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04 June 2000
White House Fact Sheet: U.S.-Russian Plutonium Disposition Agreement
The White House released this Fact Sheet on the United States-Russian
Federation Plutonium Disposition Agreement reached at the Summit
Meeting between President Clinton and Russian President Putin in
Moscow June 4.
The agreement provides for "the safe, transparent and irreversible
disposition of 68 metric tons of weapons-grade plutonium -- enough
plutonium to make thousands of nuclear weapons," the White House Fact
Sheet said.
Following is the White House Fact Sheet:
The White House
Office of the Press Secretary
(Moscow, Russia)
June 4, 2000
Fact Sheet:
United States - Russian Federation Plutonium Disposition Agreement
President Clinton and President Putin today announced that the United
States and the Russian Federation have completed a key arms control
and nonproliferation agreement providing for the safe, transparent and
irreversible disposition of 68 metric tons of weapons-grade plutonium
-- enough plutonium to make thousands of nuclear weapons.
The United States and Russia have already agreed to nuclear arms
reductions that have led to the removal of weapons-grade plutonium
from their military programs. This new agreement details the goals,
schedules, monitoring principles and conditions for the irreversible
disposition of that plutonium.
Unlike weapons-grade uranium, which is being blended down for use as
nuclear power fuel both in the United States and in Russia, plutonium
cannot be blended with other materials to make it unusable in weapons.
Under the agreement, each Party must dispose of at least 34 metric
tons of weapons-grade plutonium by irradiating it as fuel in reactors
or by immobilizing it with high-level radioactive waste, rendering it
suitable for geologic disposal. The United States intends to use 25.5
tons as fuel and to immobilize 8.5 tons; the Russian Federation
intends to use 34 tons as fuel.
Both Russia and the United States will accelerate their work leading
toward construction of new industrial-scale facilities for conversion
of the plutonium and its fabrication into fuel. The Agreement requires
each Party to seek to begin operation of such industrial-scale
facilities by 2007, to achieve a disposition rate of at least 2 metric
tons of weapons-grade plutonium per year and, working with other
countries, to identify additional capacities at least to double that
disposition rate.
The agreement establishes certain rights, obligations and principles
for monitoring and inspecting the disposition and the end products to
ensure the plutonium can never again be used for nuclear weapons or
any other military purposes. The agreement bans reprocessing of this
plutonium until the entire 34 metric tons have been disposed. After
that, any reprocessing of this plutonium must be done under effective,
mutually agreed monitoring measures.
The agreement also anticipates that any additional plutonium
designated in the future as excess to defense needs can be disposed
under these same terms and conditions.
The Russian program is estimated to cost over $1.7 billion over twenty
years. The U.S. program, which includes immobilization facilities as
well as conversion and fuel fabrication facilities, is estimated to
cost $4 billion.
The agreement recognizes the need for international financing and
assistance for the Russian Federation to fulfill the obligations of
the agreement. There is strong international support, particularly
among G-8 nations, for the initiation and implementation of plutonium
disposition. The United States and the Russian Federation will work
with other countries to develop an international financing plan for
the Russian program and multilateral arrangements to integrate and
coordinate this extensive cooperation with Russia. This will be on the
agenda for the G-8 Summit in Okinawa in July.
The U.S. Congress has already appropriated $200 million for plutonium
disposition in Russia, which will now be used for pre-construction
design work for industrial-scale facilities in Russia. Today's
agreement will also accelerate research, development and
demonstrations under the 1998 technical agreement for plutonium
disposition between the United States and Russian Federation.
The agreement is a critical, indispensable step toward the goal of
ensuring proper disposition of this plutonium from weapons programs.
Next steps include negotiating multilateral cooperation arrangements,
establishing international financing, and developing plans to
accelerate plutonium disposition.
(Distributed by the Office of International Information Programs, U.S.
Department of State. Web site: http://usinfo.state.gov)
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