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London Nuke Plant Loses 30 Kilos of Plutonium

solafide writes "The Globe and Mail reports 'A British nuclear-reprocessing plant [at Sellafield] cannot account for nearly 30 kilograms of plutonium, but authorities believe it is an accounting issue rather than a loss of potential bomb-making material, the United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority said.' Although it says later plutonium is only 1% of what they deal with there. The Times Online has more details."

3 of 613 comments (clear)

  1. Uranium regeneration is a good thing though by grqb · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Uranium regeneration is a good thing. A nuclear reactor only uses about 4% of the uranium until it has to be either discarded or regenerated (because of reduced efficiency issues) but the regeneration process makes plutonium, which can then be used in a bomb. Most of the time, the plutonium is actually mixed with uranium and it can then be used as a fuel.

    Hopefully fusion will come along sometime soon...

  2. Re:London is nowhere near Sellafield. by Peter+Cooper · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Hmm, Sellafield is not a city. It's a village 300 miles from London in the middle of nowhere known only for having a nuclear power plant.

    When you take scale into account, saying Sellafield is in London is totally like saying the Grand Canyon is in Washington D.C.

    And what are you on about? The UK has a lot of open land. It's nothing like the US, but more of the UK is fields or moor than anything else.

  3. Re:Trigger-happy reporting? Not on /. ! by p.gogarty · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I watched this news article on BBC world last night (am British living in forign country). The BBC world account of this story did highlight a couple of points that take the wind out of this sensationalist post.

    1. The missing 30Kg is discrepancy between the estimated amount of reclaimed fuel and the actual amount for a whole yeare (See previous post). As any engineer involved with nuclear reclamation will tell you there is no precise method of calculating the amount of fuel that will be reclaimed from nuclear waste until after it has been reclaimed.

    2. On several occasions (years) Sellafield has reclaimed more fuel than estimated.

    --
    Paul Gogarty