Iran and U.S. send positive signals on nuclear talks

(Reuters) – Iran and the United States sent positive signals on Wednesday about the possibility of fresh talks on the Iranian nuclear program, which Washington suspects aims to develop atomic weapons.

Iran has given an assurance that it would stop enriching uranium to 20 percent purity if world powers agreed to a proposed nuclear fuel swap, Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu told reporters in Istanbul.

The offer, conveyed to Davutoglu on Sunday, could bode well for an expected resumption of talks in September between Iran and major powers on the Islamic Republic’s atomic program, which Tehran says is for peaceful purposes and not for bombs.

Asked about Davutoglu’s comments, the U.S. State Department said Iran had often sent mixed signals but that the United States was “fully prepared” to resume talks among the six major powers and Tehran about Iran’s nuclear program.

Iran last met the United States, Britain, China, France, Germany and Russia in Geneva in October, when they discussed Iran sending some low-enriched uranium abroad in exchange for fuel for a Tehran reactor that makes medical isotopes.

“We hope to have the same kind of meeting coming up in the coming weeks that we had last October,” State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley told reporters. “We are interested in a process — more than one meeting.”

Uranium enrichment is a process that can produce fuel for nuclear reactors or, if carried out to a much higher degree, can yield fissile material for atomic bombs.

IRANIAN LETTER

In February, Iran announced that it had started enriching uranium to 20 percent purity, from about 3.5 percent previously, raising concern that it might be planning to enrich uranium still further and to produce weapons grade material.

Since June, fresh sanctions have been imposed on Iran by the U.N. Security Council, the United States, and, on Monday, by the European Union, increasing the pressure on Tehran.

One of the demands made in repeated U.N. Security Council resolutions is that Iran suspend uranium enrichment entirely.

Turkey and Brazil brokered a deal in May for a nuclear fuel swap in Tehran, hoping that this would draw Iran and major powers back to the negotiating table, but the six powers were lukewarm about the plan. At the time, Iran said it would continue enriching uranium to 20 percent.

Davutoglu, who met his Iranian counterpart Manouchehr Mottaki and Brazilian Foreign Minister Celso Amorim on Sunday, said Iran was ready to lay to rest concern over its enrichment program if the proposed nuclear fuel swap went ahead.

“Another important message given by Mottaki during his visit to Turkey was that if the Tehran deal is signed and Iran is provided with the necessary fuel for its research activities, then they will not continue enriching uranium to 20 percent,” Davutoglu told a joint news conference with visiting German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle.

Iran sent a letter to the International Atomic Energy Agency on Monday, saying it was ready to negotiate the details of exchanging 2,646 pounds (1,200 kg) of its 3 percent enriched uranium for 265 pounds (120 kg) of 20 percent enriched uranium.

HAVE YOUR CAKE AND EAT IT TOO

Davutoglu urged that talks on this subject with the so-called Vienna Group, comprising Russia, France, the United States and the IAEA, begin as soon as possible.

“The disagreements should be left aside and negotiations between the Vienna Group and Iran should be started right away,” he said. “As progress is made in those technical negotiations, the two sides will trust each other more.”

Davutoglu said Iran had also confirmed that EU foreign affairs chief Catherine Ashton and Iran’s chief negotiator, Saeed Jalili, could meet in early September, after the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan.

NATO-member Turkey has offered to store any swapped uranium and has gone into diplomatic overdrive in an attempt to ease tensions between Western allies and its neighbor.

A U.S. official said Iran may be trying to “have their cake and eat it too,” by swapping some low enriched uranium for nuclear fuel while continuing to enrich at some level.

“A lot depends on the details,” of what Iran is willing to do, he added, saying the West had responded coolly to Iranian initiatives earlier this year because they seemed designed to stymie U.N. Security Council sanctions that passed in June.

“Now that that process is completed, if Iran wants to engage on these subjects we are more than happy to have that conversation,” the official said.

(Writing by Simon Cameron-Moore and Arshad Mohammed; editing by Patricia Wilson and Mohammad Zargham)

Energy Department Has a New Commitment to Solar (and a New Blog)

The Department of Energy launched a new blog last week, the aptly named (yet uninspiring) Energy Blog. Among other announcements and musings (OK, really more statements than deep thoughts) is a call to develop three Energy Innovation Hubs, one of which will drive research to turn sunlight into fuels.

This is not the first time the Obama Administration has shelled out for sunlight fuels. Last October, ARPA-E, the advanced projects research group at the Department of Energy, gave out $23.7 million in grants to startups and universities experimenting in the relatively new field of direct solar fuels. The current award will give out up to $122 million over the next five years to one Hub for developing this one technology.

The Energy Innovation Hubs will be modeled after the Manhattan Project, the AT&T Bell Laboratories and on the three $25 million-per-year DOE Bioenergy Research Centers. The other two Hubs will research energy efficiency in buildings systems and modeling and simulation for nuclear reactors.

For the sunlight fuels, there are already various universities that are working on direct solar fuels, including the University of Minnesota, MIT, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and Penn State. BioCee and the University of Minnesota wants to take sunlight, carbon dioxide and two organisms (cyanobacteria for sunlight capture and shewanella for metabolic transformation) to produce a liquid hydrocarbon, while MIT-spinoff Sun Catayltix uses sunlight to spilt water to produce hydrogen.

The DOE is hoping that these Hubs will be able to lay the groundwork with critical research to the point where the technology can be handed off to the private sector.

Among the other chatter from Scott Blake Harris, DOE blogger and General Counsel for the Department of Energy, is a call for public written comments on how to meet smart grid goals. The blog has a link to check out what’s already been gathered and also to submit additional feedback via email by August 9, 2010 to help shape a report due out this fall about modernizing the grid.

The Energy Blog feels a lot like the DOE News page, although you don’t find a lot of calls to tweet the DOE on the news page. The information, like updates on the Global Energy Efficiency Challenge (super-efficient appliances, energy efficiency for large commercial buildings, smart grid action, getting 20 million EVs on the road by 2020 — all lofty ideals with vague roadmaps and funding), is presented in the nearly same format as it would be in other sections of the DOE website.

Also, as this is not Twitter, and certainly not Gawker, there is not likely to be any real additional breaking information, insider views or gaffes that come across this blog. Not unless you count the fact that their RSS feed tab was broken today.

E.ON could invest in EDF nuclear reactors – press

July 9 (Reuters) – German utility E.ON (EONGn.DE) could take a partial stake in some of EDF’s (EDF.PA) nuclear reactors as part of a plan to extend the life of the plants, E.ON told a newspaper on Friday.

French parliamentarians last month passed a bill that will force former power monopoly EDF to sell a quarter of its nuclear output to rivals to foster greater competition in the electricity market.

The bill will now have to be examined by the upper house in an extraordinary parliamentary session in July or September, but a senator of the UMP ruling party has proposed instead that EDF invite shareholders into the country’s 58 nuclear reactors.

“E.ON would be very interested. But this objective must be clearly written in the law. Otherwise, the historical operator would have excessive leverage in negotiations,” said Luc Poyer, the head of E.ON France in an interview with daily Le Figaro.

“If 500 million euros are needed to extend the life of a reactor, a part of that investment could come from a player that has the technical and economic expertise. In exchange, it would get a share in the output,” he added.

Poyer also said France should further open its electricity market, which was liberalised in July 2007 in line with European Union demands, but EDF’s competitors are struggling to attract customers because of scarce access to baseload output. (Reporting by Michel Rose and Benjamin Mallet; Editing by Hans Peters)

U.S. seeks details on China-Pakistan nuclear deal

(Reuters) – The United States was seeking clarification from China on its deal earlier this year to build two new civilian nuclear reactors for Pakistan, the State Department said on Tuesday.

Politics

“We have asked China to clarify the details of its sale of additional nuclear reactors to Pakistan. This appears to extend beyond cooperation that was grandfathered when China was approved for membership in the Nuclear Suppliers Group,” State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley told reporters.

“We believe that such cooperation would require a specific exemption approved by consensus of the Nuclear Suppliers Group,” Crowley said.

The United States was expected to oppose the China-Pakistan deal next week at a meeting of the Nuclear Suppliers Group.

The 46-nation group controls trade in “dual-use” nuclear fuel, materials and technology to ensure they are applied only to civilian nuclear energy programs and not diverted into clandestine nuclear weapons work.

The Washington Post reported that China has suggested that the sale is grandfathered from before it joined the NSG in 2004, because it was completing work on two earlier reactors for Pakistan at the time.

(Reporting by JoAnne Allen; Editing by Paul Simao)

No impact from radiation leak at China nuclear plant, says CLP

June 15 (Reuters) – CLP Holdings Ltd (0002.HK), Hong Kong’s largest power supplier, said it had recorded a small rise in radioactivity in reactor cooling water at a nuclear plant in the southern Chinese city of Shenzhen last month.

“The reactor cooling water is sealed in completely and isolated from the external environment, thus causing no impact to the public,” CLP said on Tuesday.

CLP’s statement followed a report by Washington-based Radio Free Asia that the Daya Bay nuclear plant had suffered a large radiation leak that was threatening public safety.

Preliminary assessments indicated there was a very small leakage at a fuel rod in Unit 2 of the power station, the company said in a statement obtained by Reuters on Tuesday.

The level of radioactivity had since remained stable over the last two weeks, it said.

Operations at the Daya Bay nuclear power plant had not been affected, said the company, adding that the situation did not fall within the International Nuclear Event Scale, which measures the significance of nuclear accidents.

Daya Bay nuclear power plant, 25 percent owned by CLP, is located about 50 km (30 miles) from densely-populated Hong Kong and supplies a quarter of the city’s power.

The power station, which comprises two nuclear reactors with a generating capacity of 984 megawatts each, has been controversial in Hong Kong, where activists have questioned the safety of the facility.

Activists have raised questions about the time it took for CLP to issue a statement about the leak.

“We are concerned about the plant’s slow reaction (to the incident) and the long duration it took them to act on the situation,” said Prentice Koo, a Greenpeace campaigner in Hong Kong.

Hong Kong’s Security Bureau said the Hong Kong Observatory’s radiation monitoring stations had not registered any unusual levels since May 23. The bureau said it would study the incident further and follow up with CLP. (Reporting by Alison Leung and Darren Chen; Editing by Don Durfee and Chris Lewis)

US not frustrated over delay in nuclear liability law

Washington, May 29 (IANS) The US says it’s not frustrated at the delay in India enacting the nuclear liability act to take their ‘win-win’ nuclear deal forward as it understands the ‘political resonance’ over it because of the Bhopal gas disaster.

‘I don’t think it’s taken that long,’ Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asian Affairs Robert O. Blake told reporters Friday when asked if the US was frustrated at the delay which was coming in the way of US companies selling nuclear reactors to India.

‘India is a democracy and, like our own democracy, they have to work a bill first through their own cabinet system and then they have get a consensus within their own parliamentary system on this very, very important bill.’

‘And it has some political resonance in India because of the Bhopal disaster. So people obviously look at this very closely and they should. It deserves that kind of scrutiny.’

The passage of this legislation is a priority for the Indian government, he said, citing Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s remarks on the issue at his recent press conference.

‘And it’s a priority because it’s going to help the United States and other countries to deliver nuclear technology that will help to meet the energy needs of India’s fast-growing economy. And it will also help us because we’ll be able to substantially increase our exports, but also provide much needed new jobs in the United States.’

‘So we see this as a win-win for both of our countries,’ Blake said. ‘And we’re not frustrated. We trust Prime Minister Singh’s judgment on this. ‘And our main interest is in making sure that the legislation that is passed is compliant with the Convention on Supplementary Compensation, which is the international standard for such legislation.’

‘If passed, it would provide a very important legal protection and open the way for billions of dollars in American reactor exports and thousands of jobs,’ he said.

India, China have enough space to prosper globally: President Patil

On Board Air India One, May 26 (ANI): Playing down China’s nuclear help to Pakistan in establishing reactors and underscoring the border disputes, President Pratibha Devisingh Patil said on Wednesday that the Sino-Indian relationship is progressing on a friendly path.

President Patil’s six-day visit to China gains importance in wake of growing irritants in the Sino-Indian relationship like usage of the waters of the Brahmaputra, reported violation of the Indian border by the Chinese Army, and providing nuclear reactors to Pakistan.

Patil is visiting China from May 26-31 and is expected to hold discussions with the Chinese leadership on all controversial issues.

“India and China’s friendship is progressing well. We have a strategic and cooperative partnership. We have also attained pronged strategy for mutual cooperation, and when Prime Minister Manmohan Singh visited China in 2008, the two countries concluded a “Shared Vision for the 21st Century” which forms the basis for bilateral cooperation on global issues,“ she told reporters on board Air India One.

“We are progressing on the friendly path and you must have seen that in the Copenhagen Climate Change summit, on the framework on basics, we operated very well. India and China both have a future together and there is enough space in the world for both the countries to fulfill their aspiration of development so that they can grow and prosper together,” she added.

Commenting on her visit, which coincides with the 60th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between India and China, President Patil said her visit is part of the process of high-level contacts between the two countries.

She said that India and China are two large and populous countries and both of them are focussed on enhancing economic growth and social progress, so there are many areas in which the two countries can exchange views and learn from each other””s experiences.

She said that as developing nations, India and China have similar approaches and viewpoints on many global issues.

India and China have successfully carried out close cooperation within such international frameworks as G-20, BRIC countries and BASIC countries.

The two countries also coordinated with each other at the UN Copenhagen Climate Change Summit. (ANI)

India leading research on Thorium: US official

India is the leading country in the research of Thorium, a naturally occurring radio active metal, a US official has said, even as the there is a distinct possibility of its use in nuclear reactors.

“Thorium is only used in an experimental and a research way, but in theory, it could be used for reactors.

I think the country that’s leading the research effort is India, actually, which has large amounts of thorium and so they’re very interested in it,” Warren P Miller the Assistant Secretary Energy (Nuclear) said.

In his testimony before the House Science and Technology Committee, Miller said in his personal opinion the uranium resource will not be a showstopper for nuclear energy.

“There’s also the Thorium possibility. Thorium is actually more prevalent in the crust than uranium is worldwide. There’s also the possibility of breeder reactors that would use much more of the uranium,” he said in response to a question.

Miller said there are quite a few studies about the uranium resource, and most estimates would argue with reasonable projections of the growth of nuclear energy throughout the world that there’s sufficient uranium resource at reasonable prices that would last throughout the rest of this century.

Nuke cooperation with Pak completely ‘peaceful’: China

China has reassured the international community that its nuclear cooperation with Pakistan is completely ‘peaceful’ in nature, and in accordance with the safeguards set up by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).

“The cooperation is subject to safeguards and the supervision of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). It is in compliance with respective international obligations of the two countries,” The Daily Times quoted Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Jiang Yu said while responding to a statement by US Deputy Secretary of State James Steinberg.

Stressing that countries must respect their individual non-proliferation commitments, the United States had said that it was closely observing China’s offer to build two nuclear power plants in Pakistan.

Speaking during a forum at the Brookings Institution, US Deputy Secretary of State James Steinberg said Washington is concerned about proliferation issues and is studying China’s offer to assist Pakistan with nuclear reactors, adding that Washington has not taken any final decision in this regard.

Steinberg had said that the United States is keeping a close watch on Beijing’s offer to build two new nuclear power plants in Pakistan.

“The United States has not reached a final conclusion. But it’s something we’re obviously looking at very carefully,” Steinberg had said.

“I think it’s important to scrupulously honour these non-proliferation commitments. We’ll want to continue to engage on the question, about whether this is permitted under the understandings of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA),” he added.

China had earlier built two reactors for Pakistan. But in 2004 Beijing entered the Nuclear Suppliers Group, an association of nuclear energy states that forbids exports to nations lacking strict safeguards set up by the IAEA.

China began building a nuclear reactor in Chashma in Pakistan’s Punjab province in 1991 and work on a second reactor began in 2005, which is expected to be completed next year. Under the new agreement, Chinese companies will build at least two new 650-MW reactors at Chashma, a media report had said last month.

‘Obama’s approach to India ruining close Bush-era ties’

US administration’s approach to India, including its “slow” response to the request for questioning David Headley, and its proximity to Pakistan in the war on terror are steadily driving a wedge in the strong relations cultivated during the Bush-era, noted historian Arthur Herman has observed.

In an opinion piece in the New York Post, widely regarded as a conservative publication, Herman wrote that India is still waiting to question LeT operative Headley, months after it emerged that he had a role in the Mumbai terror attack.

The author and historian also described the “cozy relationship” shared by the US and Pakistan as the second area of a rift in Indo-US relations.

“The partnership with India that George W Bush carefully built is in shambles — jeopardising our future in Asia,” the piece said.

“What the Pentagon and the media trumpet as Pakistan’s new ‘cooperation’ in fighting the Taliban, Indian experts see as simply one jihadist wing of Pakistan’s secret service (the ISI) surreptitiously taking out the others, with our Predator drones doing the shooting,” it added.

Herman is the author the bestseller How the Scots Invented the Modern World, and his most recent book is Gandhi and Churchill: The Epic Rivalry that Destroyed an Empire and Forged Our Age.

The author warned that the US should not make the “mistake of scorning India” like it did during the Cold War.

“Repeating that mistake will now hurt us and our ability to make our voice heard in that vital hemisphere,” he said, contending that the approach will drive India to its once close ally Russia.

The article noted that when Obama did not sell retired aircraft carrier USS Kitty Hawk to New Delhi, India bought a Russian carrier along with 16 nuclear reactors and a fleet of new MIG 29 fighters.

“The Russian deal means more than another lost opportunity for the United States — and another troubling expansion of Moscow’s influence in the region,” Herman wrote.

“It also represents a growing perception among Indian policymakers that they need to adjust to an Asia in which America plays little or no role, especially if the US economy buries itself under a mudslide of debt,” he added.

He notes that India fears Obama’s arming of Pakistan could lead to it lording it over other nations in the region, which could lead to more terror attacks.

It also suggests that New Delhi isn’t thrilled about Washington’s push for all nations to join the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).

The author also recalled that India wasn’t too thrilled about Obama’s suggestion that China should try and mediate between New Delhi and Islamabad over Kashmir.

“As the Indian press noted at the time, nothing could be more calculated to arouse New Delhi’s wrath than the suggestion that not one but two erstwhile enemies should have a say in the fate of what is still sovereign Indian territory,” he said.

Nuke cooperation with Pak completely ‘peaceful’: China

Islamabad, May 13 (ANI): China has reassured the international community that its nuclear cooperation with Pakistan is completely ‘peaceful’ in nature, and in accordance with the safeguards set up by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).

“The cooperation is subject to safeguards and the supervision of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). It is in compliance with respective international obligations of the two countries,” The Daily Times quoted Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Jiang Yu said while responding to a statement by US Deputy Secretary of State James Steinberg.

Stressing that countries must respect their individual non-proliferation commitments, the United States had said that it was closely observing China’s offer to build two nuclear power plants in Pakistan.

Speaking during a forum at the Brookings Institution, US Deputy Secretary of State James Steinberg said Washington is concerned about proliferation issues and is studying China’s offer to assist Pakistan with nuclear reactors, adding that Washington has not taken any final decision in this regard.

Steinberg had said that the United States is keeping a close watch on Beijing’s offer to build two new nuclear power plants in Pakistan.

“The United States has not reached a final conclusion. But it’s something we’re obviously looking at very carefully,” Steinberg had said.

“I think it’s important to scrupulously honour these non-proliferation commitments. We””ll want to continue to engage on the question, about whether this is permitted under the understandings of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA),” he added.

China had earlier built two reactors for Pakistan. But in 2004 Beijing entered the Nuclear Suppliers Group, an association of nuclear energy states that forbids exports to nations lacking strict safeguards set up by the IAEA.

China began building a nuclear reactor in Chashma in Pakistan’s Punjab province in 1991 and work on a second reactor began in 2005, which is expected to be completed next year. Under the new agreement, Chinese companies will build at least two new 650-MW reactors at Chashma, a media report had said last month. (ANI)

India, Kazakh have congruence on regional and international issues: Krishna

Astana (Kazakhstan), May 12 (ANI): External Affairs Minister S. M. Krishna, who arrived here on a three-day State visit on Tuesday, said that both India and Kazakhstan have a strong congruence of views on major regional and international issues.

Addressing the media here, Krishna said: “India and Kazakhstan enjoy warm and friendly ties going back several millennia. We both are multi-ethnic, multi-religious and secular societies. We have also forged a strategic partnership to give a qualitative boost to our ties.”

“The landmark visit of President Nazarbayev to India (January 2009) as a chief guest at our Republic Day celebrations provided a significant impulse to our bilateral ties,” he added.

He also said that India have rapidly moved to implement the far reaching initiatives taken during his visit, in diverse sectors like energy, including hydro-carbon, thermal and nuclear, fertilizers, agriculture, information technology, space, pharmaceuticals, trade and investment.

Krishna further said he was confident that an agreement between ONGC Videsh Limited (OVL) and KazMunaiGas on exploration and production in the Satpayev Oil Block would be concluded soon.

He said he is also confident that an Inter-Governmental Agreement on civilian nuclear energy cooperation would be finalized soon.

“This sector has immense possibilities for bilateral cooperation including for supply of uranium ore, investment by Indian companies in mining in Kazakhstan, construction of nuclear reactors and others,” he added.

He said discussions in several other promising areas like thermal power plants, transportation and banking are at an advanced stage.

“Both India and Kazakhstan are factors of peace, stability, development and growth, not only in the region but also in the world,” he added.

Krishna further said: “We would like to invite Kazakh companies to invest in India and take advantage of the huge market that India has to offer.”

India and Kazakhstan will sign an exploration and production agreement for the Satpayev oil block on the Caspian Sea before the new domestic Kazakh law on reviewing contracts of foreign companies comes into force. (ANI)

US keeping close watch on China’s offer to build nuke power plants in Pak

Washington, May 11 (ANI): Stressing that countries must respect their individual non-proliferation commitments, the United States has said that it is closely observing China’s offer to build two nuclear power plants in Pakistan.

Speaking during a forum at the Brookings Institution, US Deputy Secretary of State James Steinberg said Washington is concerned about proliferation issues and is studying China’s offer to assist Pakistan with nuclear reactors, adding that Washington has not taken any final decision in this regard.

“The United States has not reached a final conclusion. But it”s something we”re obviously looking at very carefully,” The News quoted Steinberg, as saying.

“I think it”s important to scrupulously honour these non-proliferation commitments. We”ll want to continue to engage on the question, about whether this is permitted under the understandings of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA),” he said in reply to a question.

China had earlier built two reactors for Pakistan. But in 2004 Beijing entered the Nuclear Suppliers Group, an association of nuclear energy states that forbids exports to nations lacking strict safeguards set up by the IAEA.

China began building a nuclear reactor in Chashma in Pakistan”s Punjab province in 1991 and work on a second reactor began in 2005, which is expected to be completed next year. Under the new agreement, Chinese companies will build at least two new 650-MW reactors at Chashma, a media report had said last month. (ANI)

China’s plan to build two nuclear plants in Pakistan worries Washington: Report

London, Apr.29 (ANI): In what could severely impede the United States’ efforts towards nuclear non-proliferation, China has reportedly agreed to help Pakistan build two nuclear reactors.

According to a report in The Financial Times, Chinese companies and officials in Islamabad have confirmed the deal, which is yet to be made public by Beijing.

China began building a nuclear reactor in Chashma in Pakistan”s Punjab province in 1991 and work on a second rector began in 2005, which is expected to be completed next year. Under the new agreement, Chinese companies will build at least two new 650-MW reactors at Chashma, the report said.

It quoted a Pakistani government official privy to the discussions with China over the issue as saying : “Our Chinese brothers have once again lived up to our expectations. They have agreed to continue cooperating with us in the nuclear energy field.”

Diplomats in China said that though Beijing has given its formal approval to the deal, there could still be last-minute hitches in the talks between the two governments.

Analysts believe that China’s overtures to Pakistan were primarily because of political reasons, as it wanted to help its ‘old ally’ after the US snubbed Islamabad’s demand for a India like civil nuclear deal.

“China had decided to go ahead with the deal because for political reasons it felt Pakistan should be compensated in some way for the US-India nuclear deal,” the newspaper quoted Mark Hibbs, senior associate at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace”s nuclear policy programme, as saying.

“After the dust settled on the US-India nuclear deal, China gravitated towards a position that it will support nuclear commerce if it benefits Chinese industry,” Hibbs added.

It is worth mentioning that the deal between Washington and New Delhi had facilitated nuclear co-operation, even though India has not signed the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).

Hibbs also pointed out that while the White House is concerned over the deal keeping in mind Pakistan’s history of nuclear proliferation, it can not do much as it wants keep Pakistan engaged in Afghanistan and garner Beijing’s support over Iran’s nuclear programme.

He is said that it was difficult for the Obama Administration to oppose the deal between Pakistan and China as it has a similar accord with India. (ANI)

NPCIL uploads dummy fuel into Kudankulam nuclear power reactor

Kudankulam (Tamil Nadu), Apr 24 (ANI): The first unit of the 2,000 Mega Watt Kudankulam atomic power project achieved a milestone as dummy fuel assemblies were uploaded into the first VVER-1000 Russian made Light Water Reactor”s core on Friday.

The dummy fuel assemblies were uploaded in to the reactor to assess its performance before the actual uranium fuel is used.

The Nuclear Power Corporation of India Limited (NPCIL) is building two light water nuclear units of 1,000 Mega Watt each at Tamil Nadu’s Kudankulam in Tirunelveli District with the equipment supplied by Russia.

A total of 163 dummy fuel assemblies, or exact replicas, made of lead, of the actual nuclear fuel, each weighing 705 kg and measuring 4.57 meters in length, would be loaded.

“Kudankulam-1 totally is the major event where we have started loading of the dummy bundles and dummy fuel bundles and dummy fuel bundle actually is required to be loaded in PWR reactors to create the similar situation which will be there when the actual plant is operating,” said S.K. Jain, NPCIL Chairman and Managing Director.

“The fuel assembly is 100 percent identical to the actual fuel which was in the reactors; only difference is that it does not have uranium. So this dummy fuel bundle loading has started which we hope to complete in 7-10 days time,” he added.

The reactor box-up for conducting “hydro-test” and the “hot circulation flushing” of the primary coolant systems is done following the dummy loading.

The plant is expected to go on stream by December.

“As per our ambition and target, actual fuel loading we are planning to start in September, so that by December the plant will start generating power,” said Jain.

NPCIL and Russia”s Atomstroy Export last month inked a deal to build two more civil nuclear reactors of 1,000 MW each at Kudankulam.

A total of 12 Russian reactors are expected to come up in India, of which six would be built between 2012 and 2017. (ANI)

GDF Suez unit Electrabel appoints new CEO

BRUSSELS, April 8 (Reuters) – Belgian energy company Electrabel, owned by French utilities giant GDF Suez (GSZ.PA) said its Chief Executive Jean-Pierre Hansen had asked the board to end his mandate.

Utilities

Hansen, who will remain a director and retain a seat on the utility’s executive committee, will be replaced by Dirk Beeuwsaert, Electrabel said in a statement following a board meeting on Wednesday.

Hansen would also continue to lead the group’s talks with the Belgian government to extend the lifetime of Electrabel’s three oldest nuclear reactors, Electrabel said. (Reporting by Antonia van de Velde; editing by Elaine Hardcastle)

China wants good relations with India and Pakistan: Chinese Envoy

New Delhi, Apr.1 (ANI): China”s envoy to India Zhang Yan today said that his country wants to have good relations with India and Pakistan,and added that Beijing does want its relations with one country to affect the other.

Speaking exclusively to ANI on the sidelines of a function at the Indian Council of World Affairs (ICWA), which was organized to mark the 60th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between India and China, Yan said both India and Pakistan were close neighbours of China.

“We don”t want to see relations of one country affect relationship with the other country, that”s not our policy,” Yan said.

“We hope the three countries (India, Pakistan and China) join efforts to work together for the betterment of the region and for betterment of three countries,” he added.

China and Pakistan are seen as all weather friends. The Asian dragon is making investments in building huge dams in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir and restive Balochistan province. China has also helped Pakistan with the building of that country”s nuclear reactors and also remained a key supplier of arms and ammunition.

China”s cozy relationship with Pakistan is seen with a sense of skepticism by India, which is competing with China for economic supremacy in Asia and, both countries have a festering border dispute on which several rounds of discussions have taken place among the special representatives of the two countries, but has achieved very little.

Speaking on the border issue, Yan said: “We conduct our relations in a more broader way, not just focus on border issue. We have more other important areas of cooperation, more urgent issues to work together.”

Emphasizing the underlying tensions, Yan said: “Like any other country, there are problems and differences but, that”s not a big difficulty. I agree we should handle our relationship more actively and in a more positive way, especially to appropriately handle the difficulties and the remaining problems between our two countries.”

Making a veiled reference to the shrill media reports of Chinese incursions, which dominated the media of both countries, Yan stressed that both countries should guide public opinion in fair and
just manner.

Earlier speaking at the ICWA, National Security Advisor Shiv Shanker Menon said the emergence of
“nativist” voices, and the loud expression of opinion as fact in the new media which purports to express public opinion, could introduce volatility in perceptions.

“Neither India nor China can afford misperceptions or distortions of policy caused by a lack of understanding of each other”s compulsions and policy processes,” Menon added.

On the occasion of 60 years of diplomatic relations between India and China, leaders of both countries exchanged pleasantries and compliments.

External Affairs Minister S M Krishna will also be making a visit to China on April 5 to flag off
the Festival of India in Beijing. (ANI)

Pak signed ‘civil nuke deal’ with China just ahead of strategic talk with US

Islamabad, Mar.30 (ANI): Pakistan has reportedly entered into a civil nuclear deal with China for setting up two nuclear power stations of 640 megawatts in Chashma.

According to sources, the deal under which Beijing would be providing Islamabad financial and technical assistance for the project, was finalised ahead of the last week’s first ministerial level strategic dialogue between Pakistan and the United States.

During the strategic dialogue Washington had rejected Pakistan’s demands of having a India like civil nuclear deal.

The federal government had approved an inter-government framework agreement on the financing of ‘Chashma Nuclear Power Project 3’ and ‘Chashma Nuclear Power Project 4’ with China, The Daily Times reports.

Each 320-megawatt unit would contain a nuclear steam supply system, a turbine-generator set and the associated auxiliary equipment and installations, sources added.

Insiders said that under the deal, China would be providing 82 percent of the total 1.912 billion dollars to Pakistan as a 20-year soft loan, with an eight-year grace period.

They said that the frequent visits of President Asif Ali Zardari and Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani to Beijing was particularly aimed at securing the deal.

Chasma houses a number of establishments of the Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission, including two units of 300 megawatt nuclear reactors. (ANI)

Physicists detect geo-neutrinos from deep within Earth’s core

Washington, March 27 (ANI): In a new study, two University of Massachusetts Amherst physicists are measuring some of the faintest and rarest particles ever detected, geo-neutrinos, from deep within Earth, with the greatest precision yet achieved.

The data, being collected using a delicate instrument located under a mountain in central Italy, reveal, for the first time, a well defined signal, above background noise, of the extremely rare geo-neutrino particle from deep within Earth.

Geo-neutrinos are anti-neutrinos produced in the radioactive decays of uranium, thorium, potassium and rubidium found in ancient rocks deep within our planet.

These decays are believed to contribute a significant but unknown fraction of the heat generated inside Earth, where this heat influences volcanic activity and tectonic plate movements, for example.

Borexino, the large neutrino detector, serves as a window to look deep into the Earth’s core and report on the planet’s structure.

Borexino is located at the Laboratorio Nazionale del Gran Sasso underground physics laboratory in a 10 km-long tunnel about 5,000 feet (1.5 km) under Gran Sasso, or Great Rock Mountain, in the Appenines and operated by Italy’s Institute of Nuclear Physics.

The instrument detects anti-neutrinos and other subatomic particles that interact in its special liquid center, a 300-ton sphere of scintillator fluid surrounded by a thin, 27.8-foot diameter transparent nylon balloon.

The new Borexino data have stronger significance because of their purity and the absence of nuclear reactors.

According to UMass Amherst researcher Andrea Pocar, “The Borexino detector is very clean and has lower levels of radioactive impurities than ever achieved in experiments of this kind.”

“It is indeed a very ‘quiet’ apparatus for the observation of low energy neutrinos, and exceptionally precise for distinguishing these particles by origin, either solar, geo or human-made,” he said.

The small number of anti-neutrinos detected at Borexino, only a couple each month, helps to settle a long-standing question among geophysicists and geologists about whether our planet harbors a huge, natural nuclear reactor at its core.

Based on the unprecedently clear geo anti-neutrino data, the answer is no, say the UMass Amherst physicists.

“This is all new information we are receiving from inside the Earth from the geo-neutrino probe,” explained UMass Amherst researchers Laura Cadonati.

“Our data are exciting because they open a new frontier. This is the beginning. More work is needed for a detailed understanding of Earth’s interior and the source of its heat, with new geo-neutrino detectors above continental and oceanic crust,” she said. (ANI)

Self-repairing materials may soon make nuclear reactors a whole lot safer

Washington, March 26 (ANI): As a result of research by Los Alamos National Laboratory scientists, self-repairing materials within nuclear reactors may one day become a reality.

Los Alamos researchers report a surprising mechanism that allows nanocrystalline materials to heal themselves after suffering radiation-induced damage.

Nanocrystalline materials are those created from nanosized particles, in this case copper particles.

Nanocrystalline materials consist of a mixture of grains and the interface between those grains, called grain boundaries.

When designing nuclear reactors or the materials that go into them, one of the key challenges is finding materials that can withstand an outrageously extreme environment.

In addition to constant bombardment by radiation, reactor materials may be subjected to extremes in temperature, physical stress, and corrosive conditions.

Exposure to high radiation alone produces significant damage at the nanoscale, as it can cause individual atoms or groups of atoms to be jarred out of place.

Each vagrant atom becomes known as an interstitial.

The empty space left behind by the displaced atom is known as a vacancy. Consequently, every interstitial created also creates one vacancy.

As these defects build up over time in a material, effects such as swelling, hardening or embrittlement can manifest in the material and lead to catastrophic failure.

Therefore, designing materials that can withstand radiation-induced damage is very important for improving the reliability, safety and lifespan of nuclear energy systems.

Because nanocrystalline materials contain a large fraction of grain boundaries – which are thought to act as sinks that absorb and remove defects – scientists have expected that these materials should be more radiation tolerant than their larger-grain counterparts.

Recent computer simulations by the Los Alamos researchers describe the never-before-observed phenomenon of a “loading-unloading” effect at grain boundaries in nanocrystalline materials.

This loading-unloading effect allows for effective self-healing of radiation-induced defects.

Using three different computer simulation methods, the researchers looked at the interaction between defects and grain boundaries on time scales ranging from picoseconds to microseconds.

On the shorter timescales, radiation-damaged materials underwent a “loading” process at the grain boundaries, in which interstitial atoms became trapped-or loaded-into the grain boundary.

Under these conditions, the subsequent number of accumulated vacancies in the bulk material occurred in amounts much greater than would have occurred in bulk materials in which a boundary didn”t exist.

After trapping interstitials, the grain boundary later “unloaded” interstitials back into vacancies near the grain boundary.

In doing so, the process annihilates both types of defects – healing the material. (ANI)