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Russia Renounces Plutonium Production

NUCLEAR, BIOLOGICAL AND CHEMICAL WEAPONS

 

June 24, 2008:  Russia has shut down two of its three plutonium producing nuclear reactors this year. These are special reactors, which together produced about a ton of weapons-grade plutonium each year. That's enough for 100-200 nuclear weapons. In addition, these reactors provide electricity for the isolated (and top secret during Soviet times) Siberian towns they were in. That's why it took so long to shut them down. The Russian government stopped buying the plutonium in the early 1990s and the U.S. (and several other Western nations) put up over a billion dollars to tear down the plutonium producing plants, and replace them with non-nuclear power plants. The third plutonium plant will close in two years, when its non-nuclear replacement is on line.

 

Currently, the U.S. has about 115 tons of weapons grade plutonium on hand, while the Russians have 154 tons. Both nations have agreed to dispose (turn into nuclear plant fuel or lock it away somewhere) 75 tons of that.

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FJV    The Soviets must have invented the term dual use.   6/24/2008 12:54:36 PM
And the RBMK reactors are only for peacefull power generation
 
Source:
"http://www.world-nuclear.org/info/inf31.htm"
 
"The Soviet designed RBMK (high-power channel reactor - reactor bolshoy moshchnosty kanalny) is a pressurised water reactor with individual fuel channels and using ordinary water as its coolant and graphite as its moderator. It is very different from most other power reactor designs as it derived from a design principally for plutonium production and was intended and used in Russia for both plutonium and power production."
 
Source:
"http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RBMK"

"Of the 17 RBMKs built (one is still under construction at the Kursk Nuclear Power Plant), all three surviving reactors at the Chernobyl plant have now been closed (the fourth having been destroyed in the accident) and one of the two reactors at Ignalina in Lithuania has shut down with the second due to close by 2009. [1]. The others built are still operational at Saint Petersburg (4 RBMK-1000), Smolensk (3 RBMK-1000) and Kursk (4 RBMK-1000) [2]."
 
That makes a potential of 17-4-2=11 Plutonium producing reactors by 2009. That's more than 3 if I'm not mistaken.
 
 



 
 
 
Quote    Reply

kisscatman       6/24/2008 9:39:56 PM
Trusting the Russians is dangerous and naive.  We must always be on guard and ready to deliver a devastating retaliatory response to any nuclear attack by them.
KISScatman

 
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