ESD's
Prof. Moniz
MIT
profs, colleagues propose nuclear-energy
plan
By
Nancy
Stauffer, MIT Laboratory for Energy
and the Environment – May 11,
2005
ESD
Professor Ernest J. Moniz, other MIT
faculty members and colleagues, all
former senior energy or security advisors
in Democratic and Republican administrations
from Carter to Clinton, have proposed
a pragmatic plan that would allow
the world to develop nuclear power
without increased risk of weapons
proliferation.
Under
their plan, which appears in the winter
2004-2005 issue of Survival, countries
that now have the technology to prepare
and dispose of nuclear fuel would
provide those services to countries
that do not. The latter countries
would be well situated to operate
and expand their nuclear power capacity-with
no need to acquire technology potentially
useful in weapons production.
"Global
energy demand is going to grow significantly
in the coming decades, and nuclear
power is one option for generating
large amounts of electricity without
greenhouse gas emissions," said
MIT Institute Professor John Deutch,
who was Director of Central Intelligence
in the Clinton Administration and
Undersecretary of Energy in the Carter
Administration. "But one nuclear-weapons
incident associated with nuclear power
anywhere would devastate the future
of nuclear power."
Deutch's
co-authors of the Survival article
are Ernest Moniz, Arnold Kanter and
Daniel Poneman. Moniz is an MIT Professor
of Physics and Engineering Systems,
Director of MIT Energy Studies in
the Laboratory for Energy and the
Environment, and former Undersecretary
of Energy in the Clinton Administration.
Kanter
and Poneman are both senior fellows
at the Forum for International Policy.
Kanter was Special Assistant to the
President for National Security Affairs
and Undersecretary of State for Political
Affairs in the George H.W. Bush Administration.
Poneman served on the National Security
Council staff under Presidents George
H.W. Bush and Clinton.
The
discovery of secret nuclear-weapons
programs in Libya, Iran, and North
Korea has led to much discussion of
amending the Non-Proliferation Treaty
and other approaches to curtailing
weapons proliferation. But Deutch
and colleagues believe those approaches
are politically difficult or impractical
to implement. They therefore came
up with a more pragmatic plan.
"The
first thing to understand is that
nuclear power plants are not themselves
the principal proliferation threat,"
said Moniz. "The threat comes
from technologies used to prepare
the enriched uranium fuel and to reprocess
the irradiated fuel."
The
plan, called the Assured Nuclear Fuel
Services Initiative (ANSFI), would
deem countries that now provide uranium-enrichment
or plutonium-reprocessing services
on the international market as "fuel-cycle
states" and other countries as
"user states." The fuel-cycle
states would promise to provide user
states with fresh fuel for their nuclear
power plants and to take back spent
fuel for reprocessing and disposal.
In return, the user states would agree
not to obtain the enrichment or reprocessing
technologies.
Two
features make the initiative pragmatic.
First, the split between fuel-cycle
and user states already exists, so
the initiative would simply call for
a "stay put" approach. And
second, the initiative would last
only 10 or perhaps 15 years and then
be subject to review.
"Because
of the built-in review, the initiative
has the potential for a relatively
quick start, without tortuous negotiations,"
said Moniz. "No one has to promise
to give up fuel-cycle activities forever.
And by 10 or 15 years we'll have a
clearer picture of how nuclear energy
is evolving and whether additional
fuel-cycle facilities are needed."
The
ANSFI "offers something for everyone,"
Moniz added. User states would not
have to incur the technical and political
headaches of trying to deal with their
spent fuel, and they would receive
fresh fuel under economically attractive
commercial contracts, backed by government-to-government
assurances.
Fuel-cycle
states would obtain revenues and increased
confidence that demand for their services
would not dissolve due to a proliferation
incident. There would be no shortage
of fuel-supply capacity, and spent
fuel returned by the user states would
add relatively little to the fuel-cycle
states' disposal task. Activities
of all ANSFI states would be subject
to safeguards under the International
Atomic Energy Agency.
Perhaps
most important, within the period
covered by the ANSFI, the individual
user states cannot practically develop
large enough nuclear power programs
to make their own enrichment or reprocessing
facilities economic. As a result,
a decision by a user state to deploy
those technologies rather than join
ANFSI would arouse suspicion.
"The
goal is to make the political and
economic incentives so clearly compelling
that refusal by a potential user state
would cast a spotlight on its intentions,"
said Deutch. "The prospects for
coordinated international response
to avert possible weapons-related
activities would be greatly improved."
In
arriving at the ANSFI proposal, the
authors drew on The
Future of Nuclear Power-An Interdisciplinary
MIT Study. That study, co-chaired
by Deutch and Moniz, involved analysis
of a 2050 scenario assuming dramatically
increased worldwide nuclear capacity.
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