Presentation Transcript
Slide1: Technical summary of DPRK nuclear program
Siegfried S. Hecker
Stanford University
Center for International Security and Cooperation
2005 Carnegie International
Non-Proliferation Conference, Washington, D.C.
November 8, 2005
Slide2: Visits to Pyongyang: S.S. Hecker and Prof. J.W. Lewis
Jan. 6-10, 2004 and Aug. 23-27, 2005 and Yongbyon, Jan. 6-10, 2004 North Korea has the raw materials and nuclear infrastructure
for the full plutonium nuclear fuel cycle
Slide3: Key nuclear issues as of January 2004 visit What is the status of the nuclear reactors?
5 MWe (previously operating – generates ~6 kg Pu/year)
50 MWe – under construction (56 kg Pu/year)
200 MWe – under construction (220 kg Pu/year)
What happened to the spent fuel rods from 5 MWe reactor?
Placed in safe storage (25 – 30 kg Pu) with U.S. help
Monitored by IEAE until December 2002
Does the DPRK have a uranium enrichment program?
Does the DPRK have nuclear weapons?
Slide4: Additional technical issues as of August 2005 What is the status of the nuclear reactors?
5 MWe - is it operating with a fresh core? (5 to 7 kg Pu/year)
50 MWe – has construction resumed? (~ 56 kg Pu/year)
200 MWe – future plans? (~ 220 kg Pu/year)
What is status of fresh fuel fabrication?
Reprocessing status?
If reactor was refueled, what is status of spent fuel rods?
How much additional plutonium was extracted?
Status of DPRK uranium enrichment program?
Status of DPRK nuclear weapons program?
Slide5: Update on status of 5 MWe reactor in Yongbyon 5 MWe (25 MWth) graphite-moderated, gas-cooled
indigenous reactor (uses natural uranium metallic fuel)
(began operations in 1986)
We were told by the director of the Yongbyon Nuclear Center that:
The reactor operated from Feb. 2003 to end of March 2005
The reactor operated well at full power – 25 MWth
The reactor was unloaded in April 2005
Prompted by concerns about fuel rods that were loaded in January 2003
and fabricated prior to Agreed Framework of 1994
and
To extract the plutonium
Fuel rods were found to be in good shape
The reactor was reloaded and operations resumed in mid-June 2005
They are refurbishing the fuel fabrication facility to make more
fuel because they loaded the last load made prior to 1994
Slide6: Update on status of 50 and 200 MWe reactors 50 MWe reactor in Yongbyon (construction was frozen in 1994)
Ready to resume construction soon
Redesign has been completed
Construction workers preparing to return
Some components will be retained, others replaced
Only the containment vessel is inside reactor now
Core was fabricated elsewhere in 1994 – it will be retained
DPRK did not give us an estimated completion date
Director implied a couple of years, rather than five or six
Regulatory framework
Start-up license from State Nuclear Regulatory
Commission required before operations
Self-regulated for operations
Electricity will go into the grid
200 MWe reactor in Tacheon (construction also frozen in 1994)
The are still analyzing the 200 MWe construction
DPRK claims to have methods of recovering construction
But, investment is bigger than starting anew
Slide7: Plutonium reprocessing update We were told that:
8000 spent fuel rods were unloaded beginning in April 2005
Cooled ~ 3 months in spent-fuel pool
Reprocessing to extract Pu began in late June
Through-put increased by x 1.3 by technical improvements
Director explained the mystery of the “second” line
It is used as a back-up and spare
Director said reprocessing almost finished in late August
DPRK officials told Governor Richardson on Oct. 20 that they
finished reprocessing and they were decontaminating the building
As in 2003, the Pu was processed to metal
U.S. estimates are 10 to 14 kg Pu metal could have been
extracted during this campaign
Slide8: Technical summary of Aug. 2005 visit 5 MWe reactor
Operated for 26 mo., unloaded, reloaded – operating well
at full power (can run “indefinitely”).
Reprocessing
Throughput improved by x1.3; reprocessing of 8000 fuel rods
almost complete.
Will have extracted 10 to 14 kg plutonium (Pu) [U.S. estimate].
Reactor construction
Redesign of 50 MWe complete. Construction workers preparing
to restart construction.
200 MWe still under study. Would cost more to complete than to
start over.
Radioisotopes
Run Soviet-supplied IRT research reactor occasionally to produce
I-131 for thyroid cancer therapy. Limited by not having received
fresh fuel since Soviet times. DPRK is moving full-speed ahead with nuclear weapons program
Slide9: Rough estimate of DPRK nuclear status as of Nov. 2005 Plutonium
2005 MWe capacity ~ 5-7 kg/yr (1+ weapon worth/yr)
Future 5 + 50 MWe ~ 60 kg/yr (~ 10 weapons worth/yr)
Nuclear weapons
We know very little. Given demonstrated technical capabilities,
we must assume they have produced at least a few simple,
primitive nuclear devices.
No information on whether or not devices are missile capable.
Uranium enrichment
We know even less. Continued denial by Ministry of Foreign
Affairs against overwhelming evidence that they have some level
of uranium enrichment program. *Based on estimates by David Albright and Kevin O’Neill, editors, “Solving the North Korean Nuclear Puzzle,” ISIS Reports
(The Institute for Science and International Security), Washington, D.C., 2000 and Lewis/Hecker Jan. 2004 and Aug. 2005 visits.