PROLIFERATION RESISTANCE FEATURES IN NUCLEAR REACTOR DESIGNS FOR SMALL-POWER PLANTS

Safeguarding of nuclear technologies, facilities and materials against unauthorised application and proliferation is very much on the agenda at present. The attention given to this issue is due not only to the increasing threat of terrorism but to the nuclear power renaissance as well. Many countries have declared the national energy strategies that give a prominent role to nuclear energy sources. The principal risks of the nuclear power are associated with the enrichment (separation) of uranium isotopes, long-term storage of spent nuclear fuel, plutonium and/or uranium recov- ery from SNF, storage of recovered fissile materials. The degree of prolif- eration resistance results in particular from a combination of technical design features, operational modalities, institutional arrangements, and safeguards measures. These can be classified into two groups-intrinsic proliferation resistance features and extrinsic measures. The term 'intrinsic features' implies technical features. Currently, two basic principles provide a high-level guidance regarding innovative nuclear energy systems. Pro- liferation resistance features and measures shall be implemented through- out the full life cycle for innovative nuclear energy systems to help ensure that INSs will continue to be an unattractive means to acquire fissile mate- rial for a nuclear weapons programme. Both intrinsic features and extrinsic measures are essential, and neither shall be considered sufficient by itself. In the report the application of above named principles to an estimation of the project NPP of low power is considered.