Didcot Power Station Missing: Search For Three Men's Bodies To Resume After Demolition

'There has been quite a lot of criticism about delays'.
Flowers at Didcot Power Station after the accident
Flowers at Didcot Power Station after the accident
Steve Parsons/PA Wire

Search efforts for the three men killed in the Didcot power station collapse resumed today when the remainder of the building was demolished.

Demolition workers Ken Cresswell, 57, and John Shaw, 61, both from Rotherham, South Yorkshire and Chris Huxtable, 34, from Swansea, were trapped under 20,000 tonnes of rubble when the structure unexpectedly crumbled on February 23.

Four people died in the disaster, but only one body, that of Mick Collings, 53, has been recovered so far. It is still unknown what the causes of the tragedy were.

The coffin arrives at the funeral of Mick Collings, who died in the Didcot accident
The coffin arrives at the funeral of Mick Collings, who died in the Didcot accident
Owen Humphreys/PA Wire

A remote demolition brought down the remainder of the decommissioned site shortly before 6am, in a unique operation that will make use of 10 remote-controlled robots.

The building - which was due for demolition when it partially collapsed - was too unstable to be approached and a 50-metre exclusion zone was set up around what is left of the building.

The 11 plastic explosives attached to the structure were detonated and, once, the site is considered safe, teams will be deployed to resume searching the remnants of the plant for the first time since May.

Roland Alford, who is the explosives contractor at the power station, said the four-month delay in completing the demolition was necessary on safety grounds.

He told the Press Association on Saturday: “There has been quite a lot of criticism about delays, questioning why it has taken so long to get to this point, but the fact is nothing like this has ever been attempted before and this is not a simple demolition.

“We have been working on it night and day since March and built up quite a sizeable team of very expert people to work on this, to come up with the charges, the methods of doing it and training.”

The demolition this morning
The demolition this morning
David Hedges SWNS.com
An aerial view of the station after the collapse
An aerial view of the station after the collapse
Steve Parsons/PA Wire

He added: “It was almost unthinkable to send people to work underneath there and place charges, given the fact the building could come down at any moment - you legally can’t justify that.”

Robots of a variety of sizes will carry out some of the work deemed to be too unsafe for humans, a number of which can be controlled remotely using a sophisticated camera set up.

Roads and trains will be halted in the surrounding area while the demolition takes place.

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