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Tokyo's ability to both enrich uranium and reprocess spent reactor fuel has allowed it to amass roughly nine tons of weapons-usable plutonium on its soil.
WSJ: U.S. Opposes Japan's Nuclear Plan
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They're getting a lot more money to develop new types of reactors, as well as to reprocess fuel that's in reactors now and use it again.
NPR: Budget Breakdown: Defense, Health and Energy
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Japan has a nuclear cooperation agreement with the U.S. dating back to the 1980s that allows Tokyo to reprocess the spent fuel from its nuclear reactors.
WSJ: Seoul Seeks Ability to Make Nuclear Fuel
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In 2006, the administration created the Global Nuclear Energy Partnership, an international program among nuclear nations that, among other things, seeks to develop ways to reprocess spent nuclear fuel.
FORBES: The World's Most Nuclear Nations
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Seoul has been pushing for a green light to enrich uranium and reprocess spent nuclear-reactor fuel to develop its nuclear power industry, but Washington has been opposed out of concern it could spur nuclear weapons proliferation.
WSJ: South Korea's Park Travels to U.S. to Bolster Alliance
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Iran has actually rejected offers to either supply it with prepared nuclear fuel (and the associated offers to reprocess it once used) just as it has rejected the offers to build the enrichment and recycling plant to civilian standards.
FORBES: Trying An Educated Guess Over This Iran And The Bomb Thing
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In exchange, the EU diplomats publicly assured the Iranians that, their countries would reward improved behavior (such as Tehran's agreement not to reprocess nuclear reactor fuel and its signing up to - and implementing - a new, more intrusive inspection accord with the IAEA) with still more Western nuclear technology.
CENTERFORSECURITYPOLICY: Non-starter
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Ms Mucklow's organisation which represents meatpackers and processors who would have had to discard or reprocess meat found to be infected under the new testing regime argued on Capitol Hill that increased microbial testing in meat could actually lead to a greater public health risk since confident consumers might relax their own safe-handling procedures at home.
ECONOMIST: Food safety