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United States, Russia Approve New HEU Deal Contract
Ending years of negotiation, the United States and Russia have
approved a new contract that will allow a key nonproliferation agreement
to move forward, the State Department announced June 19.
The 1993 Highly Enriched Uranium Purchase Agreement requires the
United States to purchase, over 20 years, 500 metric tons of highly
enriched uranium (HEU) derived from Russian nuclear weapons. Russia
blends down the HEU to low-enriched uranium and ships it to the
United States for use in commercial power reactors.
The so-called HEU deal is implemented in Russia by the government-run
Techsnabexport (Tenex) and in the United States by the privately
owned USEC, Inc. Since 1995, Russia has converted approximately
150 metric tons of HEU from almost 6,000 nuclear weapons into low-enriched
uranium fuel.
Under the terms of the new contract, USEC will pay Tenex a market-based
price for the blended-down uranium. The actual amount paid will
be an average of international market prices over the past three
years minus a discount, allowing USEC to make a profit when it resells
the material to U.S. and foreign power companies. According to a
senior administration official, Russia will earn less revenue than
it did under the previous contract, at least in the short term.
Under the terms of the previous contract, USEC had paid Tenex a
fixed price that was well below market value for enriched uranium
when the five-year deal was signed in 1996. But in the late 1990s,
the market price dropped sharply, reducing USECs profit margins
when it resold the material to its customers. In the spring of 1999,
anticipating the contracts expiration at the end of 2001,
USEC opened negotiations on a new contract with Tenex that would
account for market fluctuations.
Tenex and USEC initialed a preliminary agreement in May 2000 that
incorporated a more flexible pricing mechanism and obligated USEC
to buy some commercially produced low-enriched uranium from Russia,
but this deal was not approved by the U.S. or Russian governments.
The latter provision was eventually dropped at the request of the
U.S. government, and in February 2002 USEC and Tenex signed an agreement
establishing market-based pricing as the foundation of the new contract.
(See
ACT, March 2002.)
Although the pricing terms had been settled between USEC and Tenex,
obtaining required government approval of the deal proved difficult.
The Department of Energy (DOE), under both Presidents Bill Clinton
and George W. Bush, had been concerned that the U.S. supply of energy
was overly dependent on the HEU deal, which provides almost half
of the United States uranium.
A year ago, USEC shut down enrichment operations at its plant in
Portsmouth, Ohio, leaving the United States with only one uranium-enrichment
plant, located in Paducah, Kentucky. Concerned about U.S. energy
securityand the political impact of shutting down U.S. plants
and laying off workersthe Department of Energy insisted that
USEC commit to maintaining the ability to enrich uranium domestically
as an alternative to Russian HEU.
The U.S. government finally approved USECs deal with Tenex
after the Department of Energy and USEC signed an agreement June
17 addressing this concern. Under the agreement, USEC has committed
to building an advanced uranium enrichment facility
either at Portsmouth by 2010 or at Paducah by 2011, and it has agreed
to continue enrichment operations at the Paducah facility until
the new plant is operational. DOE will provide USEC access to centrifuge
enrichment technology, which is more advanced than the gaseous-diffusion
process currently being used at Paducah.
The deal also requires USEC to maintain the shipping and transfer
portion of the Portsmouth facility for 15 months. USEC had planned
to close that facility completely and consolidate all shipping operations
at Paducah by the end of June. The move would have cost several
hundred jobs at Portsmouth, but under the June 17 agreement some
of the employees that would have been laid off will be tasked with
decontaminating uranium. In exchange, the Department of Energy has
agreed to dispose of three years worth of depleted uranium
that USEC has generated at its enrichment facilities.
The deal appears to have satisfied DOEs concerns. According
to a June 18 statement by Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham, the
deal succeeds in ensuring our domestic capacity to produce
fuel for our commercial nuclear reactors and meeting important nuclear
nonproliferation goals by accepting enriched uranium from Russia.
USECs president, William Timbers, likewise expressed satisfaction.
This agreement provides a strong cooperative foundation between
DOE and USEC, he said in a statement the same day.
The Russian government has publicly said little about the deal.
Speaking to the news agency Interfax after the February 2002 agreement
was signed, Alexander Rumyantsev, the minister of atomic energy,
said simply that Russias interests were not hurt.
However, according to one U.S. analyst familiar with the deal, The
Russians feel that they were forced by the U.S. government to accept
unfair commercial terms in order to benefit U.S. business and political
interests.
The terms of the new pricing contract do not take effect until
January 1, 2003, and are good through the completion of the HEU
deal in 2013. Until then, shipments are being made at the 2001 price
under a rollover provision in the previous contract, which expired
last year.
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