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NUKEWARS
Photos show N.Korea progress on new reactor
by Staff Writers
Seoul (AFP) Nov 16, 2011


North Korea has made significant progress in building a new nuclear reactor but it is unlikely to become operational for two to three years, according to a website which published satellite photos.

Pyongyang's official news agency said last week the light-water reactor at the Yongbyon complex would start operating soon but gave no date.

The North says the experimental reactor and an associated uranium enrichment plant are designed to provide electricity, but scientists say they could be reconfigured to produce material for nuclear weapons.

The US State Department Tuesday raised concern at the projects, saying they breach UN resolutions.

The 38 North website (38north.org), which is devoted to analysis of the North, this week carried satellite images of the work in cooperation with DigitalGlobe's Analysis Center.

It said "significant progress" over the past year could indicate a desire to push ahead as fast as possible with uranium enrichment, to produce fuel for the reactor and possibly fissile material for weapons.

The website said the plant's exterior could be completed in 6-12 months.

But operations were unlikely to start for another 2-3 years because Pyongyang still needed to complete construction, finish loading machinery and equipment, install electronics in the control room and produce fuel assemblies.

The reactor and the uranium enrichment plant were disclosed to US scientists who visited Yongbyon on November 12, 2010.

One of them, Siegfried Hecker, said both facilities appeared designed mainly for civilian nuclear power.

But he said the enrichment programme could readily be converted to produce highly-enriched uranium for bombs and the reactor could be run to produce plutonium.

The website 38 North said there was also serious concern about whether the new reactor complies with international safety standards in light of the disaster at Japan's Fukushima plant.

The United States and its allies demand that Pyongyang shut the enrichment plant before six-nation talks on the North's nuclear disarmament can resume.

Pyongyang's existing plutonium stockpile -- estimated to be enough for six to eight atomic bombs -- came from a decades-old gas graphite reactor at Yongbyon that was shut down in 2007 under a six-party accord.

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US 'concerned' about NKorea light water reactor
Washington (AFP) Nov 15, 2011 - The United States raised concerns Tuesday over a nuclear reactor in North Korea that the communist state claims will soon start operating.

North Korea's uranium enrichment program "and construction of a light-water reactor violate UN Security Council resolutions as well as their commitment to the 2005 joint statement," said State Department spokesman Mark Toner.

"We have concerns," said Toner. "Certainly we're concerned about the matter."

North Korea on November 10 announced through its official news agency that it will soon start operating a new home-built nuclear reactor.

Pyongyang disclosed the light-water reactor and an apparently functioning uranium enrichment plant to US scientists who visited its Yongbyon nuclear complex in November 2010.

Light water reactors are generally used for civilian purposes.

The United States is seeking to revive six-party talks on the nuclear program involving China, the United States, Japan, Russia and both Koreas.

Talks opened in 2003 and negotiations resulted in a 2005 agreement, but have stalled since December 2008.

Washington and its allies want Pyongyang to shut down their uranium enrichment plant before six-nation talks can resume. The North insists that the talks restart without preconditions.



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NUKEWARS
S. Korea nuclear envoy to meet US official in Vienna
Seoul (AFP) Nov 13, 2011
South Korea's nuclear envoy Lim Sung-Nam left Sunday for Vienna for talks on ways to revive stalled negotiations on North Korea's nuclear disarmament. Lim is to meet Glyn Davies, new US special representative for North Korea policy, during his two-day trip to Vienna, the foreign ministry said. It will be Lim's first meeting with Davies, who has yet to step down from his current post as U ... read more


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