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Caribbean-Latin America
Brazil takes a major nuclear step
2006-02-13
RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil - While the world community scrutinizes Iran's nuclear program, Latin America's biggest country is weeks away from taking a controversial step and firing up the region's first major uranium-enrichment plant. That move will make Brazil the ninth country to produce large amounts of enriched uranium, which can be used to generate nuclear energy and, when highly enriched, to make nuclear weapons.

Brazilians, who have long nurtured hopes of becoming a world superpower, are reacting with pride to the new facility in Resende, about 70 miles from Rio de Janeiro.

Other countries enriching uranium on an industrial scale are the United States, the United Kingdom, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Russia, China and Japan.

The plant initially will produce 60 percent of the nuclear fuel used by the country's two nuclear reactors. A third reactor is in the planning stages. The government hopes to increase production eventually to meet all of the reactors' needs and still have enough to export, Brazilian officials said. ``We want to build new power plants and grow our enrichment program to be self-sufficient,'' said Odair Dias Goncalves, the president of Brazil's National Nuclear Energy Commission. ``In the whole world, there's a big reinvestment in this area. Countries are turning back to nuclear energy.''

The Resende plant's inauguration had been set for Jan. 20, but was delayed because construction wasn't completed, Dias Goncalves said. The plant may begin uranium enrichment without the hoopla later this month, officials said.

Unlike Iran, Brazil is considered a good global citizen that isn't seeking nuclear weapons, although its military ran a secret program to develop a nuclear weapon as recently as the early 1990s. Still, some U.S. observers fear that Brazil's program will encourage more countries to make nuclear fuel, raising the danger of nuclear weapons proliferation.

Brazil's nuclear fuel needs, more than 120 tons of enriched uranium a year, don't warrant the country launching an industrial facility like Resende, especially with global supplies of the material running high, said Lawrence Scheinman, a former U.S. arms-control official. ``There really isn't much justification for new enrichment facilities unless countries have a very substantial number of reactors to be serviced and don't want to depend on outside suppliers,'' he said. ``Neither Brazil nor Iran is in those positions.''

Despite the criticisms, Brazil's program hasn't drawn the outcry that Iran's nuclear program has. Disagreements between the IAEA and Brazilian officials in 2004 over access to the Resende facility were resolved within months.

Like Iran, Brazil has signed the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, the global agreement to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons. All of Brazil's 20 facilities using nuclear material are under IAEA safeguards. Brazilian officials have worked closely with the IAEA throughout Resende's planning and construction, Dias Goncalves said. IAEA inspectors have visited the facility 32 times. ``There is no way to doubt the intent of our plans because they are completely open,'' Dias Goncalves said. ``We have to take account of every gram of uranium used.''

Brazilian energy adviser Rogerio Cezar Cerqueira Leite said the Resende plant will allow Brazil to sell to growing markets for enriched uranium and fuel a domestic nuclear program that is bound to expand. ``Without enriched uranium, you don't have nuclear technology,'' Cerqueira Leite said. ``It's not just national prestige. If you don't make it yourself, you will always be behind in the nuclear race.''

Many Brazilians see the eventual opening of Resende as the first step in the country becoming a world leader in nuclear research, said Cerqueira Leite. Brazil has the world's sixth-largest deposits of uranium.
Posted by:john

#9  Whahahahhaahha Frank.
Posted by: Besoeker   2006-02-13 22:30  

#8  mmmm self-cooking escargot!
Posted by: Frank G   2006-02-13 19:27  

#7  Ha! Wait till the nuclear snails assualt the intakes, you'll be wanting you glowing anacondas.
Posted by: 6   2006-02-13 17:57  

#6  Redneck Jim: I know that. That's why I said: "Imagine the imagined effect". I thought my post was tongue-in-cheek enough to be obvious.

I guess one can never use too many /sarc tags.
Posted by: Xbalanke   2006-02-13 14:44  

#5  I really, really, REALLY don't think we need to worrry about Brazilian Extremists smuggling a nuke into a neighboring country and setting it off.
Posted by: Redneck Jim   2006-02-13 13:40  

#4  God what a moron, the "Discharge" from any nuclear power plant is warm water, usualy not more than a few degrees above the normal water temperature, Radiation, if any, is nearly unmeasurable.
Posted by: Redneck Jim   2006-02-13 13:26  

#3  Imagine the imagined effect of this plant's discharge on Amazon fauna. Radioactive fifty foot long electric eels, anacondas the size of trains, glowing giant pirhanas. The bad movie and comic bookgraphic novel possibilities are nearly endless.
Posted by: Xbalanke   2006-02-13 13:04  

#2  While the world community scrutinizes Iran's nuclear program, Latin America's biggest country is weeks away from taking a controversial step and firing up the region's first major uranium-enrichment plant.

The big differences being that Brazil hasn't been making nuke-the-Jews pronouncements lately, nor is a known supporter of international terrorism.
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama   2006-02-13 12:37  

#1  The bottom line is that nuclear power is the future for much of the world, and only the IAEA can try to keep 'em honest. The temptation will always be there to try and make nuclear weapons, and everybody knows it, so total transparency is the only way to go.
Posted by: Anonymoose   2006-02-13 11:10  

00:01