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Reduced Enrichment for Research and Test Reactors
Nuclear Engineering Division at Argonne
Nuclear Engineering is a Division of Argonne National Laboratory (Argonne), a U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) laboratory managed by The University of Chicago

Home  :: 1998 International RERTR Meeting Program  :: Related Documents

Abstracts and Available Papers Presented at the
1998 International RERTR Meeting

Multilateral Nonproliferation Cooperation
US - Led Effort to Remove HEU/LEU Fresh and Spent Fuel
from the
Republic of Georgia to Dounreay, Scotland
(Auburn Endeavor/Project Olympus)

Thomas A. Shelton and James M. Viebrock
NAC International
Norcross, Georgia, USA

Alexander W. Riedy and Stanley D. Moses
Lockheed Martin Energy Systems
Y-12 Plant
Oak Ridge, Tennessee, USA

Ms. Helen M. Bird
U.S. Department of Energy
Office of Arms Control and Nonproliferation
Washington, D.C., USA

Abstract

In early March 1998, the United States Government approved a plan in cooperation with the United Kingdom (UK) and Georgian Governments to rapidly retrieve and transport about 4.3 kilograms of enriched uranium. This material consisted largely of highly enriched uranium (HEU) and a small amount of low enriched uranium (LEU) fresh fuel, as well as about 800 grains of HEU/LEU-based spent fuel from a shutdown IRT-M research reactor on the outskirts of Tbilisi, Georgia, a former Soviet Republic. A technical team lead by DOE consisted of HEU handling, packaging and transportation experts from the Oak Ridge Y-12 Plant, managed and operated by Lockheed Martin Energy Systems and spent fuel handling and transportation experts from NAC International in Norcross, Georgia, United States. The team was part of an interagency task force formed with Department of Defense military personnel under U.S. European Command and headed by a senior official from the Department of State. The operation was executed in full cooperation with the government of the Republic of Georgia and the staff at the Institute of Physics. In April of 1998, the fresh fuel was repacked in United States' supplied 6M-2R containers (USA/0002/B(U)F) and the spent fuel was repacked in the NAC-LWT cask (USA/9225/B(U)F-85). All the containers were then transported in one U.S. Air Force C-5B cargo aircraft via air-to-air refueling from Tbilisi, Georgia to Kinloss Royal Air Force Base outside Inverness, Scotland. In Scotland the fresh and spent fuel was transported north to the Dounreay Nuclear Complex west of Thurso, Caithness, Scotland for interim storage and final disposition. This successful national security project was the first time the United States teamed with a NATO partner to remove nuclear material from a site of proliferation concern.


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Contact:
Thomas Shelton
NAC International
655 Engineering Drive, Suite 200
Norcross Georgia 30092
USA

Phone: 1-770-447-1144
Fax: 1-770-263-0293
Email: tshelton@nacintl.com

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Last modified on July 29, 2008 11:32 +0200