The
members of U2 never answered the question posed in the title of their 2004 CD,
but it turns out the answer to this seemingly intractable problem is pretty
simple: do nothing. The plutonium pits and tritium initiators in hydrogen bombs
go through natural deterioration that would render them useless if they were not
constantly given very expensive upgrades. We could walk away from them and
leave them in their silos and soon they wouldn't be bombs anymore. They would
still be nuclear waste, and potential
bomb material, but doing nothing would lead to effective disarmament within a
short time.
We
hear a lot of news about the need to continue with the reduction of nuclear
stockpiles, and we imagine this means the danger of their detonation can be
removed only by actively dismantling them and verifying that other nuclear powers are doing likewise. However, the public is largely
unaware that atomic weapons need constant maintenance and refreshment in order
to be usable. This has led to an impression that the remaining stockpile (admirably reduced since 1990 down to just a few thousand) is just an unfortunate
legacy of the Cold War that we might as well keep as long as some countries
want to keep theirs and others want to become nuclear powers. Yet it’s not so
simple. The maintenance of a nuclear deterrent requires the high cost and risks
involved in maintaining plutonium and tritium production lines.
This
point becomes obvious if we think about the name of the most fearsome weapon:
the hydrogen bomb (this discussion doesn't apply so much to the less coveted bombs made with enriched uranium). If the fissionable dreaded core of the weapon is made of
plutonium, what has simple hydrogen got to do with it? Hydrogen became the
moniker of the bomb because the radioactive isotope of hydrogen, tritium, is the
initiator and booster of the fusion-fission explosion that allows a greater
yield to be had from a given quantity of plutonium. But tritium has a
relatively short half-life of twelve years, so it requires constant
replenishment. The plutonium pits have a much longer half-life, but they quickly lose their effectiveness as well.
For
American weapons, tritium was produced during the Cold War at the Savannah
River Site in South Carolina, but in the 1990s it was deemed that existing
supplies of tritium would be enough to maintain the reduced stockpile of
weapons negotiated under the START treaty. But then in 2003 supplies were
running low and the Watts Bar Nuclear Generating station, in Tennessee - a
commercial nuclear power plant - supplied tritium for nuclear weapons. A new
tritium extraction facility came on line in 2006 at Savannah River.
For
19 years, after the environmental
catastrophe caused by the Rocky Flats plutonium production facility, the US
had no capacity to produce new plutonium pits for its reduced but aging
stockpile. It seems that in the early days, none of the nuclear powers, as they
were building tens of thousands of weapons, stopped to wonder how they could
afford to keep these arsenals fresh in the coming decades and centuries. A cynic (not I, of course) might say that the real reason both the US and the USSR wanted a reduction in stockpiles was that they were waking up to the astounding cost of maintenance. Even with the reduced numbers, all
nuclear powers are faced with the same dilemma: how to finance being a nuclear power in
perpetuity. How to maintain all the required civilian and military reactors
supplying the tritium and the plutonium. How to maintain the technical skills
and the art of crafting the perfect plutonium pit.
In
1993 the Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) was tasked with re-establishing
the nation’s ability to produce plutonium pits, and it wasn't until 2007 that
the first pit was completed. The
laboratory’s website reported the process this way:
"Practice makes perfect pits," says
Putnam [former director of the Plutonium Sustainment Program]. Significant
interruptions to the production cycle increase the risks of introducing
deviations into the manufacturing process, which can lead to production errors,
resulting in a considerable increase in the scrap rate, that is, a higher
number of unusable pits. In addition, efficiency is lost. Pit manufacturing is
a “use it or lose it” endeavor precisely because it requires constant
production to maintain quality and increase efficiency. “Making pits is a
process and an exercise in capability. If that capability is not used, it
atrophies - becomes ‘rusty.’” says Tim George, deputy associate director for
Plutonium Science and Manufacturing. Over the next few years, the program plans
to build or assemble four to six pits a year for various scaled experiments and
later disassemble them to practice production and to maintain a capability for
the future. “Pit manufacturing is an art,” Putnam asserts.
To
hear it described this way, one has to wonder why developed nations worry so
much about smaller, impoverished states becoming a nuclear threat. The Los
Alamos staff makes it clear that even for a nation the size of the USA, it is
not certain the resources will always be available for maintaining a nuclear deterrent.
How
much to spend is not an easy question in these days of global financial crisis,
and neither party wanted to talk about it during the recent presidential
election, even though the House of Representatives passed a defense
authorization bill that devoted $160 million to a new plutonium plant in
New Mexico that will make 450 or more plutonium pits per year.
Barack
Obama began his presidency with a lofty goal of eliminating nuclear weapons, and
he won the Nobel Peace Prize just for talking about this and saying some other fine
words about the aspirations of the developing world. The new president’s stated
intent contradicted the direction that the US was moving in with the resumption
of production of plutonium pits at LANL. Thus, utter confusion reigns. No one
knows if the future holds hope of disarmament or a resumption of Cold War weapons
production. How much should a super power spend now to maintain a fleet of
weapons created in the madness of the early Cold War years?
Molly
at nucleardiner.com sums up the conundrum:
All federal
tax revenue in 2011 was $2.2
trillion — less than one sixth of the total national debt. The $15 trillion
debt amounts to $133,000 per taxpayer. A decision not to build the
CMRR-Nuclear Facility could save around $6 billion over the next 10 years. Not
expanding plutonium pit production could save tens of billions of dollars over
the next half-century.
The
choices are no different for other nuclear states that have to question the
stupendous environmental and social costs of maintaining both nuclear weapons and the required fleet of civilian nuclear reactors that make weapons production economically feasible.
UPDATE:
About a week after I posted, this article appeared in The Washington Post:
Walter Pincus. "How many nukes does it take to be safe?" The Washington Post. December 18, 2012.
Further Reading:
Pavel Podvig. "The Fallacy of the Megatons to Megawatts Program." Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists. July 23, 2008.
UPDATE:
About a week after I posted, this article appeared in The Washington Post:
Walter Pincus. "How many nukes does it take to be safe?" The Washington Post. December 18, 2012.
Further Reading:
Pavel Podvig. "The Fallacy of the Megatons to Megawatts Program." Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists. July 23, 2008.
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