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N. Korea Offers to Return Japan’s Lost Plutonium

by Scott Ott for ScrappleFace · No Comments · · Print This Story Print This Story

(2003-01-29) — The Democratic Peoples Republic of Korea offered to return 206 kilograms of plutonium which Japanese authorities admit may have been “lost”.
North Korean leader Kim Jong Il said, “We empathize with our friends the Japanese. We recently found their lost plutonium and have packaged it into useful vessels which we will return to the rightful owner shortly. I believe we’ll be shipping them same-day air delivery.”
Mr. Kim said he might also send some of the plutomium to “our brothers to the south.”
[Click "More" to read story from Financial Times]


From FT.com

Japan ‘loses’ 206kg of plutonium
By Bayan Rahman in Tokyo
Published: January 28 2003 20:12 | Last Updated: January 28 2003 20:12

Japan on Tuesday admitted that 206kg of its plutonium - enough to make about 25 nuclear bombs - is unaccounted for.

Government scientists said that 6,890kg of plutonium had been extracted since 1977 from spent nuclear fuel at a processing plant about 120km north east of Tokyo. But that is 3 per cent short of the amount the plant was estimated to have produced.

About 5kg to 8kg of plutonium are needed to make a 20-kiloton atomic bomb similar to the one that destroyed Nagasaki in 1945.

Experts said the missing amount was surprisingly large.

There is normally a margin of error of 1 per cent or less when measuring liquid plutonium, which can dissolve into other elements.

Japan’s admission comes at a time of acute sensitivity because of the threat of nuclear proliferation in north-east Asia following North Korea’s revival of its mothballed nuclear programme.

However, there is no evidence that North Korea was linked to the missing plutonium even though it is known to smuggle goods in and out of Japan.

“This is an unusually large amount of plutonium to be unaccounted for, which makes me uncomfortable, although I think it’s highly unlikely that it was stolen,” said Tatsujiro Suzuki, senior research scientist at the Central Research Institute of Electric Power Industry.

The science ministry, which reported the discrepancy to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), dismissed the idea that the plutonium had been stolen. It said about 90kg was probably diluted into waste-water and about 30kg probably dissolved into other elements.

It admitted it was baffled by the remaining 86kg but said initial output projections may have been too high and the plutonium may not have been produced.

Mohamed ElBaradei, director general of the IAEA, said: “The Agency [is] confident that no nuclear material has been diverted from the facility.”

The IAEA, the United Nations nuclear watchdog, has urged Japan to strengthen its procedures for measuring nuclear material since it first noted discrepancies in 1998.

Additional reporting by Clive Cookson in London and Andrew Ward in Seoul

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