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1 Pavel Podvig, Disposition of Excess Military Nuclear Material 1 (2012)

handle is hein.unl/dispoex0001 and id is 1 raw text is: Disposition of Excess
Military Nuclear Material
Pavel Podvig
UNIDIR
Nuclear material in military stockpiles is the largest category of nuclear fissile
material that has been produced in the world. In 2012 the global stockpile of
highly enriched uranium (HEU) was estimated to be about 1440±125 tonnes and
of separated plutonium 495±10 tonnes.1 Most of this material was produced as
part of military programmes and a large fraction of it remains available for military
purposes. About 940 tonnes of HEU and almost 140 tonnes of plutonium are in
nuclear weapons or weapon components or available for warhead production.
This amount of material is equivalent to more than 55,000 nuclear weapons.
Verified and irreversible elimination of weapon-usable nuclear material is one
of the essential elements of the nuclear disarmament effort. The Action Plan
adopted at the 2010 Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) Review Conference
calls on nuclear-weapon states to declare fissile material designated as no longer
required for military purposes, and to place this material under safeguards to
ensure that it remains permanently outside military programmes.2 All states
are also encouraged to develop verification arrangements that would ensure
irreversible elimination of military materials.3 In addition to supporting the
nuclear disarmament process, these steps could also be a stepping stone towards
a fissile material control regime that would stop production of new military
material and begin elimination of the existing stocks.
After the end of the cold war, the United States and Russia, the two states
that possess the largest stockpiles of military fissile materials, declared more
than 700 tonnes of HEU and almost 100 tonnes of weapons-grade plutonium
as excess to military requirements. They also have made significant progress in
setting up programmes to eliminate the excess material-more than 550 tonnes
of military HEU had been eliminated by the end of 2011.4 The United Kingdom
is the only other state that declared some of its military material as excess to
1  International Panel on Fissile Materials, Global Fissile Material Report 2011: Nuclear Weapon and
Fissile Material Stockpiles and Production, 2012, pp. 2-3.

2   2010 NPT Action Plan, action 16.
3   Ibid., action 17.
4   International Panel on Fissile Materials, Global Fissile Material Report 2011: Nuclear Weapon and
Fissile Material Stockpiles and Production, 2012, pp. 8-9, 17.

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