Sunday 25 March 2012

Last Enriched Uranium Rumbles Out of Ukraine




KIEV (Reuters) - A consignment of enriched uranium - enough to make a nuclear weapon, according to a U.S. expert - rumbled out of a Ukrainian railway depot late on Saturday bound for Russia, a move designed to coincide with an international summit on nuclear security.

Workers place a container with spent highly-enriched uranium on a train near Kiev
Spent highly enriched uranium being loaded into the containers
The 19 kilograms (42 pounds) of spent highly enriched uranium, loaded in four containers onto rail carriers in a high-security operation, was the last such material to be removed from the ex-Soviet republic under a two-year programme with the United States and Russia.


Nuclear Security Summit in Seoul, South Korea on March 26-27
The completion of the programme was timed to raise the curtain on a March 26-27 nuclear security summit in Seoul, South Korea, to be attended by leaders from 50 countries including U.S. President Barack Obama and Ukraine's Viktor Yanukovich.

The summit will focus on measures to protect nuclear materials and facilities and to prevent illicit trafficking.
"What you are seeing here is enough material to make one nuclear weapon," Andrew Bieniawski, director of the Global Reduction Threat Initiative of the U.S. National Nuclear Security Administration, told Reuters as the containers were loaded under guard at the depot outside Kiev.

Altogether 200 kilograms of weapons-grade material have been removed from Ukraine and sent back to Russia - the originating country - since May 2010.

The material will be delivered to the Mayak reprocessing nuclear facility in Russia's Ural mountains - a rail journey of about five days from Kiev.

Spent fuel rods being stored safely at the Mayak nuclear reprocessing plant


Bieniawski said similar material still had to be removed from NATO allies Czech republic and Hungary, and Vietnam, under programmes with the United States over the next four years.
"Ukraine is the model for future shipments ... We can say the world is safer. If you remove this material you make a country permanently safer because terrorists cannot acquire nuclear material," he said.
The enriched uranium shipped out on Saturday had been used in a reactor at a nuclear research facility in Kiev.
The Seoul conference will provide a rare opportunity for Yanukovich to rub shoulders with Obama and other Western leaders.
He has been left out in the cold by several European Union leaders at international gatherings and chastised by the United States because of the jailing of Ukrainian opposition leader Yulia Tymoshenko on charges of abuse-of-office which Western governments say were politically motivated.

Copyright © 2012 Reuters


~Taken from TheStar on 25/3/2012

2 comments:

  1. better safety yeah..

    ReplyDelete
  2. with the right skill and knowledge, it is possible to have the 1st nuclear power plant in Malaysia =)

    ReplyDelete