Megatons to Megawatts Program
Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience
The Megatons to Megawatts Program was an agreement between Russia and the United States. It turned material that could have been used to make nuclear weapons into fuel for power plants. This program changed 500 metric tons of special uranium from Russia into low-enriched uranium for use in American nuclear power plants.
The idea for this program started with a physicist named Thomas Neff from MIT. He shared his idea in a newspaper article in 1991. Leaders from both countries signed the agreement in 1993. The program ran for many years and ended in December 2013.
This program is remembered as one of the most successful efforts to reduce nuclear weapons material. Because the price for the uranium was set low, it later changed who supplies enriched uranium around the world. By 2022, a Russian company called Rosatom provided much of the world's enriched uranium and nuclear fuel used in the United States.
Terms of the program
The United States and Russia made a deal to turn 500 metric tons of special uranium from old warheads into a safer form. This program lasted for 20 years and did not use government money. The Department of Energy led the effort for the United States, choosing a private company called the United States Enrichment Corporation (USEC) to do the work. Russia picked Techsnabexport, part of its Ministry for Atomic Energy (Minatom), to do the same.
In 1994, USEC and Techsnabexport signed a contract. The uranium was made safer by mixing it in Russian factories. USEC then bought this safer uranium and brought it to the United States. The first delivery happened in May 1995. The deal included both the uranium and the work done to make it safer, each having its own value. Over time, the terms were adjusted to suit both sides.
Summary of program
The Megatons to Megawatts program started in 1993 and ended in December 2013. It helped turn 500 tonnes of special uranium from Russian nuclear weapons into nearly 15,000 tonnes of safer uranium. The United States bought this safer uranium to use as fuel in its nuclear power plants. This program was a big success in stopping the spread of nuclear weapons.
The first nuclear power plant to use this safer uranium was the Cooper Nuclear Station in 1998. Over 20 years, this uranium helped provide about 10 percent of the electricity used in the United States. After the program ended, new plans were made to keep supplying uranium, but no big programs like this have started since.
After-effects
The Megatons to Megawatts Program helped reduce nuclear weapons, but some people thought the fuel price was too low. Because of this, it was hard for companies in the United States and Europe to compete with nuclear fuel from Russia. By 2022, Russia provided almost half of the world's enriched uranium and about a quarter of the nuclear fuel used in the United States. U.S. companies paid around $1 billion to Rosatom, Russia’s government-owned nuclear company. Russian nuclear fuel was not included in restrictions on other Russian energy products because of Russia's invasion of Ukraine. Some new reactor designs, like those from Bill Gates’s nuclear power project TerraPower, currently rely on fuel that only Rosatom can supply. Companies that refine uranium, such as Urenco, hope that Western governments will support local supply chains to help their businesses grow.
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This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Megatons to Megawatts Program, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.
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