What is a proliferation risk?
The proliferation risk is that during one stage of reprocessing, pure separated plutonium (reactor-grade) is produced that might be vulnerable to theft (perhaps by terrorists) or diversion (by states intent on building nuclear weapons).
What are the dangers of nuclear proliferation?
These risks fall into three classes: the risk that some fraction, be it large or small, of the inventories of nuclear weapons held by eight countries will be detonated either by accident or deliberately; the risk that nuclear weapons technology will diffuse to additional nations; and the risk that nuclear weapons will …
How do you fix nuclear proliferation?
We propose measures to strengthen international security standards on the storage and transport of fissile materials; stop the spread of facilities capable of producing fissile materials (reprocessing and enrichment plants); end verifiably the production of fissile material for weapons; dispose of excess weapons and …
What is non proliferation?
noun. the action or practice of curbing or controlling an excessive, rapid spread: nonproliferation of nuclear weapons. failure or refusal to proliferate, as in budding or cell division. adjective.
Can we stop nuclear proliferation?
The only way to completely eliminate nuclear risks is to eliminate nuclear weapons from the planet. The only way to completely eliminate nuclear risks is to eliminate nuclear weapons from the planet.
What is weapon proliferation?
The term weapons proliferation commonly refers to a rapid or prolonged increase in the development and inventory of nuclear armaments, such as was seen during the Cold War.
What is horizontal proliferation?
“Horizontal” proliferation refers to nation-states or nonstate entities that do not have, but are acquiring, nuclear weapons or developing the capability and materials for producing them.
What is uncontrolled proliferation?
The uncontrolled proliferation of cancer cells in vivo is mimicked by their behavior in cell culture. A primary distinction between cancer cells and normal cells in culture is that normal cells display density-dependent inhibition of cell proliferation (Figure 15.8).