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Monday, September 17, 2007

[chottala.com] Nations ink deal to provide safer atomic power - Global Nuclear Energy Partnership (GNEP

Note: The 11 countries which signed on Sunday to join GNEP were Australia, Bulgaria, Ghana, Hungary, Jordan,
         Kazakhstan, Lithuania, Poland, Romania, Slovenia and Ukraine. Conspicuosly  Bangladesh is absent from
         this initiative. Hope, Bangladesh will join GNEP without further delay, instead of empty rethoric and lecturing about
         energy sector development. One aim of GNEP is the peaceful uses of nuclear power, with members
       renouncing to enrich uranium themselves, instead relying on internationally guaranteed deliveries
       from current manufacturers of fuel rods. 
 
       Does Bangladesh wants to enrich uranium itself and follow Pakistan and Iran? [SA]
        
 

Nations ink deal to provide safer atomic power

The logo of the Global Nuclear Energy Partnership (GNEP)
Mon 17 Sep 2007, 5:51 GMT
http://africa.reuters.com/top/news/usnBAN724695.html

By Mark Heinrich

VIENNA (Reuters) - Sixteen nations signed a U.S.-initiated pact on Sunday to help meet soaring world energy demand over coming decades by developing nuclear technology less prone to diversion into atomic bomb-making.

Eleven nations joined the five nuclear fuel-producing powers -- the United States, Russia, China, France and Japan -- which formed the Global Nuclear Energy Partnership in a GNEP statement of principles at a ministerial ceremony in Vienna.

GNEP aims to launch proliferation-resistant nuclear reactors supplied by a global fuel bank meant to discourage nations from building sensitive fuel enrichment facilities on their own soil.

That technological threshold will probably take many years to reach, diplomats and analysts say.

It was given impetus by Iran's quest to enrich uranium despite U.N. resolutions ordering a halt over suspicions Tehran is trying to build bombs, not generate electricity as it says, and by North Korea's stealthy "break-out" to weapons capability.

"We may be late doing this. It certainly would have been better to do this 10 years ago than now," U.S. Energy Secretary Samuel Bodman told reporters. "But I don't know that the proliferation genie is out of the bottle yet."

GNEP proponents say global demand for nuclear energy will almost double by 2030, propelled by high oil and gas prices and alarm about climate change linked to burning of fossil fuels.

NATIONAL SOVEREIGNTY CONCERNS

The U.N. nuclear watchdog chief welcomed GNEP in part because it did not seem to undermine national sovereignty on energy, a concern that has hurt various proposals for a more secure multilateral system of atomic energy supply in the past.

"This has been one of the issues that has created a lot of anxiety. So this is very much an improvement and should encourage more countries to join (up)," said Mohamed ElBaradei, head of the Vienna-based International Atomic Energy Agency.

The statement of principles said partner states "would not give up any rights". But concern still simmers in developing states, and even in some industrialised nations, that they might lose some sovereignty on atomic energy options.

South Africa is considering reviving a former uranium enrichment programme, while Argentina, Canada and Australia have suggested they might start their own as well.

In a closed session after the ceremony, ministers agreed to set up working groups on creating reliable nuclear fuel services and infrastructure to support new technology, and decided to admit new members by consensus only, an official present said.

GNEP, which will be debated at a 144-nation IAEA conference starting on Monday, faces technological, financial and political cooperation hurdles before it brings tangible results.

Among major challenges will be developing affordable nuclear plants with fuel-reprocessing technology that would not yield separated plutonium, the commonest ingredient in atom bombs.

"GNEP is based on unproven technologies. It will take many years for the promise to be fulfilled," said Mark Fitzpatrick of the International Institute for Strategic Studies.

New GNEP partners ranged from Australia to Kazakhstan and Jordan. Twenty-one nations were present as observers including Canada, Egypt, Libya, Argentina, Brazil and major EU countries.

US gets more countries to join in GNEP nuke-energy programme
Times of India, India - 23 hours ago
VIENNA: Eleven countries joined the United States and four other key nuclear fuel nations on Sunday in an effort to promote nuclear power as an energy ...
 
Canada to send "observer" to nuclear partnership meeting
The Canadian Press, OTTAWA - Sep 14, 2007
OTTAWA (CP) — Canada will send an "observer" to a major international conference on nuclear energy, scheduled to start Sunday in Vienna. ...
 
Share This Article
PR Wall Street (press release), VA - 7 hours ago
VIENNA, AUSTRIA – US Secretary of Energy Samuel W. Bodman and senior international officials from 16 nations today agreed to increase international nuclear ...
 
Global Nuclear Energy Parntership to back peaceful use
Earthtimes.org - 16 hours ago
Vienna - The Global Nuclear Energy Partnership (GNEP) initiated by US President George W Bush in 2006 agreed in Vienna on Sunday to back the peaceful uses ...
 
Bulgaria joins Global Nuclear Energy Partnership
Focus News, Bulgaria - 17 hours ago
Vienna. The ministerial meeting of the Global Nuclear Energy Partnership was held Sunday at the building of the Austria Centre, which is a congress centre ...
 
The logo of the Global Nuclear Energy Partnership (GNEP)
PRESS TV, Iran - 18 hours ago
Sixteen nations have signed a pact to address the issue of soaring world energy demand by developing peaceful nuclear technology. Eleven nations joined five ...
 
GNEP to Have Canadian Contingent in Monitor Role
580 CFRA Radio, Canada - Sep 15, 2007
The Department of Foreign Affairs says someone will be sent to a large atomic energy conference. The Global Nuclear Energy Partnership meets tomorrow in ...
 
Evolving international pacts for tomorrow
Nuclear Engineering, UK - Sep 14, 2007
The Global Nuclear Energy Partnership may be controversial but new, coordinated international agreements and policies are a must for future worldwide ...
 
China willing to strengthen co-op on civilian nuke energy
China Daily, China - 5 hours ago
VIENNA--China is willing to strengthen bilateral and multilateral cooperation on civilian nuclear energy with other nations, a senior Chinese official ...
 
More countries join US-led nuclear energy programme
AFP - 14 hours ago
VIENNA (AFP) — Eleven countries joined Sunday a US-led initiative to spread atomic power but not technology which can be used to make nuclear weapons. ...
 
11 more countries move toward joining US-initiated nuclear project
The Canadian Press,  Austria - 15 hours ago
VIENNA, Austria (AP) — A US-initiated project that aims to reduce the dangers of nuclear proliferation and control radioactive waste gained support Sunday, ...
 
Nations ink deal to provide safer atomic power
Reuters South Africa, South Africa - 17 hours ago
By Mark Heinrich VIENNA, Sept 16 (Reuters) - Sixteen nations signed a US-initiated pact on Sunday to help meet soaring world energy demand over coming ...
 
Nations ink deal to provide safer atomic power
Reuters - 20 hours ago
By Mark Heinrich VIENNA (Reuters) - Sixteen nations signed a US-initiated pact on Sunday to help meet soaring world energy demand by developing nuclear ...
 
Canada to observe nukes-for-peace talks
Reuters UK, UK - Sep 14, 2007
OTTAWA (Reuters) - Canada has decided to send an observer to ministerial talks on a US-led initiative to provide nuclear fuel to other countries in a way ...
 
Remarks As Prepared for Delivery by US Sec. of Energy Samuel W. Bodman
NewsBlaze, CA - 18 hours ago
Good morning. I'm Sam Bodman, the United States Secretary of Energy. First, I want to thank you all for coming here today for this momentous occasion. ...
 
Indian nuke talks uncertain as IAEA marks 50th anniversary
Indian Muslims, CA - Sep 16, 2007
By DPA Vienna : Renewed global interest in nuclear power and the ongoing nuclear dispute with Iran are expected to dominate the annual gathering of the ...
 

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