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GAO-08-606R 1 (2008-03-31)

handle is hein.gao/gaocrptawos0001 and id is 1 raw text is: 



  SGAO

       Accountability * Integrity * Reliability
United States Government Accountability Office
Washington, DC 20548


         March 31, 2008

         Congressional Requesters

         Subject: Nuclear Material: DOE Has Several Potential Options for Dealing with
         Depleted Uranium Tails, Each of Which Could Benefit the Government

         Since the 1940s, one mission of the Department of Energy (DOE) and its predecessor
         agencies has been processing uranium as a source of nuclear material for defense and
         commercial purposes. A key step in this process is the enrichment of natural
         uranium, which increases its concentration of uranium-235, the isotope of uranium
         that undergoes fission to release enormous amounts of energy. Before it can be
         enriched, natural uranium must be chemically converted into uranium hexafluoride.
         The enrichment process results in two principal products: (1) enriched uranium
         hexafluoride, which can be further processed for specific uses, such as nuclear
         weapons or fuel for nuclear power plants; and (2) leftover tails of uranium
         hexafluoride. These tails are also known as depleted uranium because the material is
         depleted in uranium-235 compared with natural uranium.

         Since 1993, uranium enrichment activities at DOE-owned uranium enrichment plants
         have been performed by the U.S. Enrichment Corporation (USEC), formerly a wholly
         owned government corporation that was privatized in 1998. However, DOE still
         maintains approximately 700,000 metric tons of depleted uranium tails in about
         63,000 metal cylinders in storage yards at its Paducah, Kentucky, and Portsmouth,
         Ohio, enrichment plants. It must safely maintain these cylinders because the tails are
         dangerous to human health and the environment. Uranium hexafluoride is
         radioactive and forms extremely corrosive and potentially lethal compounds if it
         contacts water. DOE also maintains large inventories of natural and enriched
         uranium that are also surplus to the department's needs.

         Tails have historically been viewed as a waste product because considerable
         enrichment processing is required to further extract the remaining useful quantities
         of uranium-235. In the past, low uranium prices meant that these enrichment services
         would cost more than the relatively small amount of uranium-235 extracted would be
         worth. However, an approximately tenfold increase in uranium prices-from
         approximately $21 per kilogram of uranium in the form of uranium hexafluoride in
         November 2000 to about $200 per kilogram in February 2008-has potentially made it
         profitable to re-enrich some tails to further extract uranium-235. Even with the
         current higher uranium prices, however, only DOE's tails with higher concentrations
         of uranium-235 (at least 0.3 percent) could currently be profitably re-enriched,
         according to industry officials. About one-third of DOE's tails contain uranium-235
         concentrations at that level or higher.


GAO-08-606R Nuclear Material

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