SHOULD THE U.S. PROCEED WITH A NEW TRITIUM PRODUCTION REACTOR? YES, BUT MAKE IT THE RIGHT ONE!

(Washington, D.C.): Within the next
few weeks, the United States government
will face a policy choice of potentially
enormous consequence. The outcome will
have significance for: the nation’s
future security interests; its prospects
for energy independence; and its
leadership in the field of safe nuclear
power generation for commercial purposes.

The New York Times reported
on 4 October 1991 that the Bush
Administration is reconsidering the need
for a new reactor to produce tritium — a
radioactive gas used in modern U.S.
nuclear weapons — in light of the
President’s 27 September decision to
eliminate thousands of these devices.
According to this article, officials in
the Office of Management and Budget are
wondering whether sufficient quantities
of this gas (which is used to boost the
explosive power of nuclear weapons) can
be mined from retired systems to meet
future tritium requirements, without
having to construct an expensive New
Production Reactor (NPR) for this
purpose.

Restructure the Near-Term
Tritium Production Plan

The fact of the matter is that Mr.
Bush’s decision has significantly
alleviated the problems the United States
otherwise would have experienced in
meeting near-to medium-term tritium
production requirements
. As a
result, it is appropriate to reexamine
Department of Energy activities now
underway aimed at satisfying nuclear
weapons requirements during that
time-frame.

Specifically, the plan to spend
hundreds of millions of dollars over the
next two years to restart the nation’s
only existing production reactors — the
obsolescent “K” and
“L” reactors at Savannah River
— should be redirected along the
following lines:

  • The “K” reactor should
    be brought to the point where the
    its viability can be
    reestablished. This could be
    accomplished by testing it at
    roughly a fifteen-percent power
    level to confirm the
    effectiveness of various
    improvements made prior to and
    during the period it has been
    shut down.
  • Once this capability has been
    demonstrated, the “K”
    reactor should not continue to be
    operated. Instead, it should be
    placed in “warm
    stand-by” status (i.e., a
    condition from which it could be
    restarted within two-years time,
    if the need arises).
  • In the meantime, the
    “L” reactor should be
    shut down permanently, much as
    the “P” reactor was
    before it.

The Case for A New
Production Reactor

While such an arrangement should prove
in the wake of President Bush’ decision
sufficient to meet projected near-to
medium-term tritium requirements and to
hedge against unexpected ones, it
certainly will not satisfy those the
United States will face over the
longer-term. Because of the speed with
which tritium decays (it loses half its
radioactive properties within just twelve
years), indefinite perpetuation of the
present hiatus in tritium production
would mean that by the early years of the
next century significant portions of the
U.S. nuclear deterrent will become
ineffective and insupportable.

In short, if the United States is
going to continue to field nuclear arms
much past the year 2000, it is going to
have to have a secure supply of new
tritium. As a result, this country will
require a New Production Reactor. For it
to be available to start producing
necessary quantities of tritium by that
time, however, construction of
the NPR will need to begin during this
fiscal year
.

To ensure that such a schedule is met,
however, the Department of Energy will
have to allocate substantially greater
funds to the NPR than are currently
programmed. The most sensible way to
accomplish the needed reprogramming would
be to apply to the NPR funds saved from
restructuring the “K” and
“L” restart programs.

An Optimal Design for NPR
— and the Nation

The case for such a reordering of
DoE’s requirements in the present
strategic and fiscal environment would be
even stronger if the New Production
Reactor design affords the following
options:

  • Latitude to modify the size of
    the NPR to meet reduced tritium
    output requirements: There is no
    compelling reason to pursue a
    design that has been sized to
    meet such requirements far in
    excess of those likely to
    eventuate. More to the point,
    there is no need to pay the
    substantial sums associated with
    such excess capacity.
  • Productive use of the NPR
    even if, at some point in the
    distant future, a decision is
    made not to employ it to produce
    tritium.
  • Utilization of the NPR as
    a test bed that serves the
    national interest above and
    beyond producing tritium for
    vital defense purposes.

Downselect the Winning NPR
Design Now!

Only one of the two designs now
competing for selection as the New
Production Reactor — the
High-Temperature, Gas-Cooled Reactor
(HTGR) — offers these benefits. Unlike
its rival, an updated version of the
existing heavy water reactors at Savannah
River, the HTGR has the following
attributes:

  • The HTGR is scaleable. Because
    the HTGR utilizes a number of
    small reactors to produce a given
    level of tritium, should the need
    for tritium be greatly reduced,
    any excess capacity can be
    eliminated simply by cutting back
    on the number of reactors
    procured. The heavy water design
    cannot be similarly modified; it
    is basically the direct
    descendent of earlier, large core
    reactor designs. Any effort to
    reduce the size of the heavy
    water design would require going
    back to the drawing boards and
    spending substantial sums and
    time in qualifying a redesigned
    core.
  • The HTGR can produce
    electricity
    as a
    by-product of the production of
    tritium. The sale of this
    electricity to civilian power
    grids can be used to offset to
    some degree the costs of
    construction and operation. The
    heavy water alternative has no
    such capability.
  • The HTGR offers an
    “inherently safe”
    reactor design that can serve as
    a prototype for the next
    generation of commercial power
    reactors.
    Designed in
    such a way as to avoid the kinds
    of catastrophic failures possible
    with traditional reactor designs,
    the HTGR has the potential to
    allay understandable public
    misapprehensions about nuclear
    power plants. The same cannot be
    said of the heavy water design.

In other words, the HTGR offers an
attractive “two-fer”: On the
one hand, it appears to be the most
efficient and flexible approach to
producing whatever tritium will be
required over the long haul for U.S.
national security purposes. On the other,
it offers an attractive and publicly
acceptable means of addressing the block
obsolescence of the United States
existing commercial nuclear reactors.
Successful commercialization in sale of
civilian nuclear technology overseas.

Conclusion and
Recommendation

Neither President Bush’s initiative
nor Mikhail Gorbachev’s 5 October
response have altered the fundamental
requirement for a long-term U.S.
tritium-production capacity. Accordingly
the Administration and the Congress should
urgently implement: a restructuring of
the near-term production program for
tritium production along the lines
described above; a redirection of
resources thus freed up to the New
Production Reactor program; and an
immediate down-selection in the NPR
competition in favor of the HTGR, the
reactor design best suited to meeting
fluid long-term tritium production needs and
the larger national interest
.

Center for Security Policy

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