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Uranium
Hexafluoride, Recycling and US Workers' Health
UF6 is the chemical symbol for uranium hexafluoride. Scientists sometimes
refer to it as DUF6.
To produce enriched uranium, one must first convert it into UF6. It is
a part of the enrichment process. Gaseous diffusion, the process used
to extract enriched uranium from UF6, produces four tonnes of depleted
uranium for every tonne of enriched uranium. Therefore DUF6 constitutes
a huge proportion of the United States' nuclear waste: France stores its
waste in a different form. (I have been unable to find out in what form
the UK stores its DU) It is unstable and difficult and expensive to store,
posing a threat to workers and the surrounding environment. The DU used
in munitions in Iraq and the Gulf War came from this source.
In the United States the government have come up with a proposal to process
DUF6 back into uranium metal and use it in industry - as counterweights
in lifts and fork lift trucks for example. In July 1988, President Clinton
signed the 'Uranium Recycling Bill'. It provides $400 million to the UF6
storage plants in Ohio and Kentucky to treat and recycle UF6. Construction
is due to start in January 2000. Industry has already used DU for ballast
in aeroplane wings and in ships. It is possible that these products could
be arriving in the UK without any clear labelling.
The use of DU in ordinary industrial machinery could have more far reaching
effects than the use of DU in munitions. However, the problems associated
with the use of DU in munitions remain. IEER in the United States have
some practicable proposals for storage of UF6. They suggest ways to make
it safe in terms of proliferation: for example, processing it in such
a way that it would be difficult to enrich for use in power stations or
nuclear weapons. They also suggest ways to store it safely.
Watch this space for further developments.
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From CADU News 3: Winter 1999/2000
Read more articles about The Health
Effects of Depleted Uranium
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Page last updated: January 28, 2003
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