. Military Space News .
US To Remove 200 Tonnes Of Highly Enriched Uranium From US Weapons Stockpile

According to the plan, about 160 tonnes of HEU will be provided to the US Navy, for use in naval ship power propulsion and some 20 tonnes will be reserved for space and research reactors.
Washington (AFP) Nov 07, 2005
US Energy Secretary Samuel Bodman said Monday that up to 200 tonnes of highly enriched uranium would be removed from the US weapons stockpile to prepare the material for use in the navy, space programs and civilian sectors.

The 200 tonnes of highly enriched uranium (HEU) represents the "largest amount ever removed" and is the equivalent of 8,000 nuclear warheads, Bodman said.

He made the announcement while addressing the 2005 Carnegie International Nonproliferation Conference in Washington, marking the 60th anniversary of the first official nonproliferation proposal.

According to the plan, about 160 tonnes of HEU will be provided to the US Navy, for use in naval ship power propulsion and some 20 tonnes will be reserved for space and research reactors.

A final 20 tonnes will be down-blended, or diluted, to low enriched uranium for eventual use in civilian nuclear power reactors and research reactors, he said. Downblending eliminates the uranium's potential usefulness to terrorists.

"This 20 tonnes will help extend the peaceful benefits of nuclear energy," he said.

The removal of the HEU from the weapons stockpile will occur in the coming decades, the energy department said in a statement.

"The project represents the largest amount of special nuclear material to be removed from the stockpile in the history of the nuclear weapons program," the energy department said.

It said the decision addresses the future use of HEU that becomes available from nuclear weapons dismantlements and from significant reductions in the nuclear weapons stockpile, as directed by President George W. Bush in May 2004, it noted.

"The president's decision to reduce the nuclear weapons stockpile by nearly half -- to the smallest size since the (President Dwight) Eisenhower administration -- enables us to dispose of a significant amount of weapons-grade uranium," Bodman said in the statement.

"This is material that will never again be a part of a nuclear weapon."

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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U.S. Works With China On Nuke Security
Beijing (UPI) Nov 1, 2005
Linton Brooks, administrator of the Department of Energy's nuclear security watchdog told reporters Tuesday about a groundbreaking project in Sino-U.S. cooperation.



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