JPRS ID: 9573 WORLDWIDE REPORT NUCLEAR DEVELOPMENT AND PROLIFERATION

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CIA-RDP82-00850R000300080056-9
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APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300084456-9 ~ ' ' FOR~ OFFICIAL USE ONLY ' r~- , ; ~ JPRS L/9573 ' ~ ; 26 February 1981 ~ : ~ ~ ~ . . . : : , . . ~ ~ vyide Re ort Wo~ld p NUCLEAR DEVELOPMENT AND PROLIFERATION ~ cFOUO 4is 1 ~ . ~ ~ ~ FBIS ~OREIGN BRO~IDCAST INFORMATION SERVIGE FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY - APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300080056-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300084456-9 ~ NOTE .TPRS publications contain information primarily from foreign , newspapers, periodica.ls and books, but also from news agency transmissions and broadcasts. Materials from foreigz-language sources are translated; those from English-language sources are transcribed or reprinted, with the original phrasing and other characteristics retained. ;:sadlines, editorial reports, and material enclosed i~n brackets are supplied by JPRS. Processing indicators such as [Textj or fExcerptJ in the first line of each item, or following the last line of a brief, indicate how the original information was processed. Wtiere no processiLig indicator is given, the infor- mation was ~ummarized or extracted. Unfamiliar names rendered phonetically or transliterated are encYosed in parentheses. Words or names preceded by a ques- tion mark and enclosed in parentheses were not clear ia the original ~but have been supplied as appropriate in context. 4ther unattributed parenthetical aotes with in the body of an ~ item originate with the source. Times within items are as given by source. The conke~.:ts of this publication in no ~way represent the poli- cies, views or atticudes of the U.S. Government. COPYRIGHT Le:WS AND REGUIJATIONS GOVERNING OWNERSHIP OF MATERIALS REPRODUCED HEREIN REQUIRE THAT DISSEMINATION OF THIS PUBLICATION BE REST":TCTED FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY. APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300080056-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300084456-9 FOREIGN BROADCAST INFORMATION SERVICE P. O. Bos 2604 Washington, D. C. 20013 26 February 1981 - ~IUTC I~R01~1 'I'FIE DIRLCTOR, FBIS: Forty years ago, tlie U.S. Government inaugurated a new servi~e to monitor foreign public broadcasts. A few years later � a similar group was establislled to exploit the forei~;n press. Prom the merger of these organizations evolved the present-day FBIS. Our constant goal tlirougnout llas been to provide our readers witli rapid, accurate, and compreliensive reporting from tlie public meclia worldwide. ~ On bellalf of all of us in FBIS I wish to express appreciati~m to our reaclers who llave guided our effc: ts tiiroughout the years. APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300080056-9 APPR~VED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300080056-9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY ~ ~ WORLDWIAE AFFAIRS SAUDI ARABIA OFFERS PAKISTAN FINANCING TO BUILD NUCLEAR BOMB LD181816 London SUNDAY TIMES in Engli~h 18 Jan 81 p 1 [Article by Edith Lenart: "Saudi Uffer To Help Zia Build H-Bomb"] [Text] Saudi Arabia has offered Pakistan $800 million (about 330 million pounds) _ to help make an H-bo:nb, on condition that the nucZear technology does not get into the hands of Iraq. An agreement to this effect, which is about to be signed, will also effectively exclude Libya's Colonel al-Qadhdhafi from the project. A1-Qadhdhafi had sup- . - por'ted Paicistan's secret bid for an H-bomb with funds and uranate (uranium cake) until his friend, formec Prime Minister Ali Bhutto, was executed by General Zia in April 1979. But Pakistan was upset by al-Qadhdhafi's insistence on his own nuclear experts being allowed access to their research programune, and they looked elsewhere for funds. Last autumn Pakistan turned to the Saudi G~vernment for help. The pro- - posal far an Islamic bomb was made direct to Crown Prince Fahd, the prime minister. He instructed his deputy minister for defence and aviation, Prince Turki al-Faisal, and the minister for petroleum and minEral resources, Ahmad Yamani, to start talks. The Pakistani negotiators included the foreign minister, Agha Shahi, the nuclear - research director, Abdul Qadir Khan, and the chief of the Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission, Munir Ahmed Khan. They said that Pakistan's atomic programme had reached the stage where they could start developing a nuclear device but that the cost had outstripped the country's resources. The alternative the Pakistanis said was to drop the project or to invite the Iraqi Government to finance the whole scheme in return for sharing Paki~tani know-now. The Saudis told the Pakistanis that Iraqi President Saddam Husayn wanted his country to have a nuclear device which would enable him to exercise a dominant role in the Mi.ddle East, even without directly making use of the bomb. The Saudis said Middle East politics prevented them from openly opposing Saddam, but they were determined to block Iraq's nuclear ambitions through diplomatic _ ~ channels. 1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300080056-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300084456-9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY The first Saudi offer of $250 million was made personally last October by Sheikh Yamani to Pakistan's foreign minister but was rejected by the Pakistanis. 'Ph~ result came at a secret meeting in Europe, some weeks ago, when the Saudis increased their offer to $800 million, which both sides regard as "acceptable.~~ - COPYRIGHT: Times Newspapers Limited, 1981 _ CSO : 5100 2 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300080056-9 APPR~VED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300080056-9 ' FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY JAPAN MIXED FEELINGS OVER NUCLEAR POWER Tokyo MAINICHI DAlI,Y NEWS in English 2 Feb 81 p 1 [Text] 1Vearlv hal f of those surve~ed Only 5 percent answered it 10 millirems, or one-tenth of the in a national poll think nuclear should be lowered, while 28 exposure of a chest X-ray. power will be the principal percent wanted the present Three out of every four kne~v energy source for the future, level maintained. about the Three biile Island but at the same time, more than However, 56 percent of the radiation leak in the United half are worried about nuclear people monitored said they felt States two years ago, but the safety. concern over nuclear power. maximum exposure to local The survey was conducted by As concret~ targets of con- residents - some 100 millirems thePrimel~Iinister'sOfficelast ~ern, 30 percent cited -wasknownbyocily3percent. November to find out how radioactivity from nuclear The poll also revealed that 44 conscious peopte are of the need power plants, 16 percen�t percent want to know about the - for energy conservation and po~ential accidents, 7 percent potential effects of radiatioa on nuclear energ~�. safeness of nuclear reactors the human body and `the en- Eighty-two percent of the and "a percent vulnerability to vironment. '5'000 males and females aged ?0 tremors or other natural Thir~y-six percent wanted to disasters. learn more about safety ur over picked throughout the There was no major gap in measures against possible country responded. the extent of such concern be- nuclear accidents while 29 according to their replies tween pollees in prefectures percent wanted information on released Saturday, 47 percent where nuclear f~cilities are the means of disposing of think nuclear energy will be the located and those where there nuclear waste. - principaI soiuce of energy in are none, the office noted. ~ the future. Twenty-nine percent an- Eighteen percent of the swered correctly that nuclear resgondents cited solar energy power stations eradiate as the primary future alternate radiation constantly. power source. As many as ~4 percent an- Asked if they thought the swered incorrectly. - amount of nuclear power in the Only ~ percent knew that the entire. po~~er output lnow 13 eradiation amou~ts to less than percent) should be raised, 38 percent of the pollees replied in the affirmative. COPYRIGHT: Mainichi Shimbunsha 1981 ~ CSO: 4120 3 FOTi OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300080056-9 APPR~VED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300080056-9 ' JAPAN LEAKAGE DETECTION BY ACOUSTIC EMISSION AT NUCLEAR POWER PLANTS Tokyo TECHNOCRAT in English Vol 13, No 11, Nov 80 p 59 [Text] The Cenrral Research Insritute oj the Electric Power lndustry has ~ern srudying jeasibility of a(eukqge detection techniyue that utilizes fuund c ieuted when o liquid or gas (euks, in o~der to check the jailurr oj 7rping systemr in nuclea~ power stotrnns. The fo!lowing is a sumrrtory _ 1nd resvlts oj their investrgations. !n the cax when a crack in a piping sysrem devefops und expcnds ro cause leakuge, the fiqurd or gas wifl blow out violentfy dne to the presrure dijjerence between inside and outside oj the prping. At this point sounds being a broad�band jrequency arc generuted and trave( llong the sofid porrion oj the pipe in both directions. Consequently, round detectors properly spaced on the piping theoxticalfy can detcct rhe jailu~e, and moreover by taking advange oj rhe sound decrease ~iuring prapagation, ccn approxirncte rhe focatron oj the leakagt by rhe ~ dmnpening rario. - The findings oj the experimentr are as joilows: /i/ Charorterisrics ojleakage soun~is: For the most part LWR piping in use conveys high-temperaturr, high-pressure wate~ ond steam. The expr~irnrnt showe~ that ~he sound irttensity oja leak ojmrurated steam o~ high-tcmperahrre high-pressure wate~ increases with the increase oj rhe amounr leakrng. !rt adJition, the sound spectrum ranges over lMHz. (2) P~opugution oj o lrak's sound: The dampening oj a leak't sound v~jjcrs jrom pluce to place; the amount per unit length in the neighbor- hooJ oj point oj leokage is greate~ thur: jor the rcst oj the pipe. Furrhrr, the umount becomes rven greater in the highrr j~equency mnge, - ancl rhr pipe cuntuining liquid dampens mv~e sound thun in the case oju gUS. /1/ :tttachment oj cnnductin,q roJs to the pipinK~ Acoustie pro� perrrer ~J cvnducting rods ure thor the dampening difjercnce in the drjjrrenr lengrh oj rods is neg(igible, whereas rhe dlameter ajjects lhe prvprrrv ruthrr greurlv, resulring in a.a~dJen dumpening increase as the Jidmrrrr becomes fess. "l'u cnnnect conducting rods, a/thoagh wefding is the tasiest where uvilubfc. ,r high�temperoture udhesive hvs heen developed jor the zones in whrc�h weldiny heat is tvo severe to permit. The suund propugation per~i~rmdnc�e oj the udhesive proved in the test tv bt ufmost equivalent to thut u~ thr welding methvd. /4) Lcukagr monito~ing system: For monitoring /eakuge signals in e.rpe.imenru! equipment, detectors are not required to be under con� rtun: ~r sirnuftaneous surveillunce since the signals arc cantinuous. lnsteud, it is considered pe?J'erab(e rhat devices ure sampled and analyzed ur rertain intervuls, and thrn the resu(ts are comp: red with standa~ds (a buckground nuisc without feukageJ so as to obfain any deviatron whlch could r. valuute pvssible leuk~ye us weff as its site. 4 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY ~ APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300080056-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-00850R040340080056-9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY loe,uon or i..rp. Pipinp COnduClillO fOd $~nfpr Prwmplilip M~m ~mPl~fiv ' (inClud~np fi1tN) uM~r NnfOrf ~ 4/O Gr~qwncv CO~IV~/[~I ~flilylN i m~.no.r 0 ~ CPU ~/O umi F (w~rninq upnalt) ~ A/D tonwrnr RMS m~t~r R~CO~dN - Fig. 1. Leakage Monitoring System (an Exsmple) , ~ COPYRIGHT: 1980 Fuji Marketing Research Co., Ltd CSO: 5100 5 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY ~ APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300080056-9 APPR~VED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300080056-9 ~ _ FOR OFP'ICIAL USE ONLY - JAPAN NEW SEMICONDUCTOR RADIATION DETECTOR PREPAREB Tokyo TECHNOCRAT in English Vol 13 No 11, Nov 80 p 59 (Text] Tvshibu Cvr~. has succ�rrsed in preparing a!ow�cost, highly-sensttive, ~ X-rays non�bias semiconductor radi~rion detector fhut can bt used at normal tcniper~turr.c Hlph-pure sillcon 5emicondurtor detectors empfoying sillcon ar gtrmunium havt hlgh _ resolviny po~vrr su th~t they a~e widely in use jo~ uctivation anulysls, - .r�ruy jluo~ometry, und nuc(eur strucRrre studie.v ete., being rejened to as typica! radiution detectnrs. Howrver, conventionu! semiconductor I derec�tors ull require u high bra.r volfaye, but the worse druwbuck Js that I - the;� rrquire cooling in liquid nitrogrn, which presrnts dijftculties ij ~ - u.cr~l jor ,r�rvy theropeutic equipmrnt such as rudiogruphy and X�ruy CT. ~ I Aluminum The newiy-develnped insrn~rnrnt utili:er hiyh-purity si(lcon with an Gold ~ :rr:p~~rtty roncentrution ojabnut !//0,000 oj that used jorconventionul _ !C s, in order to providr u surju~�e�burrirr type Jetector thut bui(ds a ~ nu+~ bias, coofir~y jree eiement. This has enubleJ !Lt app!lcatton jor ~ Y ~;ty ther,tpy. ~ / Thr ndw Jevirr is shvwn in the jigure: u high-purity silfcnn .turjacr - / Ni;h ~ cprciJic� rrri~tdn~�e vf 3.Skt2�cm is deposited wrth a thin rilicon / !~iJ~� ~ilm ~n rhr urder oj SOt~ and /urthr~ with gnfd on ~ht film to - h~rn~ ~ a~.�J~�e burnrr. Depletion layer Fig. l. Schrm~tic Di~gram of New Non-Biae, _ SCmi~unSuctor Radiation Dete~tor COPYRIGHT: 1980 Fuji Marketing Research Co., Ltd " . CSO: 5100 - ~ 6 FOR aFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300080056-9 APPR~VED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300080056-9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY JAPAN NUCLEAR POWER DEVELOPMENT DECREASE SAID TEMPORARY Toicyo MAINICHI DAILY NEWS in English 31 Jan 81 p 5 [Text ] Japanese expenditure on lowing the United States' atomic power development Three Mile Island disaster of decreased for the first time in MaYCh 1979. fiscai 1979 ending last Mareh. However, the future was - following the United States' bright, the survey said. Three Mile lsland disaster of It found the balance of con- according to a survey released tracts in hand in the Thursday. mar,ufacturiqg and mining Hcwever, the Japan Atomic indastry related to atomic Industrial Forum, Inc., which power was 2,100 billion yen, up conducted the survey, said the i3 percent over the previous drop was only temporary and yInvestmenf in production did not alter the overall growth 'facilities had also increased six - trend in expenditure.on atomic ~ power development. percent. ~ Imports related to atomic i Based on questionnaires ~WeT ~n 1979 totaled 510 billion returned by about 900 firms in yen, the survey showed, industries. related to atomic compared with 21 billion yen for ~ power, the survey found their e~rts, indicating that Japan's ' totai expenditure in atomic a~mic power industry was still ~ power-related areas for 1979 very dependent on overseas was 1,420 biliion yen. technology. " This meant a drop of two percent from the previous year, - compared with an annual in- crease of from 12 to 170 percent during the previous eight years. ~ It was the first time ex- penditure on atomic power dev.elopment bad decreased, the ~9tirvey"saI'ci; and reflected delays to Japan's atomic electric power projects fol- COI'YRIGHT: Mainichi Shimbunsha 1981 CSO: 4120 7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300080056-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/48: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300084456-9 � FOR OFFICLAL [!SE UNLY JAPAN r1HI SFEKS BECHTEL TIE ON NUCLEAR POWER PLANT ~ Tokyo THF JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL in English 20 Jan 81 p 6 - [Text ] ~litsubishi Heavy Industries, electric utility companies by ing Bechtel's similar coopera- Ltd. has decided to roU back its two rival makers, Toshiba tion in basic designing and still inferior domestic nuclear Corp. and Hitachi, Ltd., both blueprinting of its PWR type of power plant market position lceal licensees of General Elec- N-power plants whenever the against nvo major lxal rivals tric Co., the original American need arose, just as Toshiba and by seeking full-scale tech- developer. The PWR type, Hitachi have done concerning nological cooperation of originally developed by West- their BWR types. Bechtel Corp. of San Francisco, inghouse Electric Corp. of :he MHI has decided to sign a the warld's top N-plant en- U.S., has been produced and new contract with Bechtel to gineering firm. supplied by MHI under West- seek the latter's constant Japan's domestic N-pawer inghouse's license. cooperative instructions as to plant market has so far been The Japanese market has numerotLS aspects of its N- - divided into two kinds of such been dominated by the BWR power plant planning, design- plant, the BWR (boilin~ water types because of GE's close ing. reactor) and the PWR (pres- business and technological alli- MHI's prospective full- - surized water reactor). ance with Tokyo Electric fledged tieup with Bechtel, to The BWR types have been Power Co. follow up Hitachi's similar step built and supplied to Japanese MHI so far has been obtain- realized last August, has been motivated by a recent resur- gence of Japan's N-power plant construction drive after a long lag since the Three Mile Island mishap. CO]'YK[GH'1': 1981 1'HE NIHON KEIZAI SHINBUN, Inc _ ('sc): 41'l.0 _ 8 FOR O~FICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300080056-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/48: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300084456-9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY ~ JAPAN GSTABLISHMENT OF RULE ON SPENT NUCLEAR FUEL REPROCESSING SOUGHT Tokyo THE JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL in English 20 Jan 81 p 4 [Text] The Japanese Government intends shortly to enter into talks successively w7th Aus- tralia, Canada and the U.S. for establishing a common interna- tional rule on reprocessing of spent nuclear fuel, based on a relaxation of c~rent restric- " tions on such reprocessing. For enabling an easing of present reprocessing regula- tions, the Government hopes to secure international consent on the following points: -Abolish the present indivi- dual approval formula under which nations exporting uranium or enriched uranium require the country importing to sacure their screening and approval in advance for every - reprceessing of spent nuclear fuel sought by their nuclear power generation stations. -Apply, instead, a prceedure requiring the importing nation to submit its plan on reproces- sing or comprehensive in- formation to the exporting nation, and have the latter , sanction reprocessing within - such a framework. ~ Atomic power generation throughout the world greatly has slowed down as a sequel to the Carter Administration's - stringent anti-nuclear proli- feration policy and the un- toward Three Mile Island incident. COPYRIGHT: 1981 TH~ NIHON KEIZAI SHINBUN, Inc CSO: 4120 9 - FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300080056-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/48: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300084456-9 rllx ur'P'il:lA1., U5~ UNLY JAPAN AUS'IRALIA ASKED FOR STABLE SUPPLY OF URANIUM Tokyo THE JAPr~N TIMES in English 23 Jan 81 p 5 ~ [TexC ] International Trade and frastructural facilities. L~�nch told Tanaka that im� Industry ;~linister Rokusuke Tanaka noted the necessity ot p o r t� r e s t r I c t i o n s w e re Tanaka Thursday asked bilateral industry�level necessary for a short F:!'iod Australta for a stable supply ot diseussion on [he amounts and time but added that the - uranfum ore. ln fhis connection, prices of coal imports; trom Australian market is open h e o f t e r e d J a p a n e s e Australia in the fu[ure. wider than the Japanese cooperation in prospecting (or Anthorry told Tanaka that it market. _ uranlum ore. was necessary to set coal prices Tanaka made the request at an appropriate level in order when he . met Doug Anthony. to tac111tate more investments deputy prime mintster and in his country's coal develop- minister for trade and ment. resources. Phillip Lynch, Tanaka sald Japan would minister for industry and import ~ millton tons of coal in - commerce. and John Carrick. 1935 and 53.5 million tons in minister for national 1~� - development o[ energy all of Tanaka and the ~ustralian , K~hom came here to attend the officials agreed to promote Japan-Australia ;~Iinisterlal bilateral. develoQment of coal Conference. liquefaction technique and oil Anthonv welcomed the shale. ~ Japanese offer. Carrick told Tanaka fhat his Anthony, howe~~er, urged country would , consider Japan to promote negotiations favorably the exports ot _ on the revision of the bilateral liquetted co~ and o11 shale to nuclear a~reement, so as to Japan in the tuture. enable his country to export On trade, Tanaka asked the uranium to.Japan. Australian ot(fcials to litt im- Tanaka aiso promised Por!restrictfonstheircountryis Japanese contribution to the imposing on fndustrial products _ develo~ment o[ Ausjraltan coal �ke textiles and cars. resources and related in- COPYRIGHT: THE JAPAN TIMES 1981 ~ CSO: 4120 10 FO~t OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300080056-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300084456-9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY . JAPAN ' BRIEFS ZIRCONIUM FUEL, CLADDING--In producing zirconium used as fuel cladding for nuclear power reactors, a new, creative process has been developed. Mitsui & Co., Ltd. in cooperation with Ishizaka Kenkyusho Co. has perfected the method, which can yield high-quality zirconium at half the cost of existing producers, in addition to eliminatinb the needs for environmentally controversial solvents and acids, and other advantages. The new process is referred to as a distill.ation method. It excels conventional extraction ~ethods ~mploying organic solvents by reducing the extraction process to only two stages, chloridization and distil~ation. This system is capable of reducing the price by half, to 3.3 dollars/lb. Present processes, in order to separate hafnium in the ore, first extract zirconium by chloridization with a large amount of organic solvents and acids, requiring addi- tional complicated procedures such as precipitation and calcination. The new method features: (1) simple preparation procedures with haXf the construction expenses; (2) a high-quality products yielded by distillation; (3) a pollution- free system which does not use solvents and acids; (4) separated hafnium useful for hard metals or control rods. The element is also promising as a titanium ' substitute because of its greatly reduced cost. jText] [Tokyo TECH[~TTOCRAT in English Vol 13, No 11, Nov 80 p 58] FUEL PRODUCTION PLANT~--The Power Reactor and Nuclear Fuel Development Corporation (PNC) has revealed that it wi.ll commence construction in 1981 F.Y. of a fully automatic FBR plutonium fuel production p~ant reportedly the world's firsC, with a 5 Cons/year capacity. The plant is to produce MOX fuels for the FBR prototype, "Mon~u" (electric output: 300MW), which will reach criticality in 1987. Expected to initiate full-fledged operation in 1986, the facility is designed to secure lowered radiation exposure to operators as well as labor saving and cost reduc- tion. At the same time, it not only produces prototype reactor fuels but is characterized as a precursor plant for future practical reactor fuels. In Japan plutonium for FBRs is obtained by reprocessing spent nuclear fuels of light-water reactors (LWR); since the product thus extracted is strongly radioactive level plutonium, remote-controlled operation is indispensable in avoiding excessive doses. By contrast, European nations treat spent fuels from gas reactor to pro- vide raw plutonium which has less intense radioactivity than that of the LWR`s, so that FBR fuel manufacturing factories, they maintain, can be dependent upon manual operation. However, LWR-made plutonium will also have to be used even in Europe in the near future, so the entirely-automated fabrication plant which the _ PNC is now aboLt to build is understandably attracting great interest. [Text] [Tokyo TECHNOCRAT in English Vol 13, No 11, Nov 80 p 58] 11 FOR OFFICIAI. USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300080056-9 APPR~VED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300080056-9 rux urrl~teL u5~ uNLY UNDERWATER DEACTIVp.TION POWER Rr,r',~T~nS--The Ministry of International Trade and - ~ Industry as well as electric power companies is proceeding with the study on rthe technical feasibility of decouuniss;.oning nuclear power reactors, and Tokyo Elec- _ t~ic Power Co. has announce.d plans to dism3ntle used reactors through underwater cutting techniques. According to the company, highly radioactive, aged reactor~ can be dismembered under water for storage in casks by means of plasma arc, water jet, and other weldiug mezhods. Such underwater dismantling technology is being developed ?.n the U.S., West Germany and Japan, with apparent promise for practical use. The immersed cutting operation is intended to prevent workers' exposure; after dismantling, chunks are placed in the cask for storage or burial. The MITI will conduct reliability~ tests on reactor dismantling treatment in next fiscal year, in order to probe its feasibility. [Text] [Tokyo TECHNOCRAT in English Vol 13, No 11, Nov 80 p 58] EXPERIMENTAL MULTIPURPOSE HTGR--The Japan Atomic Energy Research Institute (JAERI), - in an effort to establish a public-private setup for developing a ~nulti-purpose, _ high-temperature gas reactor, has ordered the detailed designing for the experi- mental reactor (thermal output: 50,000 kW) which they hope will reach criticaliCy in fiscal 1987, from the four nu~lear industry groups consisting of Fuji Electric, - Hitachi, Mitsubishi Heavy Industries and the Nippon Atomic Industry Group, desig- nating Fuji Electric as a representative. The multi-purpose HTGR is said to be the last resort in order to shift the non-electric power sector, which consumes more than two-thirds of the primary energy supply, from petroleum to nuclear heat. ~ Consequently, the Science and Technology Agency, in light of national security, - hereafter will work vigorously at allocating an increased R&D budget for the JAERI, in order to achieve immediate realization. When it receives these resources the JAERI will tackle the detailed design task in the 3-year project at a total - cost of about ~�4 billion, the construction of the reactor will begin in mid-1983 F.Y., eventually spending as much as ~�150 billion, with criticality expected in " 1987. [Text] [Tokyo TECHNOCRAT in English Vol 13, No 11, Nov 80 p 58] MODIFIED BWR TO KARIWA PLANT--The Advanced Engineering Team (AET) formed by G.E. (U.S.) and other five BWR manufacturers is developing an improved BWR which Tokyo Electric Power Co. is considering introducing into the Kariwa nuclear power station. Unit 3 reactor (1100NiW) in Kashiwazaki, scheduled for start-up around 1990. The modified-type reactor has allegedly undergone the following drastic design changes in contrast to existing models: (1) a circulation pump built in the reactor container; (2) load-follow operation is possible; (3) easier routine inspection has been provided for. At present, commercialization efforts are being made. AET is an organ of international cooperation launched by five BWR makers of G.E., Hitachi, Toshiba, Asea Atom (Sweden), Ansaldo Mecanico-Nuclear Sp~. (Italy). The modified reactor features subsrantial improvements, such as lower exposure doses and easier operation, over conventional types. Moreover, - it is said to have incorporated the results of reactor madification & standardiza- tion research now being carried on by the MITI, thereby being tailored to the needs of the Japanese industry. [Text] [Tokyo TECHNOCRAT in English Vol 13, No 11, vov 80 p 58] - CSO : 5100 12 FOR 6FFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300080056-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300084456-9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY ALGERIA BRIEFS NUCLEAR RESEARCEI CENTER--With the aid of the French atomic energy commission Algeria is going to set up a nuclear research center at Ain Oussera. When President Chadli Bend3edid visits France, after the presidential election, the acquisition of such a center wi11 be on his agenda. [Text] [Paris L'EXPRESS in French 24 Jan 81 p 93] - CSO: 5100 13 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLX APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300080056-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300084456-9 .F.y;, , .r~.i ' FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY , FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF GERMANY SCHMIDT SUPPORTS INCREASE IN NUCLEAR POWER PLANTS Hamburg STERN in German 17 Dec 80 p 146 [Text] Helmut S~hmidt intends to step up the construc~ion of nuclear power plants. Therefore the usP or oil and gas in the generation of electricity is supp~sed to be restricted even further. In the coalition negotiations with the FDP, Chancellor Helmut Schmidt surprised his partners with an unexpected demand. He insisted on including in the coalition paper the commitment to progressively cut back on the power plants' use of oil and gas for energy production. Even Economics Minister Otto Graf Lambsdorff--already an opponent of government interv~ntion in economic processes--could not dissuade the chancelZor. The chancellor's undertaking ev~ked surprise, f~r in the approximately 1,Q00 West German power plants (yearly energy production: 299 billion kilowatt hours) barely ~ 5 percent of the electricity is generated by burning fuel oil. Ten years ago it ~ exceeded 10 percent. - Ulf Lantzke, director of the International Energy Agency in Paris, praises the re- - duction of o3.1 consumption: "If the public utilities in other countries conducted themselves as those in West Germany, we would have 25 percent fewer worries." Experts however do not consider further reduction of oil consumption possible. ~ For many power plants, on account of their location in the vicinity of refineries, can be most easily supplied with heavy fuel oil. Finally, the oil-fired power plants are also needed as a stop-gap during shutdown of nuclear power plants, ac- cording to the opinion of experts, because they can be turred on and off quickly without gre3t technical effort. In gas consumption also, Schmidt's econotnizing plans make no sense on the face - of it. ~aenty percent of the West German energy :is obtained from natura"1 gas j (22 billion cubic meters). Shortages in supply wr.ich would require a forced re- ~ trenchment are not in sight. On the contrary: Qnly recently the Federal Minis- try for Economics feared that the gas ~uantities from Holland, Norway and the Soviet Union guaranteed in future contracts would only be disposed of with dif- ficulty in the market." West German companies are now even negotiating further deliveries from the Soviet Union from 1985 onwards. The contractu~'~. ~~'-~d upon amounts must be purchased. 14 FOR OFFICIAL USE O1vLY . APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300080056-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300084456-9 FOR OFFIClAL USE QNLY I Moreover, the gas-fired power plants also have the advantage that one can con- vert them in a short time to other energy ;,arriers, for example, oil. In con- trast to coal-fired power plants, they do not foul the air with dangerous sulfur dioxide. On the other hand, the market sees to it tha.t the burning of natural gas for energy production does not increase further. The times are gone when ~ natural gas was substantially cheaper than oil. Electricity producer Horst Ma.gerl, director of the Association of German Electric Power Plants (VDEW): "Natural gas will also therefore be cut back in the production of electricity. Government intervention here is neither necessary nor useful." Nevertheless, as incomprehensible as the chancellor`s plans appear at first, there is a system to them: Schmidt wants to make the unpopular expansion of nu- clear energy unavoidable through compulsion. The chancellor in his government statement: "The federal govemment considers further expansion of nuclear energy justifiably safe technically and--for the ~o~eseeable future--necessary for ener- gy policy." Schmidt's reckoning will be correct if oil and gas lar~ely cease to be used for electricity production. For electricity demand is no longer to be met by additional coal-`ired power plants alone. Schmidt also wants to check witr. the laender as quickly as possible as to how nuclear power plant certification can be speeded up without loss of safety. The _ electricity producers one again camputed, precisely at the time of the govern- ment statement, how many nuclear power plants must be built by 1990: at least 10. Bavaria alone, according to the Munich Economic Ministry, would have to build two additional nuclear reactors with the elimination of oil in electricity production. Horst Magerl of the Association of German Electric Power Plants (VDEW) cannot yet believe that Helmut Schmidt now wants to fulfill his (Magerl's) wishes: "That is too good to be true." COPYRIGHT: 1980 Gruner + Jahr AG & Co. 9750 _ CSO: 5100 E~ 1 ` l ~ 15 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300080056-9