Turning Russian Nukes into U.S. Energy

bhramos

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In 1993, shortly after the fall of the Soviet Union, the U.S. and the Russian Federation signed a landmark arms-control accord. The "Highly Enriched Uranium (HEU) Purchase Agreement" called for Russia to dismantle thousands of nuclear warheads and convert the weapons-grade uranium in the bombs into fuel for American nuclear-power plants. The agreement is rarely talked about today, but it has been a huge success: Nearly 10% of all electricity in the U.S. is generated by nuclear material taken from the tips of Russian missiles once aimed at American cities.
Think about that: one in every ten lightbulbs in U.S. kitchens, Wal-Marts and baseball stadiums is illuminated by nuclear energy initially designed to obliterate millions of Americans. On Thursday, the U.S. National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA), which monitors the dismantling of Russian weapons on behalf of the U.S. government, announced that the agreement has reached a milestone: Approximately 400 metric tons of Russian highly enriched uranium — the equivalent of around 16,000 nuclear weapons — have now been converted into low-enriched uranium, the form of the element needed to power nuclear reactors. In the vexing effort to rid the world of nuclear weapons, this little-publicized agreement provides arms-control advocates with an inspirational example of success — and a model for how to move forward.
(See "Medvedev and Obama: Sunshine in Moscow.")
"This is one of the most innovative and successful programs devised, and the concept was so simple," says William Potter, Director of the James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies at the Monterey Institute of International Studies. "When Americans turn on their lights at night they are demonstrating the power of nuclear-arms control. I don't think many people appreciate that."
The HEU Purchase Agreement is casually known among arms-control experts as the Megatons to Megawatts program, because nuclear bombs carry the force of millions of tons of dynamite, while power plants can generate millions of watts of electricity. It also falls under a principle elucidated by President Dwight Eisenhower, who, paraphrasing the Bible, suggested that because the binding energy of uranium can be released all at once by bombs (so as to level cities) or over time by powers plants (so as to provide them with electricity), nuclear swords can be beaten into nuclear plowshares.
The deal has been a win-win for both sides. By the time it is complete in 2013, Russia will have earned around $8 billion from American energy company USEC Inc., in return for uranium fuel that USEC has sold on to U.S. reactors for a profit. USEC says that, all told, it will have received the equivalent of 3 billion tons of coal or 10 billion barrels of oil — enough to power the entire U.S. for two years.
(See a brief history of arms control deals.)
Yet it is unlikely that Russia will agree to continue the Purchase Agreement past its expiration in three years' time. It feels that the price it receives from USEC for the uranium is too low, say U.S. officials close to the negotiations. But Russia has expressed interest in dismantling further weapons and selling the uranium on the open market. And U.S. government officials say they are open to amending the agreement accordingly — especially if Russia continues to allow NNSA inspectors to monitor the dismantling of the weapons to ensure the uranium Russia sells does indeed come from warheads.
"We've made no secret that we are interested in pursuing this arrangement beyond 2013," says Mark Whitney, an assistant deputy administrator at the NNSA. "The Russians have said they would prefer the arrangement to be on commercials terms. That's not something that would be excluded by our government."
How many weapons Russia is willing to dismantle, of course, depends on how many it considers to be in excess of its military needs. That figure, in turn, depends on the success of arms-control initiatives such as the recently signed START follow-on treaty, which limits the number of nuclear weapons deployed by both sides and which is currently awaiting ratification by Russian and U.S. legislatures. Plus, the program only works for uranium weapons, as weapons-grade plutonium (the other fissile material used in bombs) can't be as cheaply downblended into reactor fuel. But the central idea — that there is a financial incentive to disarmament — can be a powerful tool to reinvigorate the wider nonproliferation movement.
(See "Is Obama Overselling His Russia Arms Control Deal?")
Matthew Bunn of Harvard University's Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs has suggested that both the U.S. and Russia should offer to sell reactors to countries that wish to develop nuclear-power plants, with a unique sweetener — five years of free low-enriched uranium that's guaranteed to have come from dismantled warheads. Such a plan would provide a public relations boost for the buyer country, help the U.S. and Russia honor their commitment under the Nuclear NonProliferation Treaty to "take effective measures relating to... nuclear disarmament," and bring business to U.S. and Russian companies that sell nuclear technology. It would also avoid a situation in which countries demand the right to enrich their own uranium, which inevitably raises suspicion of illicit weapons programs, as is currently the case with Iran.
And if converting megatons to megawatts can work for the U.S and Russia, there's no reason it can't work elsewhere. Both India and Pakistan wish to increase their nuclear power-generating capacity in the coming years. Imagine what a powerful (and potentially profitable) gesture it would be if Indian power plants used fuel taken from Pakistani weapons.
The goal of the abolition of atomic weaponry is an idealistic one — and all such goals require beautiful ideas to move them forward. When it comes to nuclear weapons, Americans need not look far for such an idea — it could literally be like a lightbulb going off above their heads.


Read more: Turning Russian Nukes into U.S. Energy - TIME
 

anoop_mig25

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good when is america is going to use its own nuclear into use for its electricity needs
 

VersusAllOdds

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Never knew about this, thanks for sharing!
A good deal for the Russians, since they can only make money from weapons and oil/gas.
However, before they choose to sell more nukes into energy they should be aware that they will never again be able to produce nukes. The time of USSR military growth is over, forever. Basically, Russians are sitting on a big stash of leftover weapons, and as the time goes, the gap between their and US military technology grows. I wouldn't advise Russians to sell nukes (the only thing they are relevant as a great power at present) for some pocket money.
 

bhramos

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Why cant Russia use its Nukes to energy for their own country????
 

keshtopatel

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Why cant Russia use its Nukes to energy for their own country????
Just as the reactor fuel can be used in weapons, and vice versa!

Nuclear missiles prepared for destruction at a base near the city of Nizhny Novgorod in Russia

Multiple warhead ballistic missiles like the ones deployed at this site north of Russia's border with Kazakhstan are being dismantled. Some nuclear material goes to the United States.


"It's a great, easy source" of fuel, said Marina V. Alekseyenkova, an analyst at Renaissance Capital and an expert in the Russian nuclear industry that has profited from the arrangement since the end of the cold war.

But if more diluted weapons-grade uranium isn't secured soon, the pipeline could run dry, with ramifications for consumers, as well as some American utilities and their Russian suppliers.

Already nervous about a supply gap, utilities operating America's 104 nuclear reactors are paying as much attention to President Obama's efforts to conclude a new arms treaty as the Nobel Peace Prize committee did.

In the last two decades, nuclear disarmament has become an integral part of the electricity industry, little known to most Americans.
 

neo29

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Lets talk about converting Pakistan's nukes into energy. Pakistan is already facing a very bad energy shortage.
 

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