North Korea plans to build light-water nuclear reactors (Reuters) Updated: 2005-12-20 11:04
North Korea plans to build its own light-water atomic reactors and develop
two other reactors that can produce large amounts of fissile material to boost
its nuclear capabilities, official media said on Tuesday.
The comment from the North's official KCNA news agency comes amid a snag in
six-party talks aimed at ending North Korea's nuclear weapons programs. It could
further complicate an already difficult diplomatic process, diplomatic analysts
said.
North Korea has not said before it plans to build relatively proliferation
resistant light-water reactors (LWRs) but it has threatened to resume work on
two graphite-moderated reactors (GMRs), which can produce large amounts of
material for atomic bombs, a South Korean Foreign Ministry official said by
telephone.
In the unusually long KCNA report, North Korea repeated its demand for
compensation for an international consortium's decision to pull the plug on a
long-stalled deal to provide it with two light-water reactors in exchange for it
freezing its nuclear weapons programs.
North Korea blamed U.S. President George W. Bush for the consortium's
decision to end the light-water reactor project.
"The Bush administration's abandonment of its commitment to provide LWRs to
the DPRK compels it to develop in real earnest its independent nuclear power
industry based on 50,000 kilowatt and 200,000 KW GMRs and their related
facilities," KCNA reported.
DPRK is short for North Korea's official name, the Democratic People's
Republic of Korea.
KCNA said North Korea would "start developing and building LWRs of Korean
style in reliance upon its indigenous technology and potential when an
appropriate time comes to put further spurs to its peaceful nuclear activities."
It did not elaborate.
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