Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 20 – Rosatom is
acquiring nuclear wastes from other countries, betting that uranium prices will
rise and it will be profitable to have such reserves but, in the meantime and
longer if those prices continue to fall, transforming Russia into a dumping ground
for such dangerous wastes, Lyubov Glazunova says.
The state atomic energy corporation
has sold this program as a low-risk and high-profit operation, but in fact, the
Moscow journalist says, no one knows exactly how high the risks are because
most of the wastes taken in are going to be stored permanently and thus what
the real profits might turn out to be (ridl.io/ru/uranovyj-hvost-rosatoma/).
Until 2009, German and other
companies exported such wastes to Russia for reprocessing – under the laws of
most countries, exporting such wastes for permanent storage is banned – but protests
in the West rather than in Russia about this program which in fact involved
permanent storage forced it to shut down.
Last year, however, the program
resumed with one German firm planning to send 12,000 tons of such wastes to
Russia over the next four years. Germany’s
Urenco has done so because Russia “is the only country in the world which has agreed”
to accept such wastes from abroad, Glazunova says.
The contract calls for recycling and
the return to Germany of such reprocessed wastes, she continues; but in fact,
there is almost none of that and most of the wastes remain in Russia for what increasingly
looks like permanent storage, a violation of German law and a serious potential
danger to the Russian environment.
Despite complaints by Russian
environmentalists and even some Russian officials, Rosatom justifies the
program by arguing that it is building up a reserve that it can ultimately
process and then use or sell in the future assuming that demands for nuclear
power will increase and uranium prices go up.
At present, the Russian government
corporation is storing such wastes in barrels in the open air in Sverdlovsk,
Tomsk, Krasnoyarsk and Irkutsk federal subjects. And it is promising to denature them in the
coming decades, although given that it is cheaper to reprocess older Soviet
Russian wastes than these, that promise appears to be empty.
Moreover, Glazunova says, the
Russian bet on rising prices for uranium is likely a losing one. Ever more
countries are turning away from nuclear power plants because of the problems
involved with storing the radioactive wastes they produce, something that has
driven the price of uranium down.
There is little reason to think this
trend is about to change. As a result, Russia is now left with tens of
thousands of tons of nuclear wastes in rusting barrels that pose an increasing
threat to the health and well-being of Russians.
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