up-to-date analysis of the inspection data, progress on repair strategies, and critical path requirements for restart after an extended shutdown. At this time, I can assure you that we remain on track to return the reactor to service during the first calendar quarter of 2010.
Our continued progress is due in large part to the talented and dedicated employees at the Chalk River facility and their AECL colleagues in Mississauga. Work on the reactor has continued seven days a week and around the clock since the outage started in May. I also want to recognize the commitment of our vendor partners, like Promation in Mississauga, Ontario, and Liburdi Engineering in Dundas, Ontario. They have worked tirelessly, along with AECL's tooling design and manufacturing groups, to support our efforts in the development and manufacture of numerous first-of-a-kind toolings required during this outage.
To date, well over 20 unique new tools have been created for inspection, cleaning, and repair purposes. The collaboration with these vendors and the integration of AECL's expertise with Canadian and global companies that have other capability in the nuclear field are both impressive and very important to the progress made to date.
For example, as part of tooling development activities, our partners have worked side by side with AECL subject matter experts. AECL staff have relocated to vendor facilities, where they are able to test and qualify equipment and to train using NRU mock-ups located at the vendor premises. Work carried out by Promation and Liburdi facilities is transferred seamlessly to Chalk River for final testing and training using the full-scale NRU mock-up located at Chalk River.
At an earlier session I advised the committee on the three phases of our return to service plan. At this time, I would like to provide an update on our progress in the context of each of those three phases.
The first phase involved the conduct of a condition assessment of the reactor and the selection of a repair technique. That phase was completed at the end of August.
With respect to the repair, we have decided to proceed with a weld buildup technique over six specific locations. Phase two is the implementation of the repair strategy.
As discussed before, the challenge in conducting these repairs is the fact that access to the repair is provided through a 12-centimetre aperture that is a distance of some nine metres away and in a radioactive environment. As I have already mentioned, extensive testing of the repair process and special tools is now under way.
I can also report that as part of the repair process, qualification of the welding process for the newly manufactured repair tools by the Technical Standards and Safety Authority, or TSSA, is nearing completion. Two welding tests completed last week have met TSSA requirements. Further, welding tool qualification and additional welding tests are currently in progress at the vendors' facilities.
In parallel to the current weld qualification activities, preparation of the weld sites is under way. Initial remote cleaning is currently in progress, removing the normal wall-surface buildup that occurs during operation of the reactor. Additional surface preparation is under development. These activities are necessary to prepare the sites for welding. Once the repair is complete and the final inspection confirms results, the third phase of the program will be returning the reactor to service, with the full oversight of the CNSC, the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission. These three phases interlock and overlap to some degree. This approach ensures that we will return the reactor to service as soon as we possibly and safely can during the first quarter of calendar 2010.
I want to mention that my colleague, Richard Côté, is in regular contact with the other isotope producers around the world. Together, producers are making every possible effort to schedule production and planned maintenance outages so that isotope production is maximized and interruptions in supply are minimized.
Before concluding, I want to reiterate our confidence that the NRU will be repaired and that the repair program is the best available option for continued supply of medical isotopes to patients.
Thank you.