230. Letter From Secretary of State Rusk to the Chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission
(Seaborg)1
Washington, March 29, 1968.
Dear Glenn:
Your letter of March 15, 1968 enclosed a draft letter to Euratom and asked me to agree that such a
letter should omit any reference to the potential relevance of the NPT.2
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I agree that it would be wise to omit the reference to the NPT and thus avoid the political repercussions
of such a reference at least until the negotiation of specific long term
supply contracts. I would appreciate it, however, if you would consult the
State Department and ACDA before
undertaking such contract negotiations.
In my view, the omission of any reference to the NPT makes it desirable to make certain modifications in your
draft letter designed to remove any basis for Euratom to claim that the letter itself constitutes a
commitment to supply additional fuel or that it contains a complete list of
the conditions under which such fuel will be supplied. A marked copy of the
draft letter indicating such modifications is enclosed.
Sincerely,
Attachment3
Dear Mr. Spaak:
As you are aware, the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission recently received
statutory authorization, through an amendment to the Euratom Cooperation Act permitting the
transfer to Euratom of up to a
maximum of 1,500 kilograms of plutonium (an increase of 1,100 kilograms
over the previous authorizations) and up to 215,000 kilograms of
contained uranium 235 (an increase of 145,000 kilograms). In this
letter, I would like to describe general arrangements4 that we would consider applicable to the
transfer of this material. These conform to the proposals that I
outlined to you in our meeting in Washington on January 25.
With this new statutory authority, the Commission will be in a position
to transfer or to approve the transfer of additional quantities of
plutonium and uranium 235 to the Community within the newly authorized
amounts.5
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Plutonium
- 1.
- Of the 1,000 additional kilograms of plutonium to be made
available, acquisitions from private operators in the U.S. would not
exceed at any time 50 percent of the total plutonium which the
Community has obtained or has commitments to obtain from the United
States. Further, no more than 75 percent of any one private
operator’s plutonium would be so made available to the Community.
The remainder of the plutonium to be supplied under the new
authorization would be obtained from the USAEC. The price for the
AEC material would be the
Commission’s established price in effect at the date of delivery,
which currently is $43 per gram of fissile isotopes in the form of
plutonium nitrate.
- 2.
- The research and development work to be performed with the
additional 1,000 kilograms would be covered by appropriate
information exchange arrangements under which the USAEC would obtain
the information derived from the use of the material.
- 3.
- Any transfer of such additional plutonium would, of course, be
subject to the provisions of our Additional Agreement for
Cooperation, as amended.
We would appreciate receiving as soon as practicable your best estimates
concerning the quantities and quality of plutonium desired by the
Community, including a schedule of anticipated deliveries.
Enriched Uranium
- 1.
- Insofar as the additional quantity of enriched uranium is
concerned, it is our understanding that your estimates for the next
five years include the entire additional 145,000 kilograms of U-235
that has been authorized. We would appreciate receiving confirmation
from you to this effect. Upon receipt of such confirmation, we will
consider 215,000 kilograms of U-235 as
the new ceiling quantity transferable under our additional Agreement
for Cooperation, and pursuant to the necessary contracts.6 The five-year
period contemplated in Article I of the Additional Agreement would
commence for the additional quantity on the date of your written
reply.
- 2.
- The supply of the uranium 235 would be in accordance with the
current AEC “net amount concept”
which was the basis used by Euratom and the USAEC for calculating the U-235
increase. A definition of the “net amount concept” is appended to
this letter.
- 3.
- The AEC normal mode of supplying
the enriched uranium to the Community for power reactor applications
would be through toll enrichment while comparable services are made
available to licensed
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users in the U.S. The Additional Agreement contains wording broad
enough to encompass toll enrichment. Accordingly, it would provide a
basis for the performance of such services in connection with
projects within the scope of that Agreement, including joint program
projects to the extent that both parties wish to employ toll
enrichment. In conformance with its current policy,AEC sales of the newly authorized
quantities of enriched uranium to Euratom would take place only on a single transaction
basis rather than through long-term contracts.
All of these terms regarding the availability of enriched uranium are
fully consistent with U.S. supply policies which have been discussed in
public in recent months.7
We look forward to receiving confirmation from you that the
understandings set forth in this letter are acceptable to the
Community.
Sincerely yours,
Myron B. Kratzer
8
Assistant General Manager for International
Activities