According to a 1996 report from
Institute for Energy and Environmental Research on the
US Department of Energy, only 225 kg (496 lb) of tritium had been produced in the United States from 1955 to 1996.
[15] Since it continually decays into helium-3, the total amount remaining was about 75 kg (165 lb) at the time of the report.
[15][3]
Tritium for American
nuclear weapons was produced in special
heavy water reactors at the
Savannah River Site until their closures in 1988. With the
Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty(START) after the end of the
Cold War, the existing supplies were sufficient for the new, smaller number of nuclear weapons for some time.
The production of tritium was resumed with
irradiation of rods containing
lithium (replacing the usual
control rods containing
boron,
cadmium, or
hafnium), at the reactors of the commercial
Watts Bar Nuclear Generating Station from 2003–2005 followed by extraction of tritium from the rods at the new Tritium Extraction Facility at the Savannah River Site beginning in November 2006.
[16][17] Tritium leakage from the rods during reactor operations limits the number that can be used in any reactor without exceeding the maximum allowed tritium levels in the coolant.
[18]