US nuclear might rests on civil reactors
Experts
say there can be no US nuclear might without a large civil atomic
industry to prop up the military.
23
August, 2017
LONDON,
23 August, 2017 –
American experts say that US nuclear might depends crucially on
the civilian use of atomic energy, and believe the country will lose
its place as the world’s nuclear superpower if it does not support
its nuclear industry.
The
link between the civil nuclear industry and the military’s ability
to maintain its nuclear weapons capability is spelt out in a report
by experts close to the Pentagon.
It
states openly that tritium,
an essential component of nuclear weapons, is
manufactured in civilian reactors for military use. It also says that
civilian reactors are needed to produce highly enriched uranium.
The
Washington-based Energy
Futures Initiative report, says
that Russia and China, which are both building civil nuclear stations
outside their national borders, will overtake America both
in influence and ability to deliver a nuclear threatunless
steps are taken to prop up the civil nuclear programme at home.
False claim
This
is the first time that the dependence of nuclear weapons states on
their civil nuclear programmes has been so clearly spelt out.
Governments, particularly the United Kingdom’s, have repeatedly
claimed there is no connection between the civil and military nuclear
industries, but this report makes clear that is not the case.
It
says: “The Naval Nuclear Propulsion Program is comprised of
military and civilian personnel who design, build, operate, maintain
and manage the nearly one hundred reactors that power US aircraft
carriers and submarines and provide training and research services.
“The
program is operated jointly by the Department of Energy and the US
Navy. Nuclear reactors provide the Navy with the mobility,
flexibility and endurance required to carry out its global mission.
More powerful reactors are beginning to be employed on the new Ford
class aircraft carriers and will enable the new Columbia class of
submarines in the next decades.
“A
strong domestic supply chain is needed to provide for nuclear Navy
requirements.
Clear dependence
“This
supply chain has an inherent and very strong overlap with the
commercial nuclear energy sector.
“This
supply chain for meeting the critical national security need for
design and operation of Navy reactors includes a workforce trained in
science and engineering, comprised of US citizens who qualify for
security clearances.
“The
Navy will (also) eventually need additional highly enriched uranium
(HEU) to fuel its reactors for long intervals between refueling.
Because of the national security use and the sensitivity of HEU
production, the entire supply chain from uranium feed to the
enrichment technology must be of United States origin.
“There
is currently no such domestic capability in the supply chain. The
relatively lengthy time period required to stand up such a capability
raises serious, near-term concerns about the US capacity to meet this
critical national security need.
Non-stop demand
“The
nuclear weapons stockpile requires a constant source of tritium (half
life about 12.5 years), provided by irradiating special fuel rods in
one or two commercial power reactors. As with the Navy HEU
requirements, the tritium must be supplied from US-origin reactors
using domestically produced LEU reactor fuel.
“Once
again, we do not have the long-term capability to meet this need
because of the absence of an enrichment facility using US-origin
technology. This is a glaring hole in the domestic nuclear supply
chain, since the only enrichment facility in the United States today
uses Urenco (European)
technology to supply power reactor fuel.”
The
report also spells out that the companies that supply the shrinking
civil nuclear reactor programme are the same firms that provide the
components and enriched uranium to keep the Navy’s
nuclear-propelled vessels in full operational order.
The
report says: “A shrinking commercial enterprise will have long term
spillover effects on the Navy supply chain, including by lessened
enthusiasm among American citizens to pursue nuclear technology
careers.”
Unappealing option
The
report goes on to detail how the number of American citizens taking
higher education nuclear energy qualifications is becoming too small
to sustain the industry. If only military nuclear options were
available for a career path, this might prove even less attractive to
the younger generation. It fears there would not be enough qualified
American people with security clearance to support the military.
“The
picture is clear: a stabilized existing reactor fleet and new builds,
perhaps incentivized by the favorable emissions characteristics of
nuclear power, will be needed to rebuild a supply chain that will
underpin both clean energy and national security success,” the
report concludes.
Britain
decided in 2002 after an
objective inquiry by the government’s Performance and Innovation
Unit (PIU) that
nuclear was becoming too expensive and renewables were a better
alternative for generating electricity.
However,
quite unexpectedly, in 2005, after a secretive review under the
premiership of Tony Blair, the
policy was reversed and
the UK government announced a revival of the nuclear industry.
“With renewable costs tumbling and the international nuclear industry in growing crisis, it is becoming ever more difficult to carry on concealing this key underlying military reason for attachment to civil nuclear power”
Corresponding
with this unprecedented U-turn on civil nuclear power was an equally
unprecedented intensification in efforts to preserve nuclear skills
for the military sector. Many millions of pounds have been given in
government grants since that time to set up nuclear training
programmes.
The Oxford
Research Group (ORG),
a UK think tank, published a two-part report, entitled Sustainable
Security.
Both parts examined the
prospects of the UK’s Trident nuclear programme influencing its
energy policy.
The
ORG concluded that the government realised it could not sustain
its own nuclear weapons programme, or more particularly its
nuclear-propelled submarine fleet, without a large and complementary
civilian nuclear industry.
Commenting
on the release of the American report on the military crisis being
caused by the lack of civilian power projects, Andrew Stirling,
professor of science and technology policy at the School of Business,
University of Sussex, UK, said: “With renewable costs tumbling and
the international nuclear industry in growing crisis, it is becoming
ever more difficult to carry on concealing this key underlying
military reason for attachment to civil nuclear power.”
Strange similarity
In
the last year the UK government has been trying to generate interest
in an alternative civilian nuclear programme. It has encouraged a
competition to developsmall
modular reactors.
These
reactors are supposed to be dotted around the countryside to power
small towns. There are a number of designs, but some are remarkably
similar to the power generators for nuclear submarines, particularly
those that will be needed for the UK’s so-called independent
nuclear deterrent – the Trident programme.
It
is no coincidence that the frontline developer of both these kinds of
reactors is Rolls-Royce, which has a workforce that seamlessly
crosses over between military and civilian developments.
Despite
the fact that these reactors might create considerable public
opposition if they were placed anywhere near homes, no public
consultation has been carried out, and none of these matters has ever
been debated in the UK Parliament.
–Climate
News Network
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