On the International Fuel Bank

$50 million has been approved by a House committee for an IAEA program to guarantee nuclear fuel to countries that waive their right to fuel cycle facilities. There are a number of things wrong with the concept, however:

1. There’s nothing wrong with fuel cycle facilties, and there are ways to determine whether a dual-use facility (one that can theoretically be used for civilian or military applications) is being used for peaceful purposes. The problem is not the presence of the facilities; it is excess capacity at those facilities. Giving them long-term customers–nuclear power plants–is the only reliable way to ensure that they aren’t used by the military. They can also be designed to not be able to handle weapons-grade material, or more advanced fuel cycles can be used that don’t require enrichment or plutonium recovery. This program codifies the idea that reprocessing is plutonium recovery, which it usually is, but doesn’t have to be. It does not in any way weaken nonproliferation efforts to draw a distinction between them, and actually strengthens them by removing an excuse to have a dual-use facility.
2. Taking existing military facilities and using them for peaceful purposes is a good thing. This program would ask countries to entirely dismantle them.
3. Countries opt for nuclear power largely for security reasons. Gas can be cut off and start causing blackouts within a few hours–but nuclear reactors can be run for up to two years without refueling, so there is no point to cutting off nuclear fuel shipments as a political negotiating tactic. Requiring countries to give up their “stash” of unused fuel and mandating that they maintain a “good record” with an international community dominated by radiophobe politicians or lose their fuel shipments erodes the independence provided by nuclear power. More here.

Link.

Filed under Fuel Cycle, International, Iran, Proliferation, Security and Terrorism

Posted on May 31, 2007 by Stewart Peterson | 0 Comments »

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Iran Update

They haven’t stopped enriching uranium, even under international pressure that seeks to violate their rights under international law; good for them.

According to the IAEA (a real international body, as opposed to the “coalition of the willing”:

1. They haven’t diverted any nuclear material.
2. 2,132 centrifuges are running.
3. If they don’t implement the Additional Protocol to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons, it will be more difficult for the IAEA to find all the information they want. (Not mentioned is the fact that the Iranians were implementing it before we started to threaten them.)

Link.

Filed under International, Iran, Politics and Regulation, Proliferation

Posted on May 26, 2007 by Stewart Peterson | 0 Comments »

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Iran Update

First, it has started to appear around the media that the Non-Aligned Movement (essentially, Third World countries who were not thrilled with taking crap off either the United States or the Soviets) supports Iran’s nuclear power program. This is true, and has been for a while, but as yet had only appeared in the Iranian state media, which nobody pays any attention to (and shouldn’t).

Second, Mohamed ElBaradei has suggested that the Iranian enrichment program be capped instead of stopped. Finally, we have someone with a little bit of sense in this debate; unfortunately, he wants to try to slow down their program, which won’t work. We would suggest that they be assured of some customers–probably domestic ones–so that the enrichment facility would be in use and could’t be diverted.

Link.

Filed under International, Iran, Politics and Regulation, Proliferation

Posted on May 20, 2007 by Stewart Peterson | 0 Comments »

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EU Sanctions Iran; Russians Sign Agreement to Complete Bushehr Unit 1

That’s totally the wrong approach to take on the EU’s part, which I’ve said over and over.

So I guess the Russians have got the contract for the next two, as well, although this is about the third time they’ve signed an agreement to complete Bushehr Unit 1.

Link.

Filed under International, Iran, New Build, Proliferation

Posted on April 24, 2007 by Stewart Peterson | 0 Comments »

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Israeli PM on Iranian Nuclear Program

While it may be possible to “stop it peacefully,” it is also possible to keep this prestige project (which is very important to the national pride of Iran and thus unlikely to be simply abandoned) going peacefully.

It is however good to hear that cooler heads might prevail; at least their voices are being heard. Bombing Iran is not the answer for anyone but right-wing nuts.

Filed under International, Iran, Proliferation

Posted on April 22, 2007 by Stewart Peterson | 0 Comments »

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Iranians Leaked Palo Verde Operator Training Materials

Whoopty-doo.

Filed under Industry Performance, Iran, Missing the Point

Posted on April 21, 2007 by Stewart Peterson | 0 Comments »

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Iran’s Reactor Announcement

They’ve announced an international tender for two light-water reactors.

Light-water reactors are simply tanks of ordinary water with uranium rods suspended in them. They are fairly safe; the water increases the reaction rate and is also the coolant, so if you drain the coolant, the reactor physically doesn’t work any more. Three Mile Island was a light-water reactor; Chernobyl was not (it was in fact a bomb factory), and that is the reason why TMI didn’t become Chernobyl.
Light-water reactors are also very proliferation-resistant, and that is why I call on people to support allowing their country’s manufacturers to bid on these plants. Light-water reactors, far from being a proliferation risk, have negative proliferation value. They do this by requiring the services of enrichment plants. An enrichment plant can theoretically produce weapons-grade uranium if constructed and configured correctly (basically, highly-enriched uranium can go critical in some plants that were not designed to produce it), but if that same enrichment plant is entirely occupied with enough low-enriched uranium orders from light-water reactors, it cannot produce any highly-enriched uranium even if it were theoretically capable of doing so. Iran is currently accused of using an enrichment plant for those purposes; enough light-water reactors, with a mandate for the Iranians to provide the fuel, would give the Natanz enrichment facility the proliferation value of a steel foundry.
A common objection to the “negative proliferation value” thesis is plutonium reprocessing. Plutonium reprocessing is similar to an outdated fuel recycling method developed in the 1950s, and is a chemical process used to extract plutonium from spent nuclear fuel for use in nuclear weapons. Attempts to manufacture nuclear weapons out of material from light-water reactors failed, however, since the fuel is left in too long for the plutonium to be useful (the reactor converts the lightest common type of plutonium, which works in bombs, to a slightly heavier type, which does not). There are two other problems with plutonium reprocessing of light-water reactors’ spent fuel:
1. It may be theoretically possible to enrich the plutonium in the lighter weapons-grade material using a uranium enrichment facility. This has never been tried, for a good reason: weapons-grade plutonium has a dramatically lower critical mass than weapons-grade uranium, so introducing it into an enrichment facility could cause a criticality accident, depending on the design, and uranium enrichment facilities are not designed to handle reactor-grade plutonium’s weight distribution. There might be a uranium enrichment plant design where this works, but it’s not likely. If that’s not good enough:
2. The other problem with enriching plutonium from light-water reactors is that light-water reactors use more fissile material than they produce. In other words, the light-water reactor has less plutonium in it than the type of uranium that a uranium enrichment facility concentrates. Thus, it’s just not worth it to try–you might as well make a uranium weapon, and they’re easier to build, too. Be reminded that the plutonium-enrichment scenario also requires that the Natanz plant be taken out of service for an extended length of time to be reconfigured, and would be unavailable to produce low-enriched uranium to feed the light-water reactors while it was doing both the reconfiguring and the plutonium enrichment. So it flunks both tests–the availability requirement, and the physics requirement.
To answer another common objection, no, they could not simply shut down the light-water reactors afterward and reconfigure the facility. The lights would go out–the Iranian grid is too small to absorb the loss of the five to six gigawatts of power that would be generated by enough light-water reactors to use Natanz’s enrichment capacity.
And yes, Israel built its atomic bombs from a light-water research reactor’s plutonium–because they didn’t have an enrichment facility, and the research reactor provides access to the fuel rods while the reactor is running, so that they can be taken out without shutting the reactor down. A light-water power reactor–what the Iranians want to buy–does not allow access to the fuel rods while the reactor is running; in order to take them out before the plutonium inside them is useless for bombs, they would have to shut the reactors down frequently, which they cannot do without causing internationally obvious power outages. And if they did shut them down frequently, they would require more fuel–which Natanz is not capable of providing.

Details, details.

People want to believe that the Iranians, because they are Iranians, will do something bad with these reactors. But done right, they will slow down any speculated Iranian bomb program and quite possibly stop it. The light-water reactor, used in a nuclear power plant (as the Iranians propose), has less than zero military value. Selling the Iranians as many as they want helps everyone involved, including the American, French, Japanese, or Russian companies that get construction experience. There is currently a trade ban that would prevent American companies from selling the Iranians light-water reactors, but I believe that this is an exception that needs to be made; it would enhance American security by killing or dramatically handicapping the Iranians’ capacity to make an atomic bomb. I am of course under no illusions that this will happen; George Bush isn’t thinking that far ahead.

Building an atomic bomb of any type is just a little bit trickier than the political hacks will have you think. Transparently false uranium enrichment allegations led us to the Iraq war. I sure hope it doesn’t lead us to another one.

Filed under International, Iran, New Build, Politics and Regulation, Practical Problems, Proliferation

Posted on April 20, 2007 by Stewart Peterson | 0 Comments »

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Iran Enrichment Update

They have successfully enriched uranium at an industrial scale.

Now let’s sell them a couple of nuclear power plants to use said enriched uranium. It’s a win-win situation for the Iranian environment, American companies, and both nations’ security.

They have noted that the financing problems at Bushehr have been resolved; the reason for the latest delay in completion is given to be differences between the Russian plant design and the partially-completed German plant that is being modified.

Filed under International, Iran

Posted on April 20, 2007 by Stewart Peterson | 0 Comments »

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Weekly Nuclear Poll #13

Here or in the sidebar:

Do you support allowing your country’s manufacturers to bid on Iran’s international tender for two reactors?
Yes
Only if it’s light-water reactors
Only if it’s not RBMKs
Only if it appears that the Russians might get the contract
Only if it’s my employer
Only if it’s under safeguards
Some combination of option 6 and one choice from 2-5
Under no circumstances
This poll is confusing
Other/Undecided

View Vote Stats
Discuss this Poll

Filed under International, Iran, New Build, Politics and Regulation

Posted on April 16, 2007 by Stewart Peterson | 0 Comments »

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Submarine Collision Update

The Iranians are complaining that the USS Newport News, which collided with a Japanese oil tanker a while back, “released radiation into the Gulf.”

Here’s a hint: if it had sustained damage severe enough to make it release anything, it probably would no longer work. I was never in the Navy and hope never to be, but I’m not aware of a light-water reactor that can operate with severe core damage. If I’m wrong, please comment.

I suspect that this is simply another example of guilt by association; to some people, if somebody stubs their toe at a nuclear facility, it must always involve a radioactive release.

Link.

Filed under Environment, International, Iran, Safety

Posted on April 15, 2007 by Stewart Peterson | 0 Comments »

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