HEU Minimization Challenges in the US and Russia - Political, Technical and Economic Issues
Vienna, Austria
Panel 3: HEU Minimization Challenges in the US and Russia - Political, Technical and Economic Issues
This panel discussion was convened as a part of the 2nd International Symposium on HEU Minimization in Vienna, which was co-hosted by Austria, Norway and NTI, in cooperation with the IAEA. Panel members discussed the factors in the U.S. and Russia that constrain HEU minimization efforts.
- Chair: Corey Hinderstein, Vice President, International Program, Nuclear Threat Initiative
- Anton Khlopkov, Center for Energy and Security Studies (Russia)
- Dr. Alan Kuperman, University of Texas – Austin (US)
- Dr. Ferenc Dalnoki-Veress, James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies (US)
- Dr. Jordi Roglans-Ribas, Argonne National Laboratory (US)
- Dr. Matthew Bunn, Harvard University (US)
About
This was the third of six panel discussions that took place at the 2nd International Symposium on HEU Minimization in Vienna, which was co-hosted by Austria, Norway and NTI, in cooperation with the IAEA.
Understanding
the Nuclear Threat
Reducing the risk of nuclear use by terrorists and nation-states requires a broad set of complimentary strategies targeted at reducing state reliance on nuclear weapons, stemming the demand for nuclear weapons and denying organizations or states access to the essential nuclear materials, technologies and know-how.
In Depth
Global Security Newswire
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Canadian Imports of Russian HEU Criticized
March 21, 2012
A 2010 agreement between a Canadian medical isotope production company to purchase highly enriched uranium from Russia has drawn criticism from nonproliferation analysts who argue it runs contrary to Ottawa's publicized nuclear security promises, the Globe and Mail reported on Wednesday.
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U.S. Recovers German Reactor Fuel Under New Program, Plans to Help Convert Argentine Reactor
Aug. 13, 2004
WASHINGTON — The United States this month received the first shipment of U.S.-origin spent fuel repatriated through the Global Threat Reduction Initiative, which seeks to recover U.S.- and Russian-origin fresh and spent nuclear fuel from research reactors around the world, the U.S. Energy Department announced this week (see GSN, July 21).

