HC Deb 03 March 1980 vol 980 cc9-11W
Mr. Skeet

asked tile Secretary of State for Energy what is the size of the stockpile of plutonium held in the United Kingdom for the nuclear power station programme; and what is the annual accretion to the stockpile as a result of reprocessing spent fuel elements at Windscale, Cumbria.

Mr. Norman Lamont

The current stock of plutonium available for the United Kingdom nuclear power programme is about 10 tonnes. Over the next 12 years, the average annual increase to that stock will be approximately 2 tonnes per year.

Mr. Skeet

asked the Secretary of State for Energy how many fast reactor stations of a capacity of 1,000 mwe the present United Kingdom plutonium stockpile would sustain in a development programme.

Mr. Norman Lamont

The full initial inventory for the reference design of a commercial fast reactor is approximately 6 tonnes of plutonium. The precise requirement depends on the fuel management regime adopted but the figures assume that some form of reprocessing is involved. The stockpile of about 10 tonnes of plutonium now available would sustain one fast reactor immediately. There is no shortage of uranium 238 for use as breeder material.

Mr. Skeet

asked the Secretary of State for Energy what is the yield of plutonium in the following types of reactor (a) Magnox, (b) AGR, (c) PWR and (d) CANDU.

Mr. Norman Lamont

The yield of plutonium—in tonnes—per year from a station of 1,000 MW electrical capacity, operating continuously, would be as follows:

  • MAGNOX 0.75
  • AGR 0.25
  • PWR 0.33
  • CANDU 0.51

Mr. Skeet

asked the Secretary of State for Energy (1) if he will give the equivalent in terms of coal of the uranium and plutonium secured annually from reprocessing at Windscale and express the results in terms of United Kingdom annual coal and oil production;

(2) if he will express in terms of coal the value of the plutonium stockpile if used in a fast reactor programme.

Mr. Norman Lamont

The significance of plutonium in the fast reactor cycle is not so much its own energy content as its ability to act, in effect, as an intermediary, permitting energy to be extracted from the depleted uranium—arising from thermal reactors or enrichment plant tails—loaded into fast reactors as breeder fuel.

One tonne of depleted uranium which has arisen as a result of the reprocessing of Magnox fuel, will, if fissioned in a fast reactor, produce the same quantity of electricity as would be produced by burning 2.1 million tonnes of power station coal or 8 million barrels of oil. The annual arisings of reactor-depleted uranium from reprocessing—approximately 780 tonnes—would therefore, if fissioned in a fast reactor, equate to 1,600 million tonnes of coal or 6,250 million barrels of oil.

Mr. Skeet

asked the Secretary of State for Energy if he will list the countries in the European Economic Community where plutonium is used as a mixed oxide fuel in thermal reactors.

Mr. Norman Lamont

There are no thermal reactors in the Community where the entire core inventory is composed of mixed uranium and plutonium oxide fuel. I understand that France, Belguim, Germany, the Netherlands and Italy, in addition to the United Kingdom, have used plutonium in mixed oxide fuel for experiments in thermal reactors.

Mr. Skeet

asked the Secretary of State for Energy what is the plutonium charge of the Dounreay fast reactor.

Mr. Norman Lamont

The fuel charge of the prototype fast reactor at Dounreay contains about 1 tonne of plutonium. In addition, and to allow for flexibility and experimental use, there are a further 2 tonnes of plutonium in the fuel cycle outside the reactor.