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The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
  • Christine Parthemore, Center for Climate and Security

    How Are Climate Plans Affecting Nuclear Security?

    May 5, 2016 By Wilson Center Staff
    Kalpakkam-Complex

    The original version of this article, by Christine Parthemore, appeared at the Center for Climate and Security.

    Today, new nations are pursuing civilian but dual-use nuclear capabilities, the threat of non-state actors seeking nuclear materials may be growing, and countries continue to debate proper ways to enhance nuclear safety, security, and nonproliferation systems to keep up with the pace of change. At the same time, governments worldwide are having difficulty managing the effects of a rapidly changing climate, such as more damaging natural disasters and resource stress. The relationships among nuclear, climate, and security risks are growing more complex and interconnected, and these issues are likely to begin converging in new ways. By early 2016, it has become clear that the international community must take a fresh look at the ways in which they are likely to connect and potentially collide in the years ahead, and foster deeper dialogue on what should be done about it.

    A Confluence of Concerns

    While experts have long spoken of a “nuclear renaissance” in the global energy market, a confluence of recent events related to both nuclear energy and climate change are contributing to heightened concerns about nuclear security, and other security problems. The July 2015 Iran nuclear agreement raised to a truly global debate the decades-old tensions between allowing peaceful nuclear energy programs to advance and preventing the expansion of nuclear threats.

    The following month, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) and Kazakhstan concluded a long-awaited agreement to move forward on an international fuel bank to hold and supply low-enriched uranium for nuclear reactors, with a goal of reducing the desires of countries to invest in their own fuel enrichment capabilities. The climate change negotiations concluded in Paris in December 2015 raised yet more questions about the world’s nuclear trajectory.

    Continue reading at the Center for Climate and Security.

    Sources: Arms Control Association, Center for Climate and Security.

    Photo Credit: A fast-breeder test reactor in Kalpakkam, India, courtesy of Kristie Hansen/IAEA.

    Topics: Asia, Bangladesh, China, climate change, COP-21, energy, environment, foreign policy, India, Iran, Jordan, Kazakhstan, Middle East, mitigation, nuclear, Pakistan, Russia, Saudi Arabia, security, South Asia, U.S.
    • https://nuclear-disaster.com Nuclear Disaster

      Thank you for the article. On the other hand, this is the matter of discussion if nuclear power is totally helpful to reduce the CO2 ejection. Moreover, nuclear energy is risky to deal with. Kazakhstan may claim their enriching uranium plan in order to supply it to the neighbour China. At the same time, China plans to built extra 24 nuclear power plants in addition to their 30 nuclear reactors existing. The goal is to reduce carbon dioxide from the coal power plants, which are currently the majority of China energy supply.

      However, the thing they seem to ignore is the risk of nuclear disasters. Back in USSR, Chernobyl nuclear disaster happened https://nuclear-disaster.com and nobody was expecting this to happen. Oppositely, politicians were sure that the Chernobyl nuclear power plant was safe and reliable one. Despite the global effort made to avoid more meltdowns, Fukushima nuclear disaster happened in 2011 http://www.world-nuclear.org/information-library/safety-and-security/safety-of-plants/fukushima-accident.aspx despite all the preventions. Now, they are developing new nuclear power plants and the fuel production instead of focusing on renewable energy which are less risky.

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