News

The Savannah River Site, run by the U.S. Department of Energy, is looking to hire — and help train — 9,000 new employees over the next five years.
The Department of Energy has awarded a Fluor-led (NYSE: FLR) team a potential $12 billion contract to continue operating and managing the Savannah River Site in South Carolina for the next five years.
Sep. 16—The effort to remove plutonium from the Savannah River Site and South Carolina is ahead of schedule, the Department of Energy announced Tuesday. The department's Office of Environmental ...
Map of Savannah area, showing travelers where the best hotels and attractions are located. Travel. ... The Andrew Low House, on Lafayette Square and near the Savannah River, ...
Employees who worked at the Savannah River Site from Jan. 1, 1953, through Sept. 30, 1972, are entitled to compensation for medical bills caused by exposure to hazardous materials.
SRS Watch is a non-profit public-interest organization located in Columbia, South Carolina, that monitors policies and programs of the U.S. Department of Energy, with a focus on the Savannah River ...
Highly enriched uranium moved from Japan to Y-12, Savannah River Site The Oak Ridger Fulfilling a commitment made at the 2016 Nuclear Security Summit, the U.S. Department of Energy’s National Nuclear ...
ORANGEBURG, S.C. — Orangeburg-Calhoun Technical College has partnered with the Savannah River Mission Completion (SRMC) to offer hands-on training in a new co-op program. The program is designed ...
The Savannah River Site provides the capability for supporting the nuclear weapons stockpile; storing and processing nuclear materials in support of U.S. nuclear nonproliferation initiatives; ...