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Steven Chu

Steven Chu

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A Safe, Secure Nuclear Future

Posted: 06/ 8/11 12:22 PM ET

I am in Russia meeting with business, government and scientific leaders about opportunities for partnership between our two countries. One of the most important areas where we need to work together is on nuclear power and nuclear security.

In a speech I delivered earlier today, I mentioned a letter that Albert Einstein wrote to President Roosevelt in 1939, at the dawn of the atomic era. Einstein's letter correctly predicted that nuclear power would become "a new and important source of energy in the immediate future." But he went on to alert the President to another possibility -- less certain, but much more ominous -- that Germany was seeking to create "extremely powerful bombs of a new type," capable of destroying an entire port and some of the city that surrounds it.

More than 70 years after Einstein's letter, the fundamental challenge he outlined remains one of the most critical issues scientists and our governments must grapple with: harnessing the power of nuclear fission for peaceful and productive uses while guarding against the most horrific and destructive weapons the world has ever known.

No nation can tackle this challenge alone. We must face it together.

Russia has a proud tradition of scientific and technological achievement. Through robust cooperation today, we can bring our brightest minds together to promote the peaceful use of the atom in a manner that is safe, secure and minimizes proliferation risks.

President Obama and President Medvedev have made nuclear cooperation a priority. Our nations have agreed to broaden and deepen collaboration to strengthen security at nuclear facilities, to help prevent proliferation and acts of nuclear terrorism, and to promote safe and responsible civil nuclear energy.

The U.S.-Russia Agreement for Cooperation in the Field of Peaceful Uses of Nuclear Energy which recently entered into force, represents a major step forward in U.S.-Russian cooperation on civilian nuclear power. The agreement allows for stronger commercial ties, provides new opportunities to collaborate on research and development, and advances our nonproliferation and nuclear security objectives.

In addition to promoting safety, the U.S. and Russia have a special responsibility to reduce nuclear dangers. The signing and ratification of the New START Treaty was a historic moment in our relationship and an important milestone for nuclear security and nonproliferation. It built on long-standing and ongoing cooperation between our countries in these areas.

For example, together we have accelerated the return of Russian-origin Highly Enriched Uranium, including both fresh and spent fuel from other countries. Working together and with others, we have returned approximately 1,590 kilograms of HEU to Russia for final disposition -- which is equivalent to more than 60 nuclear weapons.

The U.S. and Russia have partnered to accelerate the conversion of Russian research reactors from the use of highly enriched uranium to low enriched uranium. This complements ongoing international efforts that have converted 23 research reactors since 2004.

Russia and the United States have both shut down our weapons-grade plutonium production reactors -- an enormous nonproliferation achievement. Last year, Russia permanently shut down its last operating weapons-grade plutonium production reactor.

Our two countries have gone even further -- each committing to convert 34 metric tons of surplus weapons plutonium into mixed oxide fuel for civilian reactors.

Additionally, since the late 1990s, we have partnered with Russia to install radiation monitors that can detect smuggled nuclear and radiological material at Russian border crossings. Each side agreed to fund 50 percent of the total work scope of approximately 380 border sites. We are on schedule to complete all airports, seaports, and vehicle and rail crossings by the end of 2011.

Our cooperation is helping keep dangerous nuclear materials out of the hands of terrorists. Looking ahead, the U.S. and Russia have the opportunity to share our experience and work with other countries to promote nuclear security and to combat terrorism. Together, we can help peaceful nuclear energy realize its potential -- and grow our economies, strengthen our security and build a healthier, safer planet.

 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SLS11
Its all there, if we just open our eyes...
3 hours ago (9:58 PM)
Fukushima radiation found in California milk, fruit, vegetables

FDA says there is no danger to our food or seafood and therefore testing is not necessary. There have been no calls since the accident for heightened nuclear safety inspection­s or to upgrade or decommissi­on aging nuclear power plants in the U.S.

Yet, in limited testing conducted by states and independen­t labs since the accident, radioactiv­e iodine and cesium—bot­h toxic to human health—hav­e appeared at elevated levels in milk and vegetables produced in California­. Radiation has also been detected in milk sold in Arizona, Arkansas, Hawaii, Vermont and Washington since the accident.

Elevated levels of radioactiv­ity have also been detected in drinking water in numerous municipali­ties from Los Angeles to Philadelph­ia, and in soil samples tested in California­. Fallout is blanketing America and will do so for a prolonged period of time until they can somehow stop the crippled reactors from leaking any more radiation into the environmen­t—a formidable task.

http://red­greenandbl­ue.org/201­1/06/01/fu­kushima-ra­diation-fo­und-in-cal­ifornia-mi­lk-fruit-v­egetables/
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SLS11
Its all there, if we just open our eyes...
3 hours ago (9:55 PM)
Japan says fuel may have melted through 3 reactors

Japan admitted Tuesday that damage to the reactors at the Fukushima nuclear plant was worse than previously thought, as it conceded it was unprepared for the severity of the accident.

In a report being submitted to the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency, the UN's nuclear agency, the Japanese government said the nuclear fuel in three reactors likely melted through the inner containmen­t vessels, not just the core.

It said fuel may have burned through the reactor pressure vessels of Units 1, 2 and 3 and into their outer steel containmen­t vessels.

http://www­.ctvbc.ctv­.ca/servle­t/an/local­/CTVNews/2­0110607/ja­pan-says-i­t-was-unpr­epared-for­-nuclear-d­isaster-11­0607/20110­607/?hub=B­ritishColu­mbiaHome
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SLS11
Its all there, if we just open our eyes...
3 hours ago (9:45 PM)
Unthinkabl­e nuclear woes may yet become normal in Japan

Not much is worse than children having radiation metres strapped to their chests, writes DAVID McNEILL in Tokyo

FROM THE countrysid­e of post-disas­ter Japan come two starling stories: 8,000 schoolchil­dren in Date City, 60km from the ruined Fukushima nuclear power plant, are to be given dosimeters to measure radiation. Thousands more children in day-care centres, kindergart­ens and primary schools in towns and villages around the area are likely to follow suit.

Meanwhile, hundreds of kilometres southwest, officials in Shizuoka Prefecture­, home to the nation’s tea-growin­g industry, have reportedly asked Tokyo retailers to refrain from informing consumers that above-norm­al levels of radiation have been detected on tea leaves. The prefecture felt that issuing the warning could “fan public anxiety”, said Kyodo News.

http://www­.irishtime­s.com/news­paper/worl­d/2011/061­1/12242987­35954.html
5 hours ago (8:02 PM)
How many near misses is it going to take. Do we have to have one (or more) blow up here and take out a major chunk of the population­­. Let's try something different for a change, take all that money and develope a decentrali­­zed community based system of renewable energy that leaves the planet better then we found it. You are suppose to be the brilliant one here, of course, you are dealing with lazy Americans that want everything on a silver platter.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Michael Mann
Nuclear Educator
6 hours ago (6:30 PM)
It is amazing to me that warheads once aimed at US cities are instead providing energy to make life better in those same cities.
"Working together and with others, we have returned approximat­ely 1,590 kilograms of HEU to Russia for final dispositio­n -- which is equivalent to more than 60 nuclear weapons."
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maslin
At 6 bn km, it's mostly small stuff.
1 hour ago (11:35 PM)
This is truly a wonder of our modern world. It truly is.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
rich misty
8 hours ago (4:36 PM)
MOX fuel has far more human toxicity than enriched uranium fuel. They are loading old reactors with MOX and turning the outputs up to 12. But don't worry, Fukushima is impossible­, and to make sure you don't get exposed they shut down all the radiation detection systems.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Michael Mann
Nuclear Educator
8 hours ago (5:13 PM)
rich misty are you a nuclear fuel expert? The nuclear engineers that I talk to are telling me MOX fuel is not significan­tly different than any other fuel, it is blended to have the same characteri­stics as enriched uranium fuel, the initial calculatio­ns are more complex but the end result is just about identical. I would like to see your calculatio­ns, and who shuts down the radiation detection systems? I calibrate them and there are many requiremen­ts for operabilit­y, I think someone is selling you lies and innuendo. The people who work at these plants are not about to allow the monitors to be shut off,,, think about it.
7 hours ago (5:51 PM)
I thought MOX also had Plutonium mixed in the fuel rods...
Is this true?
9 hours ago (3:28 PM)
FromRM
http:///ex­- skf.blogsp ot.com/201 1/06/arnie -gundersen -on-and-of f.html -- Excellent graph

Spent Fuel Pool. Gundersen suspects an on-and-off recritical­ity in the Reactor 3 (or any of the Spent Fuel Pools).

The chart of iodine-131 detection at the Federal Office of Radiation Protection in Germany, plotting the CTBTO station data from around the world. ... I always thought i... there seemed to be periodic spikes in the amount of iodine-131 (also of cesium-137 but to a lesser degree) followed by a relatively calm, steady decline.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Michael Mann
Nuclear Educator
8 hours ago (4:23 PM)
There are plenty of Fukushima articles, this article is about US and Russia making an agreement to improve nuclear energy for the prosperity of the world.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
rich misty
8 hours ago (4:41 PM)
Yeah and besides loading up old reactors in the US with MOX and over rating them to 120% of their designed output capacity is perfectly safe. Safer even than the uranium fuel they were designed for, and overrating an old reactor to 120% is even more safe because they were designed to be operated over capacity when they got old. Fukushima is impossible­, it just never happened. Same with TMI and Chernobyl.
11 hours ago (2:05 PM)
☯

No Meltdowns they shout

Eco-Alarmi­st they scream

Melt thru's they whisper
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Lock Piatt
4 hours ago (8:30 PM)
Everyone is entitled to his own opinion, but not his own facts.
Daniel Patrick Moynihan
11 hours ago (1:41 PM)
MUST LOOK - NEVER SEEN IT THIS BAD
http://www­.tepco.co.­jp/nu/f1-n­p/camera/i­ndex-j.htm­l
11 hours ago (1:56 PM)
These cameras should all have sound linked to the TEPCO Control room
(Think Mission Control during our space launches)
The World deserves to know what is happening and why!

Faved

Radioactiv­e Venting, Mist, smoke, steam or a mixture of all the above is happening!

My guess considerin­g TEPCO is in charge is that they are venting one or more of the reactor containmen­t buildings ASAP and will continue to do so at night all during the weekend...

I hope they are monitoring the air and water offshore!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
GeeziePeezie
Democracy rules
11 hours ago (2:16 PM)
We can only imagine the English translatio­n from the control room:

"That's impossible­!"
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undsoweiter
but I know where to look it up
8 hours ago (4:41 PM)
What, fog? I've seen fog worse than that. Unless you're talking about something else.
8 hours ago (4:46 PM)
Just how do you know it is FOG?

Could be and probably anything..­.
11 hours ago (1:34 PM)
☯

Remember last Fall

Japan was the place to be

Sadly no longer

☯

Nuclear leakage

Now the children breath bad air

Mass relocation

☯

Problems continue

The end is not yet in sight

Now We all Lose Face
12 hours ago (1:03 PM)
Please Chu On This
Something'­s Amiss

Where will the displaced go
You are smart and should know

We all just want what is best
Nuclear has failed the test

Somehow it is just not fair
More pollution in our air

Japan is leading the way
Toward a future scary day
11 hours ago (1:23 PM)
You are so creative. I esp like the first line. Faved!
11 hours ago (1:40 PM)
When using words fail me
I turn to poetry
:-)
12 hours ago (12:57 PM)
Yomiuri: Hydrogen Blasts at Fukushima Surprised Experts
http://www­.yomiuri.c­o.jp/dy/na­tional/T11­0609005186­.htm

That is exactly why Nuclear is dangerous and reckless! Experts surprised?­!?! Good god.
12 hours ago (12:54 PM)
Our Nuclear Sorrow

They came to us with promises
And shiny vessels of steel
The angels of our nuclear joy
Regaled us with their zeal

Impossible­­, no, it cannot be
They've taken our tomorrow
The angels of our nuclear joy
Have brought us nuclear sorrow

Geezie Peezie other thread
12 hours ago (12:26 PM)
Tomorrow is the 3 month anniversar­y of this Eco Nuclear War.

BTW: Their Nuclear Reactor Eco-Disast­er is on-Going as we speak!

Most folks speak as it is "OVER" and that is not true...
The situation could go "critical" at any moment, for any number of reasons!

Thye have NO PLAN B
13 hours ago (12:09 PM)
Will Radioactiv­e Sludge become the next WMD?