Edition

China Nuclear Report Acknowledges Safety Concerns

IN THIS ISSUE: China nuclear report acknowledges safety concerns, Parchin high explosives test site activity still ongoing, Russia warns of 'technical response' to NATO missile plans, UAE nuclear law spells out liability clauses, Mr. Putin's gift to terrorists, presidential nuclear initiatives of 1991–1992.

Published on October 18, 2012
 

China Nuclear Report Acknowledges Safety Concerns

Brian Spegele and Wayne Ma | Wall Street Journal

Guangan

A report by China's Ministry of Environmental Protection acknowledged safety concerns in China's fleet of nuclear reactors, including potential complications from the sheer variety of reactors in operation.

The latest report, part of a broader effort by Beijing to evaluate safety in the country's nuclear-power industry, suggested the government is moving closer to restarting the approvals process for reactor expansion, which was suspended following Japan's Fukushima disaster last year.   Full Article



Follow the Nuclear Policy Program
RSS News Feed Facebook Twitter
Footer information begins here
More from Proliferation News


David Albright and Robert Avagyan | ISIS
The latest imagery from the Parchin military complex in Iran, suspected to have housed nuclear weapons development related tests, shows a further phase of activity. Iran appears to be removing the tarpaulin covers placed earlier on two of the major buildings at the site.     Full Article

RIA Novosti
Russia may deliver a "technical response" to NATO over its plans to deploy a European missile defense program, Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Rogozin said on Thursday. "The Russian response is currently mostly virtual, political and diplomatic in character, but under certain circumstances we would be forced to deliver a technical response."    Full Article

Awad Mustafa | National
A UAE law covering the country's first nuclear power plants has placed liability for any problems squarely on the shoulders of the operator. Among the requirements in the Civil Nuclear Liability law is one that states the operator must provide an extraordinary Dh2.5billion in insurance to cover any possible claims against it.    Full Article

New York Times
There will be plenty of losers from Russia's recent decision to end two decades of cooperation with Washington on cleaning up nuclear and chemical weapons sites left over from the cold war. Russia will now have to pay for such efforts on its own. The US will lose the most cost-effective way yet found for reducing nuclear dangers.     Full Article

Susan J. Koch | National Defense University
On the morning of September 28, 1991, then-Colonel Frank Klotz witnessed an historic moment at Grand Forks Air Force Base, North Dakota. As he and other senior officers from the base bomber and missile units watched, the crews for the B-1 strategic bombers that had been on alert that day climbed into their cockpits.    Full Article

Carnegie does not take institutional positions on public policy issues; the views represented herein are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of Carnegie, its staff, or its trustees.