Russia's Nuclear Warheads Keep The Lights On In America
"Over the past 15 years, nuclear fuel from this source has accounted for approximately 10 percent of all electricity produced in the United States," Gottemoeller said.
Russian news agency Rianovosti reports:
Under a landmark 1993 nonproliferation deal, the United States has purchased uranium derived from around 20,000 Russian nuclear warheads eliminated under the accord - informally known as the "Megatons to Megawatts" program - and converted the material into nuclear fuel to be used by nearly all US nuclear power plants, Gottemoeller told the committee.
Gottemoeller called it an "under the radar" agreement, sort of like the "open skies" program which allows each country to fly surveillance flights over the other (not to say much about underground facilities).
The program - which the U.S. spent $8 billion on so far - is due to expire in December of this year, and Gottemoeller is on a crusade of sorts to continue reducing the nuclear stockpiles to reflect post "Cold War" postures.
While Obama also touts nuclear reduction, he also spurs investment in nuclear modernization.
Detractors say he's not making good on his promise to reduce nuclear armaments, but analysts counter, saying that modern nuclear weapons reduce overall numbers of warheads.
Notably, the last major nuclear mishap was not a nuclear weapon, but a nuclear power plant - Fukushima, still a problem today - and certainly some people would argue it's not worth converting these dated weapons into nuclear fuel.