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Publication Laka-library:
USEC Privatization and the Russian HEU Agreement (1999)

AuthorYggdrasil Institute
DateJune 1999
Classification 6.01.2.56/12 (PLUTONIUM - MOX & POSSIBLE RE-USE WEAPONS PU / HEU)
Front

From the publication:

Summary

In its Securities and Exchange Commission filing of May 7, 1999, the United States 
Enrichment Corporation (USEC) reported that its financial position has worsened 
since the corporation became privately owned in July 1998. As in previous filings, 
it grumbled that the cost of its sales is affected by its role in the importation of 
down blended highly enriched uranium from the Russian weapons stockpile. USEC 
would doubtless appreciate a subsidy from the US Congress toward purchase of the 
Separative Work Units (SWU, the measure of uranium enrichment services) in the 
imported Russian uranium. But would such a subsidy be justified and is Congress 
likely to grant it?
The Russian Highly Enriched Uranium (HEU) Agreement, signed in 1993 by 
Presidents Clinton and Yeltsin has had a trouble history. The signers intended that 
the US Executive Agent, USEC, would gradually purchase the low-enriched 
uranium resulting from the blending down of 500 metric tons of Russian HEU. 
However, this purpose collided with a Suspension Agreement between Russian 
and the United States designed to limit imports of Russian uranium. As a result, 
the US Congress in the USEC Privatization Act of 1996 stipulated that USEC 
buy from Russia only the SWU in the lightly enriched uranium and return the 
natural uranium in the enriched product to Russia. In the autumn of 1998 the 
accord was on the point of collapse, because Russia, faced with import quotas 
in the United States and western Europe, could not sell the returned uranium, 
now known as the Russian Feed.
In the fall of 1998 Congress agreed to pay for the Russian Feed for 1997 and 
1998 after the signing of a commercial contract covering subsequent years. In 
March 1999 three companies, Cogema, Nukem, and Cameco, with the support 
of the US and Russian governments, did indeed sign a contract giving them an 
option to purchase 72% of the Russian Feed.
Nevertheless, the Russian HEU problem lingers. The price of the SWU in the 
imported low-enriched uranium must be renegotiated for 2002 and subsequent 
years; and USEC is not happy about continuing to carry for the US government, 
what it views as a financial burden.
In this report we survey the history of the privatization of USEC; and then the 
history of the Russian HEU Agreement. We close with a discussion of the 
interaction between the privatization of USEC and the implementation of the 
Russian HEU agreement. Privatiziation, we conclude, has not made smooth 
the path of implementation.

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