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MarketNeutral
13th April 2010, 01:03 PM
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/us_and_americas/article7095705.ece

Chile has given up President Pinochet’s secret hoard of highly enriched uranium, boosting US efforts to secure volatile stockpiles worldwide.

The transfer of Chile’s uranium to the United States was completed at the end of last month, just after the country was struck by a huge earthquake.

The material arrived in South Carolina after a two-and-a-half-week sea voyage in a double-hulled ship.

Andrew Bieniawski, deputy administrator at the US National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA), which oversaw the operation, said that when the earhtquake had shaken his Santiago hotel room on February 27 his first thought was for the 40lb (18kg) of highly enriched uranium that had been packed into special containers, ready for its secret voyage.

The team was unable to contact one of the two sites where the uranium was being stored,so the head of Chile’s Nuclear Energy Commission, Fernando Lopez-Lizana, had to drive there himself.

The container was unharmed, but the exit route was impassable, forcing the team to weave their way to the nearest functioning port, an eight-hour night-time journey made even more perilous by aftershocks.

“We are happy to see it go,” Mr Lopez said. “To put it in a safe place is valuable for everybody... we want to make this a safer world.”

Like many countries, Chile acquired its uranium through a strategy aimed at preventing proliferation.

Over several decades under the so-called Atoms for Peace programme, states already in the nuclear club offered a deal to those eyeing membership: they would distribute highly enriched uranium provided it was used only for research and not weapons.

About 44,000lb of uranium was distributed to 50 countries from Jamaica to Vietnam.

Chile received its highly enriched uranium from the US, France and Britain in the 1970s and 80s.

General Pinochet opened two nuclear reactors in 1974 and 1977. The second – Lo Aguirre – raised suspicions about the dictator’s nuclear intentions.

But the generals finally shelved the military’s nuclear programme as too costly, and the reactor has lain inactive for more than a decade. Its control room, now in civilian hands, is frozen in time, with outmoded computers and indicator panels.

Often poorly guarded, at least 1,500lb of the Atoms for Peace uranium has yet to be retrieved.

mick silver
13th April 2010, 02:02 PM
what will we do with all this stuff when it come here ... were are the tree huggers

still afloat
13th April 2010, 08:05 PM
what will we do with all this stuff when it come here ...


We will do nothing with it , it will be another problem added to the long list of blotched ideals that our Grandkids and their Grandkids will be left to clean up .
The United States , toxic waste dump to the world .

keehah
13th April 2010, 10:05 PM
http://www.lfpress.com/news/canada/2010/04/13/13576126.html

WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Canada and the United States have struck a deal with Mexico that will see the three countries work to eliminate all highly enriched uranium from Mexico.

The deal will see Canada work with the U.S. and the International Atomic Energy Agency to convert Mexico's research reactor to one that can run on low-enriched uranium.

The three amigos also will work to transport all stockpiles of highly enriched uranium in Mexico back to the U.S. so it does not fall into the hands of terrorists seeking to use it to build a nuclear bomb.

"This nuclear security project demonstrates that collective action can deliver concrete results," Prime Minister Stephen Harper said in a statement.

The deal was struck at the Nuclear Security Summit in Washington where representatives from 47 countries, most of them heads of state, are meeting to strike a deal that will secure "loose" nuclear material globally.

U.S President Barack Obama is hosting the event as part of an ambitious nuclear agenda that saw him sign a deal with Russia last week to cut warheads by a third.

The focus of this summit, however, is to ensure that countries in the former Soviet Union, and around the world, destroy or keep safe highly enriched uranium and plutonium so it does not fall into the hands of terrorists.

The deal between the U.S., Canada and Mexico comes a day after Harper announced Canada would be shipping all of its inventory of highly enriched uranium back to the U.S. where it will be made unusable in a nuclear weapon. :D

Argentium
15th April 2010, 04:43 PM
There was a dirty little secret in S. America in the 1970's, the beginnings of nuclear weapons programs in Argentina, Brazil and it appears, Chile. It did not take long for the tinpot dictators of the time, to discover that a real weapons program needed both lots of cash and talent. both in short supply in SA.