2026-06-15T10:05:59.959Z / 路透社
汉福德工厂的普雷克斯(钚铀萃取厂)分离设施,摄于未注明日期的航拍照片。根据美国能源部的说法,该建筑已空置近20年,但仍受到严重污染。美国能源部/路透社供图 仅供编辑使用… 购买授权 阅读更多
- 摘要
- 企业
- 钚燃料的安全与处理成本可能高昂,引发纳税人担忧
- 防扩散专家和国会议员警告存在恐怖主义风险和经济可行性挑战
- 奥克洛公司称过剩钚可帮助填补燃料缺口
华盛顿,6月15日路透社电——特朗普政府正推进与企业的谈判,拟将冷战时期遗留的钚转化为新型核反应堆燃料,这是多项战略的一部分,旨在确保有足够电力支撑美国数据中心的扩张。
但该计划面临严重延误和极高的安全成本,甚至可能因一个简单事实而无法实施:钚具有极强的危险性。
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一块葡萄柚大小的该材料,若落入不法分子手中,可制造出相当于二战期间美国投向长崎的原子弹威力的核武器。这种放射性元素的半衰期长达2.4万年,即使是其粉尘,若被吸入也可能致命。
“这是可用于制造武器的钚,”曾在美国能源部及其下属机构国家核安全局负责全球钚材料安全工作的罗斯·马茨金-布里杰说道,“我非常担心纳税人将承担绝大部分风险。”
特朗普政府于上月透露,已选定五家企业进入高级谈判阶段,拟将19.7吨各种形态的钚(包括来自已拆除核弹的钚)转化为反应堆燃料。
长期以来,储存钚一直是美国政府的一大难题,而急于使用钚的做法反映出,随着数据中心的电力需求激增,核电行业正在尝试新方法以实现唐纳德·特朗普总统设定的目标:到2050年将美国核电产能扩大三倍。
美国众议员比尔·福斯特是伊利诺伊州民主党议员,也是美国国会中唯一的物理学家,他表示,听到这项提议时“我的神经会高度紧张”。
福斯特称,该项目可能需要极高的安全成本,以确保其“能有力抵御恐怖主义”,相关利益方在推进前应仔细审视此类工厂的经济性。
美国能源部表示,预计钚处理设施的绝大多数工作人员都需要获得最高级别的安全许可。
美国核能办公室的一位发言人表示,这些企业必须提交关于钚的稳定、包装、运输和储存的材料安全与安保计划。
“能源部预计不会为处理过剩钚所需的专门防扩散、安全和健康保护措施买单,”该发言人说道。
入选企业
奥克洛公司是一家寻求利用钚发电的企业,该公司认为,在美国扩大国内铀供应(包括一种主要在俄罗斯生产的高浓缩铀HALEU,其浓缩度高于当前美国反应堆使用的燃料)之前,钚至少可以作为一种燃料来源。
当被问及纳税人是否最终会为该项目承担巨额成本时,奥克洛的发言人博尼塔·切斯特表示,使用钚作为燃料的计划将无需再实施另一项成本高昂且风险巨大的政府计划,即稀释并处置该材料。
特朗普政府去年首次宣布这项燃料计划时,暂停了处置工作。
切斯特说道:“奥克洛将投资运输、相关燃料制造基础设施以及所有许可要求,包括安全、安保和保障措施。”她未透露该公司对这些成本的估算。
能源部长克里斯·赖特在加入政府前曾是奥克洛的董事会成员。
另一位能源部发言人表示,赖特并未参与奥克洛的遴选工作,已放弃该公司未兑现的股票,并“已回避所有与奥克洛相关的具体事项”。
计划在联邦土地上建造设施将过剩钚加工成核燃料的Exodys能源公司首席执行官卡尔·佩雷斯表示,任何设施若未充分满足工人保护、整体安全和材料保障的公认标准,都无法获得美国所需的授权和许可。
SHINE Technologies公司首席执行官兼创始人格雷格·皮耶弗表示,该公司在核材料加工和处理方面拥有丰富经验,一旦钚在反应堆中发电,就不再具有危险性。
“我们对武器级钚能做的最负责任的事情之一就是将其‘燃烧’掉,”他说道。
参与高级谈判的另外两家企业标准核电公司和Flibe能源公司未回应置评请求。
坎坷历史
美国将钚转化为燃料的历史并不顺利。美国曾在2000年同意将钚转化为混合氧化物燃料(MOX)用于反应堆发电。特朗普首届政府于2018年取消了MOX项目,称其成本将比已投入的76亿美元高出约480亿美元。
奥克洛计划在其开发的所谓快堆中使用钚,该公司称快堆比原本预计使用MOX燃料的反应堆效率更高。根据奥克洛的内部测算,1吨钚在快堆中使用,可为近100万美国家庭供电一年。
美国的快堆目前仅用于研究,而非发电。
前总统巴拉克·奥巴马执政时期的美国能源部长欧内斯特·门齐斯表示,稀释并处置该材料更容易且成本更低。“我预计你会发现政府将为这里发生的绝大多数事情买单,包括武器级钚周围所需的所有安保措施。”
蒂莫西·加德纳报道;理查德·瓦尔德马尼斯和妮娅·威廉姆斯编辑
我们的标准:汤森路透信托原则。
Highly dangerous plutonium offers no quick fix to US nuclear fuel crunch
2026-06-15T10:05:59.959Z / Reuters
The Purex (Plutonium Uranium Extraction Plant) separations facility at the Hanford Works is seen in an undated aerial photo. The building has been vacant for nearly twenty years but remains highly contaminated, according to the Department of Energy. DOE/Handout via REUTERS FOR EDITORIAL USE… Purchase Licensing RightsRead more
- Summary
- Companies
- Security and handling costs for plutonium fuel could be high, raising taxpayer concerns
- Non-proliferation experts and lawmakers warn of terrorism risks and economic viability challenges
- Oklo says surplus plutonium could help bridge fuel gap
WASHINGTON, June 15 (Reuters) – The Trump administration is moving forward with talks with companies to turn Cold War-era plutonium into a fuel for new nuclear reactors, part of a multi-pronged strategy to ensure there is enough power to feed the U.S. data center boom.
But the scheme risks extensive delays and exorbitant security costs – to the point it may be unfeasible – due to a simple fact: plutonium is incredibly dangerous.
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A grapefruit-sized hunk of the material, in the wrong hands, could yield an atomic weapon as strong as the one the United States dropped on Nagasaki during World War Two. Even the dust of the radioactive element, which has a half-life of 24,000 years, is potentially deadly if inhaled.
“This is weapons-usable plutonium,” said Ross Matzkin-Bridger, who worked on securing plutonium materials around the world at the U.S. Department of Energy and its arm the National Nuclear Security Administration. “I’m very concerned that there are big pieces of the risk that the taxpayers are going to be tackling.”
The Trump administration revealed last month that it had chosen five companies to enter advanced talks over developing 19.7 metric tons of various forms of plutonium, including from dismantled nuclear warheads, into reactor fuel.
Storing plutonium has long been a headache for the U.S. government, and the dash to use it shows how the industry is trying novel ways to achieve President Donald Trump’s goal to quadruple U.S. nuclear power capacity by 2050 as power demand from data centers surges.
U.S. Representative Bill Foster, an Illinois Democrat and the only physicist in the U.S. Congress, said “my brain goes on high alert” when he hears about the proposal.
Foster said the program would likely face sky-high security costs to keep it “robust against terrorism” and that stakeholders should look closely at the economies of such plants before moving forward.
The U.S. DOE said it expects that the majority of the workforce at a facility handling plutonium will require highest-level security clearances.
The companies would be required to submit material safety and security plans for the stabilization, packaging, transportation, and storage of plutonium, a spokesperson for the Office of Nuclear Energy said.
“DOE does not expect to pay for the specialized proliferation, security, and health protections required to process surplus plutonium,” the spokesperson said.
COMPANIES SELECTED
Oklo
, one company seeking to generate power with the plutonium, believes the material can be a fuel source at least until the U.S. expands domestic uranium supplies, including a type called HALEU, mostly made in Russia, that is more enriched than fuel used in today’s U.S. reactors.
Bonita Chester, an Oklo spokesperson, when asked whether taxpayers would end up paying large costs for the program, said the plan to use plutonium for fuel would eliminate the need for another expensive and risky government plan to dilute and dispose of the material.
The Trump administration halted disposal efforts last year when it first announced the fuel plan.
Oklo “would invest in transport, the associated fuel fabrication infrastructure, as well as all licensing requirements, including safety, security, and safeguards,” said Chester. She did not detail the company’s estimate for those costs.
Energy Secretary Chris Wright sat on Oklo’s board until he joined the administration.
Wright was not involved in the selection of Oklo, forfeited unvested shares in the company, and “recused himself from matters specifically involving Oklo,” another DOE spokesperson said.
Carl Perez, CEO of Exodys Energy, which plans to build a facility on federal land to process surplus plutonium into nuclear fuel, said no facility can obtain required U.S. authorizations and licenses “without fully addressing worker protection, overall safety, and material safeguards against recognized standards.”
Greg Piefer, CEO and founder of SHINE Technologies, said it has extensive experience processing and handling nuclear materials, and that once plutonium generates power in a reactor, it is no longer dangerous.
“One of the most responsible things we can do with weapons-grade plutonium is to burn it,” he said.
Standard Nuclear and Flibe Energy, the other two companies involved in the advanced talks, did not respond to requests for comment.
ROCKY HISTORY
The U.S. history of converting plutonium to fuel is rocky. The U.S. had agreed in 2000 to turn it into mixed oxide fuel (MOX) to run in reactors. Trump’s first administration nixed the MOX program in 2018, saying it would cost about $48 billion more than the $7.6 billion already spent on it.
Oklo plans to run plutonium in so-called fast reactors it is developing and that it says are more efficient than reactors that had been expected to run on MOX. According to Oklo’s internal calculations, 1 metric ton of plutonium used in a fast reactor could power almost 1 million American homes for a year.
Fast reactors in the U.S. have so far only been used for research, not power generation.
Ernest Moniz, a U.S. energy secretary under former President Barack Obama, said it is easier and less costly to dilute and dispose of the material. “My expectation is that you will find the government paying for a hell of a lot of what’s going on here, including all the security you would need around weapons-grade plutonium.”
Reporting by Timothy Gardner; editing by Richard Valdmanis and Nia Williams
Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
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