Original article: http://www.japantimes.co.jp/text/nn20130107a3.htmlThe Japan Times wrote:As plutonium hoard grows, so do Japan's headaches
By MARI YAMAGUCHI
AP
ROKKASHO, Aomori Pref. — How is an atomic-powered island nation riddled with fault lines supposed to handle its nuclear waste? Part of the answer was supposed to come from this windswept village along the country's northern coast.
By hosting a high-tech facility to convert spent fuel into a plutonium-uranium mix designed for the next generation of reactors, Rokkasho was supposed to provide fuel while minimizing nuclear waste storage problems. Those ambitions are falling apart because years of attempts to build a "fast breeder" reactor, which would use the reprocessed fuel, appear to be ending in failure.
But Japan still intends to reprocess spent fuel at Rokkasho. It sees few other options, even though it will mean extracting plutonium that could be used to make nuclear weapons.
If the reprocessing plant is closed down, some 3,000 tons of spent waste piling up there will have to go back to the nuclear plants that made it, and those already are running low on storage space. There is scant prospect for building a long-term nuclear waste disposal site in a country where no one wants one in their backyard.
Can`t we just fire it in to space? That would get rid of it for good...
Any viable alternatives that aren`t polluting? Or dangerous? This is a global problem, after all.




