
Anne Lauvergeon, CEO of AREVA
Anne Lauvergeon is CEO of AREVA. This speech was given at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace’s 2009 Conference on Nonproliferation in Washington, D.C. on April 6, 2009. Previously: Part I – Part II – Part III
The nuclear industry itself can play an important role in making the acquisition of national enrichment and recycling facilities unnecessary and uneconomic. Thanks to a well-functioning fuel cycle market, with suppliers like AREVA that provide enrichment and used fuel recycling services at competitive prices, newcomers to nuclear energy simply do not need sensitive technologies! As well as many countries such as the Netherlands, Belgium, or Switzerland have enjoyed the benefits of nuclear energy for 40 years without mastering any sensitive technology! Fuel is supplied as part of long-term contracts, covered by export licenses. To make sure its products and services remain viable in the long term, the nuclear industry has already committed to major investments in new capacity.
I can see some of you reacting when I speak about recycling… Let me make a special focus on the recycling issue as I am convinced that this has to be the nerve centre of the partnership between nuclear industry and the non-proliferation community.
As we all know, there has been a long-standing debate about the merits of recycling and the management of the back-end of the fuel cycle.
- On one side is the once-through approach historically endorsed by the United States, which involves disposing of used fuel as a waste.
- On the other side is the recycling approach adopted by France, Japan, the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, and under consideration by China and India, which consists of recycling used fuel and recovering both plutonium and uranium to produce recycled fuel.
Concerns about proliferation risks of recycling were at the heart of the US policy, which was originally established on an interim basis by President Gerald Ford and extended by President Carter. The Bush Administration showed a new willingness to reconsider America’s once-through used fuel management strategy and to examine the merits of developing advanced technologies. We do not yet know what policy the Administration of President Barack Obama will adopt on recycling, but Secretary of Energy Steven Chu has expressed interest in continued research and development on recycling technologies.
Those decisions belong to the US Government and it is certainly not my role to interfere! Let me just give you my experience as a CEO of the world leader in this field. For this very reason, I might appear biased on the question of recycling… I am indeed guilty of such bias, but not for ideological or commercial reasons!
The closed fuel cycle approach is an industrial solution available today, and the inescapable path of the future. The experience shows that, under the right framework, treatment and recycling are a very good option, at a competitive cost. AREVA has treated more than 20 000 tons of spent fuel from 7 countries, on a commercial basis. Concretely, it means that the spent fuel used by our customers is taken back to La Hague, treated there in a way that enables to recycle 96% of it. The recycled materials are then taken to our facility in Melox, where MOX fuel is manufactured. This technique means that our customers have no access to any separated fissile materials, at any moment.
I am convinced that recycling is an economically, environmentally and socially responsible approach to the management of used nuclear fuel. I am always ready to share my views with skeptics and opponents, but I would first give them an advice: “please, come and see what recycling means to AREVA in our facilities! Come and visit AREVA’s recycling facility at La Hague and MOX fabricating in Melox!”
By sharing with you my experience, I would like to convince you that recycling used fuel and fabricating MOX fuel under effective safeguards and physical protection measures have not contributed and will not contribute to the weakening of the nonproliferation regime.
On the contrary, I believe that AREVA is contributing to reducing proliferation risks and being environmentally responsible. AREVA removes used fuel, recycles reusable material, and reduces the volume and radiotoxicity of waste. In the United States alone, if the US chooses to recycle, there is already enough used fuel in temporary storage at utility sites to generate enough electricity from nuclear origin to power the US for 7 years.
In addition AREVA is contributing to nuclear arms control and disarmament by
helping to eliminate weapons plutonium declared as excess by the United States in connection with its international commitments. We are building a MOX Fuel Fabrication Facility in Savannah River, South Carolina, based on our MELOX facility used to produce recycled fuel in France. This will enable the United States to convert 34 metric tons of surplus weapons-grade plutonium into MOX fuel for the elimination / destruction / disposition of nuclear weapons and the production of electricity in commercial nuclear plants! We are also part of the Global Threat Reduction Initiative of the DoE by recycling in La Hague separated plutonium, then used in MOX fuel.
As we all know here, MOX fuel is the only solution available in the short-term to reduce the surplus of weapons-grade plutonium. I think important to state it here, when President Obama has urged weapon-states to go further in nuclear disarmament. Let me say that AREVA is ready to deepen its partnering with the US Government.
Ladies and Gentlemen,
After the G20 Summit last week in London, some comments said that we may enter a new world as far as economy is concerned. For nuclear energy, it is already done! We have entered indeed a world where nuclear industry is not to be seen as part of the problem, as it could have in the past, nor as a passive actor, but as an active part of the solution; a world where efficiency and pragmatism have replaced prestige.
The ongoing nuclear renaissance offers us indeed a tremendous opportunity to meeting the energy, economic and environmental needs of both developed and developing countries, for the lifetime of our children and beyond. This, without increasing the risk of nuclear weapons!
On the contrary, I strongly believe that thanks to the partnership between all the stakeholders in non-proliferation – you, from the community of non-proliferation, me, as a representative of the nuclear industry, – we are able to seize this nuclear renaissance as the unique opportunity it is, the opportunity to enhancing the culture of nonproliferation among all the stakeholders of this renaissance.
Ladies and Gentlemen, thank you for your attention. I’ll be happy to address and
deepen any questions you may want to tackle.