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Reprocessing

published Thursday, September 25, 2008  173 Views :: 0 Comments

On September 13th, Mycle Schneider, International Consultant on Energy and Nuclear Policy, gave a fascinating presentation on the Status and Trends of the World Nuclear Industry. To see Mycle's text analysis published in the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists, click here. To see Mycle's powerpoint presentation

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published Saturday, April 12, 2008  0 Views :: 0 Comments

 2008 Fact Sheet Global Nuclear Partnership(GNEP)

The Department of Energy (DOE) has asked Congress for $302 million in fiscal year 2009 for the Global Nuclear Energy Partnership (GNEP), which it also calls the Advanced Fuel Cycle Initiative (AFCI). GNEP is a Bush Administration scheme to revive the dangerous practice of reprocessing irradiated nuclear fuel. GNEP would endanger the environment, encourage nuclear bomb-making, squander U.S. taxpayer dollars, and deepen the nuclear waste problem.


Download PDF: ANA GNEP final.pdf


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published Thursday, April 12, 2007  0 Views :: 0 Comments

2007 Fact Sheet Global Nuclear Energy Partnership

The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) has asked Congress for $405 million in fiscal year 2008 for the Global Nuclear Energy Partnership (GNEP), a Bush Administration scheme to revive the dangerous practice of reprocessing spent nuclear fuel. If it goes forward, GNEP will endanger the environment across the globe, encourage nuclear bomb-making around the world, squander U.S. taxpayers’ money, and deepen the nuclear waste problem.

Download PDF:  GNEP FS 2007.pdf


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published Wednesday, April 12, 2006  0 Views :: 0 Comments

2006 Fact Sheet Global Nuclear Energy Partnership & Reprocessing: Risky Schemes Spread Weapons Material, Technology

The Bush Administration has launched a major initiative it calls the Global Nuclear Energy Partnership (GNEP) that will increase the availability of weapons usable material and encourage the spread of nuclear weapons and technology. GNEP requires a major shift in U.S. nuclear energy and nonproliferation policy and depends on a number of advanced technologies still in their infancy.

Download PDF:  Reprocessing FS 2006.pdf

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