And now:Ish <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Canada Plutonium Debate Rages 
The Associated Press 
By DAVID CRARY
 
 TORONTO (AP) - The Canadian government insists it wants to help eliminate 
nuclear weapons, yet its plan to burn plutonium from dismantled U.S. and 
Russian missiles is under fire from the country's most ardent anti-nuclear 
groups.
 
 A small quantity of weapons-grade plutonium is scheduled to be driven into 
Canada from the United States this summer for a test burn at a nuclear 
research facility in Chalk River, Ontario, 100 miles west of Ottawa and 150 
miles north of Buffalo, N.Y.
 
 Scientists will seek to determine if the plutonium can be used on a regular 
basis as fuel in Canada's nuclear reactors. If the test goes well, and if 
promised environmental and safety reviews result in approval, Canada has 
offered to burn up to 100 tons of weapons-grade plutonium fuel at reactors in 
Ontario over a 25-year period.
 
 Opponents of the project express deep concerns about safety and are 
skeptical about the fact that Canada's troubled nuclear power industry is 
promoting the plan when several of its aging reactors are experiencing 
problems.
 
 ``This nuclear industry-driven project is presented by the prime minister 
and other supporters as a disarmament initiative,'' said Kristen Ostling of 
the Ottawa-based Campaign for Nuclear Phaseout. ``In fact, the project will 
contribute to proliferation by commercializing the use of plutonium.''
 
 Foreign Minister Lloyd Axworthy, who helped lead the global campaign to ban 
land mines and is a strong advocate of disarmament, says Canada hasn't made a 
final commitment to the long-term project.
 
 ``The only commitment we have made is to undertake certain tests of very 
small, minute portions to determine the feasibility,'' Axworthy told 
Parliament recently. ``We live in a dangerous nuclear world. We have some 
responsibilities to help in the denuclearizing of that world ... We are 
simply testing to see if we can make a contribution to that issue.''
 
 Parliament members from several opposition parties, and even from the 
governing Liberal Party, have opposed the project.
 
 ``Canadians do not want our country to become a dumping ground for the 
world's Cold War plutonium,'' said Svend Robinson of the left-wing New 
Democratic Party.
 
 The plutonium shipments will originate at a U.S. government facility in Los 
Alamos, N.M., and be driven overland, possibly through North Dakota or New 
York. The date and exact route are not being disclosed for security reasons.
 
 Under heavy pressure from congressmen and local officials in Michigan, U.S. 
authorities agreed to abandon a third possible route that crossed into 
Ontario north of Detroit. Michigan officials said they feared disaster from 
road accidents and fire.
 
 Greenpeace, part of the coalition of groups opposing the project, says the 
plutonium shipments could be targeted by terrorists.
 
 The U.S. and Canadian governments say the risk of an accident or terrorism 
is very small. According to Axworthy, the plutonium involved is no larger 
than a double-A battery.
 
 ``I do not think it represents a real threat to Canada,'' he said. ``But 
nuclear proliferation represents a threat to all mankind.''
 
 AP-NY-07-14-99 1814EDT

Reprinted under the Fair Use http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.html
doctrine of international copyright law.
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