Wednesday, February 15, 2006

Bush budget seeks to recycle spent nuclear fuel

Science News Article Reuters.co.uk

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President George W. Bush asked the U.S. Congress on Monday for $250 million in research funds to restart a controversial program that would reprocess spent nuclear fuel.
The United States abandoned the technology in the 1970s because it was too expensive and there was fear terrorist groups or rogue nations could get access to the plutonium and make nuclear bombs.
However, the administration said it wants to phase-out the old recycling methods that separated plutonium from the spent fuel and created a nuclear proliferation risk.
Using new technology, the plutonium would "remain bound" with other highly radioactive materials, making it less useful for nuclear weapons and reducing security concerns, according to the administration.
The money for its "Global Nuclear Energy Partnership" was included in the administration proposed budget for the 2007 spending year. The program would be part of the Energy Department.
Under the recycling program, the administration said the United States would partner with other countries, such as Russia, France and the United Kingdom, to establish the infrastructure necessary to supply nuclear fuel to other nations.
U.S. Energy Secretary Sam Bodman said the plan "brings the promise of virtually limitless energy to emerging economies around the globe, in an environmentally friendly manner while reducing the threat of nuclear proliferation."
The United States and the European Union are concerned that Iran's plan to enrich uranium could result in its development of nuclear weapons. Iran denies this, saying it wants the uranium to fuel nuclear power plants.
NUCLEAR WASTE
The administration said its plan would eliminate the need for foreign countries to build their own uranium enrichment and recycling facilities, because the United States and its partners could send those countries the nuclear fuel they need to run plants for electricity generation.
The recycling plan would also reduce the thousands of tons of nuclear waste sitting at U.S. nuclear power plants and encourage the building of more reactors to expand domestic electricity supplies, the administration said.
The amount of commercial spent nuclear fuel destined for disposal at the Yucca Mountain storage site near Las Vegas would be reduced by 80 percent under the program, the White House said.
Reprocessing separates uranium and plutonium from spent fuel so the elements could be used further.
Twelve of the 33 nations that generate electricity from nuclear power plants practice reprocessing, but it has not been done in the United States for more than 20 years, according to the Nuclear Energy Institute trade group.
President Jimmy Carter banned reprocessing because of concerns it could spread nuclear weapons. President Ronald Reagan lifted the ban and President Bill Clinton reinstated it.
The administration said it would pursue creating a permanent nuclear waste storage site at Yucca Mountain, where the used reprocessed spent fuel would be sent. The 2007 budget includes $545 million for the storage project.
Separately, the administration proposed spending $54 million to help the country's major utilities make it feasible to order the first new U.S. nuclear power plant by 2009 and have it in operation by 2014. Energy companies have not placed an order for a nuclear power plant in three decades.

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