News

USIS Washington File

02 December 1999

Text: Energy Secretary Richardson on U.S.-Russia Uranium Agreement

(U.S. Enrichment Corp. to continue as U.S. agent) (800)

U.S. Energy Secretary Bill Richardson says the uranium-processing
firm, the United States Enrichment Corporation (USEC), will continue
in its role as the government's executive agent in the nuclear
nonproliferation agreement with Russia.

Richardson said December 1 that he is committed to the critically
important Highly Enriched Uranium (HEU) Agreement with Russia for
national security reasons, and is committed to the U.S. communities
where the work is being done on the project as well as USEC. "In turn,
we expect that USEC fully perform on the HEU Agreement and on the
privatization agreement that builds in workforce safeguards," he said.

The USEC board of directors voted December 1 to continue as executive
agent until the deal with the Russians expires in 2001.

In 1993, the United States and Russia agreed to an HEU Purchase
Agreement that involves the United States buying from Russia low
enriched uranium derived from 500 metric tons of highly enriched
uranium from Russian nuclear weapons. The United States agreed to buy
the low enriched uranium from Russia over a 20-year period for use in
commercial nuclear reactors.

USEC had recently asked for additional funds from the U.S. government
to offset increasing costs in implementing the HEU Agreement, but the
Clinton administration and the Congress turned down the request.

Richardson said the Energy Department will continue to work with USEC
"on this important agreement that is so critical to our
nonproliferation goals."

Following is the text of Richardson's statement:

(begin text)

[U.S. Department of Energy
Washington, D.C.
December 1, 1999]

Richardson Statement on USEC Decision

Secretary of Energy Bill Richardson today made the following statement
on the decision by the Board of the United States Enrichment
Corporation (USEC), not to resign as the U.S. government's executive
agent for the U.S.-Russia HEU (highly enriched uranium) Agreement and
to continue to perform this responsibility:

"I'm pleased that USEC is standing by their role as our executive
agent for the HEU Agreement. I look forward to continuing to work with
them on this important agreement that is so critical to our
nonproliferation goals. In the end, I think they realized that it was
not in their interest to abandon an exclusive long-term market
position that is of considerable financial value.

"My immediate concern is about the related matter of the workers at
our gaseous diffusion plants in Ohio and Kentucky. I expect USEC to
meet their obligations to continue operation of the plants through
2004. I'm committed to do what's right for the critically important
HEU Agreement with Russia for our national security, what is right for
workers and citizens in communities around our gaseous diffusion
plants who helped to win the Cold War and what's fair and proper by
way of USEC. In turn, we expect that USEC fully perform on the HEU
Agreement and on the privatization agreement that builds in workforce
safeguards."

Background

The 1993 U.S.-Russian HEU Purchase Agreement involves the purchase
over twenty years by the U.S. from Russia of the low enriched uranium
derived from 500 metric tons of highly enriched uranium from Russian
nuclear weapons for use in commercial nuclear reactors. USEC is
currently the U.S. executive agent for the agreement. USEC became a
private corporation in July 1998. If USEC gave notice on December 1,
they would still have to perform their contractual obligations under
the HEU Agreement until December 31, 2000. After December 1, for
various reasons, the period extends to December 31, 2001. The US
government can also introduce additional or alternative executive
agents on 30 days notice. Annual scheduled quantities from to be
ordered from Russia from 2000 to 2013 are some 30 metric tons per
year, or roughly one-half of the U.S. market annually. USEC had
recently sought additional funds from the U.S. government to
compensate for what it characterized as the increasing costs of the
implementing the HEU Agreement, but these funds were not provided by
the Administration or the Congress.

The Department of Energy owns and leases to USEC the gaseous diffusion
plants at Portsmouth Ohio, and Paducah, Kentucky. USEC prior to
privatization in July 1998 signed an agreement with the Department of
Treasury to keep both plants open through 2004 unless USEC's economic
performance met several hardship tests, which USEC's September 10,
1999 10-K filing with the Security and Exchange Commission suggests do
not now apply. Legislation has also been proposed that addresses
future decontamination and decommission work at these locations,
construction of DUF6 plants, and medical assistance for workers
exposed during enrichment operations at the plants during the Cold
War.

(end text)

(Distributed by the Office of International Information Programs, U.S.
Department of State.)