Arab Times

Call for Japan to cut its plutonium stocks

Fight over renewable push

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TOKYO, July 5, (AP): Japan’s nuclear policy-setting body on Thursday endorsed a call for stricter management of its fuel recycling program to reduce its plutonium stockpile.

The annual “nuclear white paper” approved by the Atomic Energy Commission is an apparent response to intensifyi­ng pressure from Washington as it pursues denucleari­zation in North Korea. It says Japan’s fuel recycling program should continue, but minimize the amount of plutonium extracted from spent fuel for reuse in power generation to eventually reduce the stockpile.

Japan has pledged to not possess plutonium that does not have a planned use, but the promise increasing­ly sounds empty because of the slow restarts of Japanese power-generating reactors that can burn plutonium amid setbacks from the 2011 Fukushima disaster.

Though Japanese officials deny any possible misuse of the material and reprocessi­ng technology, the large stockpile of plutonium that can make atomic bombs also raises security concerns as the US wants North Korea to get rid of its nuclear weapons.

Commission chairman Yoshiaki Oka said the effort to tackle the stockpile is Japan’s own initiative underscori­ng its commitment to a peaceful nuclear program, and not because of the US Oka said he was not aware of any outstandin­g problem between the two countries over the plutonium issue, but that Japan is taking into considerat­ion the importance of maintainin­g “relationsh­ip of trust with the US.”

The commission is compiling guidelines to better manage and reduce the plutonium stockpile. Measures would include some government oversight in setting a cap on plutonium reprocessi­ng and a study into how to steadily reduce the plutonium processed abroad.

Oka declined to cite a numerical target, but he said reducing the stockpile is a “must.”

Japan has nearly 47 tons of plutonium — 10 tons at home and the rest in France and Britain, where spent fuel from Japanese nuclear plants has been reprocesse­d because Japan is not able to reprocess it into plutonium-based MOX fuel at home.

The amount is enough to make 6,000 atomic bombs, but at Japan’s Rokkasho reprocessi­ng plant denies any risk of proliferat­ion, citing its safeguards and close monitoring by the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency.

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