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- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive
- Path: sparky!uunet!gumby!wupost!mont!pencil.cs.missouri.edu!daemon
- From: World Perspectives <worldpnews@igc.apc.org>
- Subject: Japan: What's the plutonium for?
- Message-ID: <1992Nov6.010559.22114@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
- Followup-To: alt.activism.d
- Originator: daemon@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Sender: news@mont.cs.missouri.edu
- Nntp-Posting-Host: pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Organization: ?
- Date: Fri, 6 Nov 1992 01:05:59 GMT
- Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Lines: 95
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- /* Written 4:33 pm Nov 5, 1992 by worldpnews@igc.apc.org in igc:worldp.samples */
- /* ---------- "Japan: What's the plutonium for?" ---------- */
- From WORLD PERSPECTIVES. Box 3074, Madison, WI 53704
-
-
- JAPAN
- The following are highlights from R. Australia's One World:
-
- Japan and France have agreed on the shipment of reprocessed
- plutonium to Japan. There's little insight into why Japan sees
- plutonium as such an important part of its future energy supplies.
- There has been little discussion about the issue of plutonium
- stockpiling, which could lead to nuclear weapons production.
-
- Japan made a policy decision in the 1950 to use plutonium as a
- future energy source. At the time, it was considered that uranium
- and oil would always be expensive. Plutonium offered the hope of
- more self-sufficiency. This is because it could be retrieved and
- use fuel rods from conventional uranium thermal reactors and
- eventually used in so-called "fast breeding" reactors which produce
- further plutonium in their energy creating process.
-
- In the 1970's, Japan began a 40-year plutonium recycling program.
- In the 1990's, Japan still seems interested in following the
- plutonium power even though some critics consider it to be
- infeasible.
-
- Extracting plutonium from spent fuel is a commercial business,
- monitored under the provisions of the nuclear non-proliferation
- treaty by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). The
- critical mass of plutonium that will start off the fast breeding
- plant in Japan is at this moment waiting in northern France. It is
- also at the Sellefield plant in the north of England, waiting to be
- reprocessed by British nuclear plants. If everything goes according
- to plan, more than a third of Sellefield's plutonium will come from
- Japan's power utilities.
-
- Jean Solley(?) used to work near Sellefield. Now she is the nuclear
- campaigns coordinator for Greenpeace, Australia: "Sellefield is one
- of the world's largest nuclear processing plants, where the spent
- nuclear fuel from a rector is taken and broken down to its
- constituent parts, including plutonium. On a day-to-day basis, it's
- the reprocessing that is the highest danger, basically because it's
- a more routinely polluting part of the nuclear fuel cycle.
-
- "The plutonium is being dumped in very large amounts in the Irish
- Sea, and children living there have a very high rate of leukemia."
-
- Adds Paul Leventhal of the Nuclear Control Institute in Washington:
- "I don't believe that if we have atom bomb materials circulating
- freely in world commerce, that over time we can get away with no
- catastrophic consequences. The kind of catastrophic consequences
- we're talking about here is the loss of a city or blackmail by
- terrorist organizations or a state that acquires this material and
- has incredible coercive leverage as a result of it. As we know from
- history, the world changes rather radically and unexpectedly and we
- go from peaceful times to warlike times and back again to peaceful
- times. What we don't want to have is a lot of atom bomb material
- lying around, which could rapidly be converted into weapons if
- circumstances once again change for the worse.
-
- "There is no debate really in the technical community that any form
- of plutonium, including the kind that is created in nuclear power
- reactors, can be made into weapons. We have among out advisors to
- the Nuclear Control Institute the former head of nuclear weapons
- design at the Los Alamos national laboratory for a quarter of a
- century, and he's got a paper for us in which this point is being
- made absolutely clear. In fact, this stuff is so potent that even
- if from a design standpoint it's not ideal weapons material, even
- the fizzle yields 1,000 tons of TNT. If it performs to its so-
- called "nominal yield," then it has a Nagasaki-type yield of 20,000
- tons of TNT."
-
- "Another reason why Japan should not be shipping a lot of plutonium
- from spent fuel and injecting it into commerce is that now that the
- US and the former Soviet Union are dismantling their weapons,
- what's coming out of these weapons in addition to plutonium is
- highly enriched uranium, in enormous quantities. That highly
- enriched uranium can be blended down with natural uranium to become
- low-enriched uranium and is perfectly suitable as a fuel for
- reactors. It is the ideal fuel for reactors. It is the Soviet
- highly-enriched uranium that Japan should be buying up as a future
- contingency reserve, while with plutonium, what the Japanese should
- be doing is sending their excess plutonium to Russia to be mixed in
- with the weapons plutonium and that in turn mixed with high-level
- radio-active waste and buried deep in the ground. (11/4)
-
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