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Professor Nuke's avatar

Great overview of the technical and economic challenges of reprocessing, but there is particular error I think it necessary to point out:

"The fuel required for pyroprocessing, metallic uranium-plutonium-zirconium alloy, is used in no commercial power plant anywhere in the world including those Russian, Chinese and Indian fast reactors all of which use MOX."

This is not correct; in fact, the very process diagram you use illustrates the head-end oxide reduction process which would be a necessary pre-conditioning step for an oxide-based fuel input to pyroprocessing. Yes, the fuel needs to be a metallic form before electrochemical separations, but this is the whole point of the oxide reduction process.

It's plenty fair to point to the lack of scale-up demonstrated for electrochemical processing, especially as in its current form, it has only been demonstrated as a batch process rather than a continuous process like aqueous processes such as PUREX. But it's not impossible to adapt it to an oxide-based fuel cycle.

Nakup Lepton's avatar

Independent of cost and technical obstacles, which countries are allowed and which countries are not allowed to do nuclear reprocessing?

For example. South Korea originally agreed to forgo enrichment and reprocessing when it signed a nuclear cooperation agreement with Washington in 1972. Only in 2025 they were allowed civil uranium enrichment and spent fuel reprocessing for peaceful uses.

UAE committed to forgo domestic uranium enrichment and reprocessing of spent fuel.

Japan was allowed to do reprocessing, probably because Prime Minister Fukuda was seeing Japan’s nuclear energy goals as “life and death” matters.

Would for example Poland, or Canada be allowed uranium enrichment or reprocessing of spent fuel?

Fuel reprocessing is integral part of many molten-salt reactor designs, which countries would be allowed to build and operate such reactors?

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