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UN to visit Brazil nuclear plant Tuesday RIO DE JANEIRO (AFP) Oct 19, 2004 Three UN experts will Tuesday visit a uranium enrichment plant to see if they can inspect it while reassuring Brazil that trade secrets will not be revealed. "We agreed on the details of the visit, which will allow them to say whether our plant conforms with the blueprints and design information that we sent IAEA before construction," said the local head of the National Nuclear Energy Commission (CNEN), Oldair Gomes dos Santos. Brazil initially refused the International Atomic Energy Agency inspection, claiming that its trade secrets for a new process of uranium enrichment could be compromised if inspectors are allowed to see the plant. On Monday, the sides agreed to look for a way to confirm whether the plant meets IAEA regulations while not allowing the inspectors to see the process itself. IAEA inspectors arrived at the Rio de Janeiro office of the CNEN early Monday. On Tuesday, they are to visit the Resende nuclear plant in Rio de Janeiro state where Brazil enriches uranium. Brazil, which has one of the world's largest uranium reserves, denied IAEA inspectors access to the facility in February and March. "This uranium enrichment process is extremely efficient because it saves a lot of energy," Science and Technology Minister Eduardo Campos told Folha de Sao Paulo in an interview published Monday. "We do not believe it to be necessary (for inspectors) to visually inspect the physical format of the centrifuges and the way they are supported on the floor," Campos told the daily. IAEA inspectors want to ensure that Brazil is respecting the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT). IAEA director general Mohamed ElBaradei has said Brazil should not be an exception to the organization's norms. Uranium enrichment makes fuel for civilian reactors but can also be used to make atomic bombs. The IAEA is mandated under the NPT to make sure member states do not divert nuclear material for military purposes. The US government said in April that it was confident Brazil was not developing nuclear weapons. Earlier this month, US Secretary of State Colin Powell discussed Brazil's nuclear program with President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and said Washington had no proliferation worries. In contrast, the United States has accused Iran of pursuing a nuclear weapons program, and the IAEA has set a November 25 deadline for Iran to suspend uranium enrichment activities and answer all questions about its nuclear ambitions. Campos rejected any comparison between Brazil and Iran or North Korea, which kicked inspectors out of the country in 2002 and claims to have a nuclear weapon. "There is no Iran syndrome" in Brazil, he said in an interview published Monday in Correio Braziliense. "There is no atomic mystery. Brazil does not represent a nuclear threat." CNEN's spokesman, Luis Machado, told AFP the IAEA inspectors had asked that their names not be released and that no press conference was planned. Resende's centrifuges would produce 60 percent of the needs of the Angra I and Angra II electric power plants located 180 kilometers (110 miles) south of Rio, according to Brazilian plans. They would produce two million kilowatts of power. "Monday we will discuss the technical details for the inspection of the three IAEA technicians," Laercio Vihnas, a top official at CNEN, said Friday. "Tuesday there will be a visit at the Resende plant to check whether the practical application of these technical details is possible," he said. All rights reserved. � 2005 Agence France-Presse. Sections of the information displayed on this page (dispatches, photographs, logos) are protected by intellectual property rights owned by Agence France-Presse. As a consequence, you may not copy, reproduce, modify, transmit, publish, display or in any way commercially exploit any of the content of this section without the prior written consent of Agence France-Presse.
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