Title: Proliferation%20Issues%20and%20Fuel%20Cycles
1Proliferation Issues and Fuel Cycles
- Phillip Finck
- Associate Laboratory Director for Nuclear Science
and Technology - September 30, 2009
2On the First Hand
- Nuclear energy is a critical component of an
integrated greenhouse gas emission solution - Nuclear energy is again expanding worldwide
- More and different types of materials in more
locations - New technologies and new strategies in more
locations - Recent examples demonstrate the need for caution
3On the Other Hand
- President Obama has stated that while we must
harness the power of nuclear energy on behalf of
our efforts to combat climate change, and to
advance opportunity for all people nuclear
terrorism is the most immediate and extreme
threat to global security. (Prague, April 5,
2009). - No technical silver bullet
- Risk is very hard (maybe impossible) to measure,
or even compare for a single technology or an
integrated system - Current international regimes are strong but
limited
4Lessons Learned
- The old approach (i.e., technology push, a
posteriori fixes) probably wont be sufficient
Need to protect materials, facilities, sensitive
technologies, and expertise through integrated
development of fuel cycle options.
5Some Technical Possibilities
- Safeguards by Design
- More accurate, faster, and better integrated
measurement techniques - Co-location of facilities
- Unseparated materials
- Very long-lived fuels (and cores)
- Reinforced international regimes
- Novel international regimes
6Integrated Program Composed of Four Key Elements
Understanding, limiting and managing risks for
integrated fuel cycle options
Safeguards and Security Technologies and Systems
Nuclear energy technologies and systems
Frameworks and Institutions
Source S. Scott, Los Alamos National
Laboratory (unclassified presentation)