Update: Previous releases:
September 3, 2008
March 7, 2008
January 30, 2008
Abstract: After several decades of widespread stagnation, nuclear power is attracting renewed interest. New
license applications for 30 reactors have been announced in the United States, and another 150
are planned or proposed globally, with about a dozen more currently under construction. In the
United States, interest appears driven, in part, by tax credits, loan guarantees, and other incentives
in the 2005 Energy Policy Act, as well as by potential greenhouse gas controls that may increase
the cost of fossil fuels. Moreover, the U.S. Department of Energy is spending several hundred
million dollars per year to develop the next generation of nuclear power technology.
Expanding global access to nuclear power, nevertheless, has the potential to lead to the spread of
nuclear technology that could be used for nuclear weapons. Despite 30 years of effort to limit
access to uranium enrichment, several undeterred states pursued clandestine nuclear programs;
the A.Q. Khan black market network’s sales to Iran and North Korea representing the most
egregious examples. Concern over the spread of enrichment and reprocessing technologies,
combined with a growing consensus that the world must seek alternatives to dwindling and
polluting fossil fuels, may be giving way to optimism that advanced nuclear technologies may
offer proliferation resistance.
Proposals offering countries access to nuclear power and thus the fuel cycle have ranged from a
formal commitment by these countries to forswear sensitive enrichment and reprocessing
technology, to a de facto approach in which a state does not operate fuel cycle facilities but makes
no explicit commitment, to no restrictions at all. Countries joining the Bush Administration’s
Global Nuclear Energy Partnership (GNEP) signed a statement of principles that represented a
shift in U.S. policy by not requiring participants to forgo domestic fuel cycle programs. Whether
developing states will find existing proposals attractive enough to forgo what they see as their
“inalienable” right to develop nuclear technology for peaceful purposes remains to be seen.
GNEP’s future under the Obama Administration is uncertain; it is not mentioned in the FY2010
budget request. Other ideas for limiting the expansion of nuclear fuel cycle facilities include
placing all enrichment and reprocessing facilities under multinational control, developing new
nuclear technologies that would not produce weapons-usable fissile material, and developing a
multinational waste management system. Various systems of international fuel supply guarantees
and “nuclear fuel banks” have also been proposed.
Congress will have a considerable role in at least four areas of oversight related to fuel cycle
proposals. The first is providing funding and oversight of U.S. domestic programs related to
expanding nuclear energy in the United States. The second area is policy direction and/or funding
for international measures to assure supply. A third set of policy issues may arise in the context of
implementing the international component of GNEP or related initiatives. A fourth area in which
Congress plays a key role is in the approval of nuclear cooperation agreements. Significant
interest in these issues is anticipated in the 111th Congress.
[read report]
Topics: Energy, Risk & Reform, International