Tritium on Ice: The Dangerous New Alliance of Nuclear Weapons and Nuclear Power

Couverture
MIT Press, 17 sept. 2004 - 244 pages
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The dangers of a United States government plan to abandon its fifty-year policy of keeping civilian and military uses of nuclear technology separate.

In December 1998, Energy Secretary Bill Richardson announced that the U.S. planned to begin producing tritium for its nuclear weapons in commercial nuclear power plants. This decision overturned a fifty-year policy of keeping civilian and military nuclear production processes separate. Tritium, a radioactive form of hydrogen, is needed to turn A-bombs into H-bombs, and the commercial nuclear power plants that are to be modified to produce tritium are called ice condensers. This book provides an insider's perspective on how Richardson's decision came about, and why it is dangerous. Kenneth Bergeron shows that the new policy is unwise not only because it undermines the U.S. commitment to curb nuclear weapons proliferation but also because it will exacerbate serious safety problems at these commercial power facilities, which are operated by the Tennessee Valley Authority and are among the most marginal in the United States. The Nuclear Regulatory Commission's review of the TVA's request to modify its plants for the new nuclear weapons mission should attract significant attention and opposition.

Tritium on Ice is part expose, part history, part science for the lay reader, and part political science. Bergeron's discussion of how the issues of nuclear weapons proliferation and nuclear reactor safety have become intertwined illuminates larger issues about how the federal government does or does not manage technology in the interests of its citizens and calls into question the integrity of government-funded safety assessments in a deregulated economy.

 

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Table des matières

A Covenant Breached
1
Wars Child The Birth and Nurture of Civilian Nuclear Energy
15
Nuclear Reactor Safety Confidence versus Vigilance
35
Nuclear Nonproliferation The Devil Is in the Details
77
Tritium the Lifeblood of the Nuclear Arsenal
95
Tennessee Waltz
141
Whats the Rush?
165
Appendix A Analysis of Public Comments on the DOEs Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement on Tritium Supply and Recycling
175
Appendix B Interagency Review of the Nonproliferation Implications of Alternative Tritium Production Technologies under Consideration by the De...
181
Appendix C Critique of Interagency Review
195
Appendix D Glossary
205
Notes on Epigraphs
209
Notes
211
Bibliography
229
Index
231
Droits d'auteur

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Expressions et termes fréquents

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Page 195 - special nuclear material' means (1) plutonium, uranium enriched in the isotope 233 or in the isotope 235, and any other material which the Commission, pursuant to the provisions of section 51, determines to be special nuclear material, but does not include source material ; or (2) any material artificially enriched by any of the foregoing, but does not include source material.
Page 1 - We of this nation, desirous of helping to bring peace to the world and realizing the heavy obligations upon us arising from our possession of the means of producing the bomb and from the fact that it is part of our armament, are prepared to make our full contribution toward effective control of atomic energy. When an adequate system for control of atomic energy, including...
Page 186 - byproduct material' means (1) any radioactive material (except special nuclear material) yielded in or made radioactive by exposure to the radiation incident to the process of producing or utilizing special nuclear material, and (2) the tailings or wastes produced by the extraction or concentration of uranium or thorium from any ore processed primarily for its source material content.
Page 35 - To prevent nuclear accidents as serious as Three Mile Island, fundamental changes will be necessary in the organization, procedures, and practices — and above all — in the attitudes of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission and, to the extent that the institutions we investigated are typical, of the nuclear industry.
Page 32 - I have decided that the United States should no longer regard reprocessing of used nuclear fuel to produce plutonium as a necessary and inevitable step in the nuclear fuel cycle...
Page 214 - Theoretical Possibilities and Consequences of Major Accidents in Large Nuclear Power Plants" USAEC Report WASH-740, March 1957.
Page 4 - Atoms of the same element that contain the same number of protons but a different number of neutrons are called isotopes.
Page 18 - I shared fully and tried to inculcate in others, that somehow or other the discovery that had produced so terrible a weapon had to have an important peaceful use. Such a sentiment is far from ignoble. . . . Everyone . . . wanted to establish that there is a beneficial use of this great discovery. We were grimly determined to prove that this discovery was not just a weapon.
Page 184 - Many organizations were involved, including the National Security Council, the Department of Defense, the Department of State and...

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À propos de l'auteur (2004)

Kenneth D. Bergeron is an Albuquerque-based writer who specializes in social and political aspects of science and technology. For twenty-five years he worked at Sandia National Laboratories in Albuquerque, primarily on the safety of commercial nuclear reactors and the military reactors used to produce tritium for nuclear weapons.

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