daveb said:
I hate to be the voice of dissent but the NNPA did not outlaw reprocessing in the US. Here is the link for (most) of the text of the act http://www.nti.org/db/china/engdocs/nnpa1978.htm" and it was designed to specifically address the dissemination of nuclear materials to non-nuclear states (i.e., import/export of nuclear fuel and uranium processing technology).
daveb,
As you stated - your link gave the text for MOST of the Act - but NOT ALL!
I have the text of the COMPLETE ACT - including the section that outlaws reprocessing.
I haven't found an online reference with the complete text.
Here is a reference courtesy of the Federation of American Scientists:
http://www.fas.org/blog/ssp/2008/05/nuclear-non-proliferation-act-is-good-policy-30-years-on.php
Through the NNPA, the U.S. committed to using a “once-through” nuclear fuel cycle which cools and then
stores spent uranium fuel rods intact with the plutonium and other nuclear wastes that are radioactive
enough to make theft of the material almost impossible.
Whether by law or by Executive Order; the nuclear industry is not going to invest in a major facility for
reprocessing spent fuel when the operation of the facility could be precluded by the results of the next
election. Witness the West Valley and Barnwell facilities that were built in the '70s for the reprocessing
of spent fuel; and had to be abandoned during the Carter Administration.
We can't have the disposition of spent fuel be a political football - the USA has to make choices and make
decisions and stick with them. In the Nuclear Waste Policy Act of 1982, Congress decreed that spent fuel
would be dealt with by geologic disposal; and instructed the DOE to study potential sites. In the Nuclear Waste
Policy Act of 1987, Congress decreed that the repository site would be Yucca Mountain, Nevada.
Under LAW, the policy of the USA has been that spent nuclear fuel would be disposed of in Yucca Mountain,
and the Courts have held that this is actually a contract with the US nuclear industry. However, withing the
last few weeks, the first budget of the Obama Administration has essentially killed the Yucca Mountain project.
This is akin to the case of the Shoreham Nuclear Power Plant where the then Governor of New York, Mario Cuomo
was able to essentially "veto" the operation of the plant by appointing PUC members that ruled that LILCO could
not charge any money for Shoreham electricity.
We need to decide if we want nuclear power or not. We need to decide whether we want to reprocess / recycle
our spent nuclear fuel. We need to decide if we are serious about disposing of spent nuclear fuel that we have
already accumulated in 50+ years.
So far, these questions are currently all "policy" questions; and policy can swing from one extreme to the other
depending on the whims of the ballot box. We need to remove these questions from the "policy" realm and encode
them into LAW.
We need to decide whether nuclear power, reprocessing / recycling, and spent fuel disposal are going to legal or
illegal in the US - and not leave those questions to the whims of politicians. The industry isn't going to invest capital
when the system is as unpredictable as it is now.
Dr. Gregory Greenman
Physicist