close
MENU
Hot Topic Summer features
Hot Topic Summer features
2 mins to read

Agreements made over nuclear threat in Washington - Key

The 47 countries represented at the Nuclear Security Summit in Washington DC this week have agreed to reduce the threat of nuclear terrorism and New Zealand showed the difference a small country can make, Prime Minister John Key says.He said the summit, c

NZPA
Wed, 14 Apr 2010

The 47 countries represented at the Nuclear Security Summit in Washington DC this week have agreed to reduce the threat of nuclear terrorism and New Zealand showed the difference a small country can make, Prime Minister John Key says.

He said the summit, convened by United States President Barack Obama, was a "crucial step forward" in reducing the global threat from nuclear terrorism.

New Zealand's participation in the summit underlined the contribution a small country could make, Mr Key said.

"New Zealand has long had an independent and principled voice on nuclear issues, and our anti-nuclear law is well known domestically and internationally."

New Zealand was also "committed to playing our part" to ensure the threat of nuclear terrorism was never realised.

In the American capital, Mr Key announced New Zealand's commitment to further funding of the Global Partnership Against the Spread of Weapons and Materials of Mass Destruction and the International Atomic Energy Agency's Nuclear Security Fund.

New Zealand has contributed almost $6 million to the global partnership since 2004.

Mr Obama called the summit to focus world attention on keeping dangerous materials out of terrorist hands.

The Obama administration submitted to Congress legislation to bring US laws into line with two treaties: one to crack down on potential nuclear terrorism and one on the physical protection of nuclear materials.

The US also committed to requesting an "advisory mission" from the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) to review physical security at a nuclear facility of the National Institute of Standards and Technology.

Officials from the US, Canada and Mexico announced an agreement to work together, along with the UN's nuclear watchdog agency, to convert the fuel in Mexico's research reactor from highly enriched uranium to a lower-enriched fuel that would be much harder to use in the manufacturing of a nuclear weapon.

Mexico further agreed that once the fuel is converted, it will get rid of all its highly enriched uranium.

That follows Ukraine's announcement that it, too, will ship all its highly enriched uranium to protected storage outside its borders.

Russia and the US will complete and operate facilities to dispose of at least 34 tonnes of plutonium by using it as fuel in civilian power reactors to produce electricity, although it will not start until 2018.

The summit countries said they would co-operate more deeply with the United Nations and its watchdog arm, the IAEA. They also said they would share information on nuclear detection and ways to prevent nuclear trafficking.

A follow-up nuclear security conference will be held in South Korea in 2012.

Mr Key now travels to Canada.

NZPA
Wed, 14 Apr 2010
© All content copyright NBR. Do not reproduce in any form without permission, even if you have a paid subscription.
Agreements made over nuclear threat in Washington - Key
4169
false