Nuclear energy and nuclear weapon proliferation:
Gespeichert in:
Format: | Buch |
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Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
London
Taylor & Francis
1979
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Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XXV,462 S. graph.Darst., Ill. |
ISBN: | 0850661846 |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | Contents Preface v Abbreviations, acronyms, units and conversions PART I INTRODUCTION Chapter 1. Fuel cycles........................................................ xxiii 1 11 Paper 1. An evolutionary strategy for nuclear power..................... I. Introduction............................................................................. II. Latent proliferation................................................................. III. Isotopically denatured fuel cycles......................... IV. Uranium efficiency......................................................... V. Economics .............................................................................. VI. A high nuclear growth scenario............................................. VII. Uranium prices........................................................................ VIII. A timetable for the USA......................................................... IX. Nuclear energy for the world................................................. X. Summary................................................................................. 11 11 14 15 20 23 29 33 35 38 40 Appendix 1A. Assumptions used in the economic calculations .... 45 Chapter 2. 49 Enrichment..................................................................... Paper 2. Practical suggestions for the improvement of prolifera tion resistance within the enriched uranium fuel cycle....................... I. Introduction............................................................................ II. Chemical
enrichment............................................................... III. Enriched uranium fuels........................................................... 49 49 49 53 Paper 3. Jet nozzle and vortex tube enrichment technologies...... I. Introduction............................................................................ 61 61 vii
II. The technologies......................,............................................... III. Problems of proliferation of enrichment technologies and facilities........................................................ IV. Conclusions ............................................................................... Paper 4. Laser separation of isotopes............................................... I. Basic requirements and classification of methods.................. II. Results for light elements......................................................... III. Results for heavy elements........................................................... IV. Open problems, future prospects............................................. Chapter 3. Reprocessing....................................................................... Paper 5. Proliferation risks associated with different back-end fuel cycles for light water reactors............................................................. I. Introduction................................................................................... II. The problem of defining proliferation risk levels.................... III. Common assumptions............................................................... IV. The reprocessing route............................................................. V. The once-through cycle............................................................. VI. Summary and conclusions........................................................ Chapter 4. Waste disposal....................................................................
61 67 69 73 73 78 81 87 91 91 91 92 93 94 97 101 105 Paper 6. Reprocessing and waste management................................... 105 I. Introduction.................................................................................. 105 II. Is reprocessing necessary from a waste management standpoint?.................................................................................... 105 III. Reprocessing would not simplify waste management............ 106 IV. Conclusions .................................................................................. HO Chapter 5. Physical barriers to proliferation....................................... 113 Can plutonium be made weapon-proof?............................. 113 PART II INTRODUCTION.......................................................................... 121 Chapter 6. 122 Paper 7. Breeders .............................................................................. Paper 8. The proliferation aspects of breeder deployment.............. 127 I. Background .................................................................................. 127 II. Why the breeder?...................................................................... 128 III. The uranium cycle versus the plutonium cycle........................ 132 IV. How to strengthen the ‘weak points’ in the plutonium cycle .. 135 V. Conclusion .................................................................................... 139 viii
Paper 9. The roie of the breeder reactor........................................... I. Background ............................................................................. II. Types of nuclear weapon proliferation................................... III. Breeder fundamentals.............................................................. IV. The proper role of the breeder reactor..................................... V. What to do?.............................................................................. VI. Conclusion .................................................................................. 141 141 141 142 145 147 152 Chapter 7. Hybrid reactors.............................................................. 155 Paper 10. Fusion-fission hybrid reactors....................................... I. Nuclear fuel supply problems.................................................. II. Hybrid reactors....................................................................... 155 155 157 Paper 11. Laser fusion and fusion hybrid breeders: proliferation implications................................................................... I. Introduction: energy in the very long term............................. II. Fusion as a process................................................................... III. Fusion-fission hybrid: fissile material production............... IV. The question of knowledge and technology........................... V. Conclusion ............................................................................... 161 161 161 167 171 171
INTRODUCTION................................................................... 173 PART III Chapter 8. Safeguards technology.................................................. 179 Paper 12 IAEA safeguards technology............................................ I. Introduction............................................................................ II. The NPT and safeguards......................................................... III. The implementation of safeguards.......................................... IV. The future................................................................................ 179 179 180 180 185 Paper I. II. III. IV. V. VI. 187 187 187 189 190 195 195 13. Safeguards techniques..................................................... Introduction............................................................................ Nuclear energy programmes and safety measures................. National and international safeguards.................................. Reprocessing plant safeguards............................................... Safeguards for conversion and fabrication facilities............. Conclusions ............................................................................ Chapter 9. Exporting policies......................................................... 199 Paper 14. Applications of US non-proliferation legislation for technical aspects of the control of fissionable materials in non-military applications............................................................... I.
Introduction............................................................................ 199 199 ix
II. The ideal use of nuclear energy................................................. III. Overview of US legislation : the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Act............................................................... IV. Incentives to adhere to US non-proliferation ideas............... V. Non-proliferation controls for international nuclear commerce.................................................................... VI. Providing alternatives for nuclear power............................... VII. Other legislation affecting US non-proliferation policy........ VIII. Implications for the control of certain technical nuclear activities....................................................... IX. Overview.................................................................................... 199 200 203 205 212 212 216 220 Appendix 14A. Improving the reliability of the United States as a nuclear supplier: provisions of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Act of 1978 ............................................................. 223 Appendix 14B. International assurances of reliable nuclear supplies in the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Act of 1978 ..................... 223 Appendix 14C. Desired conditions for international nuclear trade specified in Section 403 of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Act of 1978 ...................................................................................... 225 Appendix 14D. Desired limitations upon domestic use of nuclear power specified in Section 403 of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Act of 1978
.................................................................................................... 225 Appendix 14E. List of actions triggering cut-off of US nuclear exports specified in the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Act of 1978 ........ 226 Appendix 14F. Conditions for US agreements for nuclear cooperation required by the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Act of 1978 . 227 Appendix 14G. List of statutory criteria for approval of US nuclear exports................................................................................ 228 Appendix 14H. Notable procedural requirements for negotiation and renegotiation of agreements for nuclear cooperation.................. 229 Appendix 141. Notable requirements for NRC licensing of US nuclear exports.......................................................................... 230 Appendix 14J. Notable procedural requirements for Department of Energy action on subsequent arrangements................................... 232 Appendix 14K. Summary of provisions in the Nuclear NonProliferation Act of 1978 relating to sanctions against certain proliferation actions................................................................ 232 Appendix 14L. Summary of notable implications of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Act of 1978 for control of certain technological activities in the non-military applications of nuclear energy................ 234 x
Appendix 14M. Summary of provisions of the Nuclear NonProliferation Act of 1978 relating to enrichment of uranium........... 235 Appendix 14N. Summary of provisions of the Nuclear NonProliferation Act of 1978 relating to reprocessing of nuclear fuels .. 236 Appendix 140. Summary of provisions in the Nuclear NonProliferation Act of 1978 relating to nuclear explosives................... 238 Appendix 14P. Summary of provisions of the Nuclear NonProliferation Act of 1978 relating to safeguards technology............. 239 Paper I. II. III. IV. 241 241 241 244 248 15. Nuclear exporting policies.............................................. Introduction............................................................................. Export and import policies...................................................... Safeguards measures............................................................... The INFCE............................................................................... Chapter 10. Multinational and international controls................... 251 Paper 16. A nuclear fuel supply cooperative: a way out of the non-proliferation debacle................................................................... I. Introduction............................................................................. II. The inadequacy of safeguards............... III. Recent measures to strengthen the non-proliferation régime . IV. Multilateral institutional arrangements................................... V. The idea of a nuclear fuel supply cooperative......................... 251 251 251 252 253 254
Paper 17. A preliminary evaluation of the technical aspects of INFCE................................... I. INFCE: technical versus political content............................... II. The new fuel cycles................................................................ III. Proliferation resistance........................................................... IV. The basic solutions and their evolution.................................. V. Conclusions ............................................................................ 261 261 263 264 266 268 Paper 18. Nuclear proliferation: arrangements for international control.......................................................................... I. Introduction............................................................................ II. Existing control machinery and proposalsto improve it......... III. The energy problem of the Third World ................................. IV. The need for global action..................................................... V. Concluding remarks............................................................... 271 271 272 278 281 285 xi
PART IV INTRODUCTION.................................................................................... I. Peaceful nuclear explosions..................................................... II. Reactors in satellites................................................................ Chapter 11. 287 287 290 Peaceful nuclear explosions......................................... 293 19. Peaceful applications of nuclear explosions.................. Introduction.............................................................................. What explosions can be used for............................................ Encouragement and discouragement to peaceful-use programmes.............................................. IV. The Indian explosion and horizontal proliferation................ V. How international arms-control agreements affect peaceful-use explosions................................................. VI. Conclusions .............................................................................. 293 293 293 Paper I. II. III. Paper 20. Technical aspects of peaceful nuclear explosions relevant to their possible role in the future proliferation of weapon-usable nuclear materials......................................................... I. Introduction.............................................................................. II. PNE applications....................................................................... III. The health and environmental risks of PNE........................... IV. The technical and economical feasibility of PNE.................... V. The relation
between PNE and nuclear weapon proliferation.............................................................................. VI. Concluding observations........................................................... Chapter 12. 296 300 301 303 307 307 308 309 312 314 317 Reactors in satellites..................................................... 319 Paper 21. Nuclear reactors in satellites............................................. I. Introduction.............................................................................. II. The development and use of Snap devices by the USA......... III. The Canadian experience with the Cosmos-954 satellite : operation ‘Morning Light’......................... IV. Discussion and legal questions ................................................ V. Other power sources for satellites and the trend towards higher electric power output..................................................... VI. Concluding remark.................................................................. 319 319 320 329 330 v.................................................................................................... 333 part Chapter 13. I. II. III. IV. xii 324 327 Implementation of the Non-Proliferation Treaty .... 333 Non-transfer and non-acquisition of nuclear weapons.......... Nuclear safeguards.................................................................. Physical protection of nuclear materials............... Peaceful uses of nuclear energy............................................... 334 338 340 341
V. Nuclear fuel cycle centres........................................................ VI. Peaceful nuclear explosions.................................................... VII. Disarmament obligations........................................................ VIII. The security of non-nuclear weapon states............................ IX. The second review conference................................................... 342 343 346 349 350 Appendix A. Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons........................................................................... 352 Appendix B. Final Declaration of the Review Conference of the parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons, 30 May 1975 ......................................................... 357 Appendix C. List of states which have signed, ratified, acceded or succeeded to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT) as of March 1979 ........................................ 366 Chapter 14. Nuclear energy and nuclear weapon proliferation .... 373 I. II. III. IV. V. VI. VII. Introduction........................................................................... The current nuclear power situation........................ The proliferation threat........................................................... New technologies.................................................................... Technological security............................................................ Institutional security............................................................... Further anti-proliferation
measures and new initiatives....... 373 373 398 407 413 418 424 Abstracts............................................................................................. 437 Glossary ............................................................................................. 447 Index................................................................................................... 453 xiii
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discipline | Physik Politologie Energietechnik |
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publisher | Taylor & Francis |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Nuclear energy and nuclear weapon proliferation Urheber: Stockholm International Peace Research Institute. Hrsg. von Frank Barnaby* London Taylor & Francis 1979 XXV,462 S. graph.Darst., Ill. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Treaty on the Non-proliferation of Nuclear Weapons 1968 Juli 1 (DE-588)4131647-2 gnd rswk-swf Atomic power Atomic weapons and disarmament Kernenergie gtt Kernwapens gtt Nuclear disarmament Nuclear energy Nonproliferation (DE-588)4331181-7 gnd rswk-swf Kernbrennstoff (DE-588)4130318-0 gnd rswk-swf Proliferation Militär (DE-588)4309759-5 gnd rswk-swf Kernenergie (DE-588)4030318-4 gnd rswk-swf Kernwaffe (DE-588)4003434-3 gnd rswk-swf Nutzung (DE-588)4120814-6 gnd rswk-swf Kernenergie (DE-588)4030318-4 s Kernwaffe (DE-588)4003434-3 s Nonproliferation (DE-588)4331181-7 s DE-604 Nutzung (DE-588)4120814-6 s Kernbrennstoff (DE-588)4130318-0 s Proliferation Militär (DE-588)4309759-5 s 1\p DE-604 Treaty on the Non-proliferation of Nuclear Weapons 1968 Juli 1 (DE-588)4131647-2 u 2\p DE-604 Barnaby, Frank Sonstige oth Stockholm International Peace Research Institute Sonstige (DE-588)2033929-X oth Digitalisierung UB Bamberg - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=001302044&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis 1\p cgwrk 20201028 DE-101 https://d-nb.info/provenance/plan#cgwrk 2\p cgwrk 20201028 DE-101 https://d-nb.info/provenance/plan#cgwrk |
spellingShingle | Nuclear energy and nuclear weapon proliferation Treaty on the Non-proliferation of Nuclear Weapons 1968 Juli 1 (DE-588)4131647-2 gnd Atomic power Atomic weapons and disarmament Kernenergie gtt Kernwapens gtt Nuclear disarmament Nuclear energy Nonproliferation (DE-588)4331181-7 gnd Kernbrennstoff (DE-588)4130318-0 gnd Proliferation Militär (DE-588)4309759-5 gnd Kernenergie (DE-588)4030318-4 gnd Kernwaffe (DE-588)4003434-3 gnd Nutzung (DE-588)4120814-6 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4131647-2 (DE-588)4331181-7 (DE-588)4130318-0 (DE-588)4309759-5 (DE-588)4030318-4 (DE-588)4003434-3 (DE-588)4120814-6 |
title | Nuclear energy and nuclear weapon proliferation |
title_auth | Nuclear energy and nuclear weapon proliferation |
title_exact_search | Nuclear energy and nuclear weapon proliferation |
title_full | Nuclear energy and nuclear weapon proliferation Urheber: Stockholm International Peace Research Institute. Hrsg. von Frank Barnaby* |
title_fullStr | Nuclear energy and nuclear weapon proliferation Urheber: Stockholm International Peace Research Institute. Hrsg. von Frank Barnaby* |
title_full_unstemmed | Nuclear energy and nuclear weapon proliferation Urheber: Stockholm International Peace Research Institute. Hrsg. von Frank Barnaby* |
title_short | Nuclear energy and nuclear weapon proliferation |
title_sort | nuclear energy and nuclear weapon proliferation |
topic | Treaty on the Non-proliferation of Nuclear Weapons 1968 Juli 1 (DE-588)4131647-2 gnd Atomic power Atomic weapons and disarmament Kernenergie gtt Kernwapens gtt Nuclear disarmament Nuclear energy Nonproliferation (DE-588)4331181-7 gnd Kernbrennstoff (DE-588)4130318-0 gnd Proliferation Militär (DE-588)4309759-5 gnd Kernenergie (DE-588)4030318-4 gnd Kernwaffe (DE-588)4003434-3 gnd Nutzung (DE-588)4120814-6 gnd |
topic_facet | Treaty on the Non-proliferation of Nuclear Weapons 1968 Juli 1 Atomic power Atomic weapons and disarmament Kernenergie Kernwapens Nuclear disarmament Nuclear energy Nonproliferation Kernbrennstoff Proliferation Militär Kernwaffe Nutzung |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=001302044&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT barnabyfrank nuclearenergyandnuclearweaponproliferation AT stockholminternationalpeaceresearchinstitute nuclearenergyandnuclearweaponproliferation |