UN’s Atomic Energy Agency Singles Out Brazil as Example of Cooperation

IAEA chief El Baradei The head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, Mohamed El Baradei, praised Brazil's nuclear program saying that the Brazilian atomic energy program did not cause the same concern as in other countries.

The chief of the United Nations nuclear watchdog agency made his comments, earlier this week, while visiting in Brazil a uranium enrichment plant capable of producing fuel for nuclear reactors.

"Our inspectors are here all the time, and they are working in close cooperation with the Brazilian authorities" he said – implicitly comparing it with lesser access to Iran's program, which has been a source of concern to the US and European countries.

A US intelligence review released Wednesday concluded that Iran stopped developing atomic weapons in 2003. El Baradei called the report a "sigh of relief" because its findings jibed with his agency's conclusions.

Brazil has two operating nuclear plants and in June restarted work on long-planned third plant, stalled since the 1980s by lack of funds.

"Lately, we see a lot of interest into the expansion of nuclear power because of concerns about climate change, because of the competition for gas and oil, because of the increased need for energy to develop," said El Baradei while touring the plant in Resende, 165 kilometers northwest of Rio de Janeiro.

"We also need to understand that nuclear in many ways provides energy independence."

El Baradei said the agency is working closely with Brazil "to ensure that all nuclear facilities in Brazil are used in a safe, secure way and exclusively for peaceful purposes".

Brazil has signed the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, and Brazil's constitution bans the military use of nuclear energy. Brazil also has the world's sixth-largest uranium reserves and the largest nuclear power industry in Latin America.

Brazil plans as many as seven new atomic plants to reduce its dependence on oil and hydroelectric power and plans to export enriched uranium to provide energy for other countries.

Mercopress

Tags:

You May Also Like

How Outsourcing Can Benefit Brazil

Brazil ranks third in country attractiveness for offshore IT outsourcing, only behind India and ...

Oscar Freire – Brazil’s Street of Dreams

If you walk along São Paulo’s Rua Oscar Freire and nearby streets like Bela ...

Gustavo Brasileiro

Brazilian Economist Kidnapped and Abused in His Own Hollywood Apartment

The Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) finally heard Brazilian economist and journalist Gustavo Brasileiro ...

Picking Coffee in Brazil

After passing by so many women searching for the bad beans, it is very ...

Behind Brazil’s Nuclear Dream Is a Perceived Call to Be a Super Power

On July 10, Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva announced his intention to ...

Brazil Expects More than 6 Million International Passengers in 2007

The number of foreign passengers arriving in Brazil grew 15.22% in October, 552,520 passengers ...

Brazil Loses 4.5 Million Tons of Soybeans to Rust

Brazil’s Ministry of Agriculture, Livestock, and Supply’s Department of Plant Health and Inspection is evaluating ...

Brazilian state controlled company Furnas

Brazil’s Politicians Share the Spoils

Trying to explain Brazilian society to western Europeans and Americans can be frustrating. When ...

RAPIDINHAS

Introducing the Jambalaya Jazz Festival taking place in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, November 6 ...

Brazil Lula’s New Battle Cry: We Must Be Eclectic

Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva said this Wednesday, February 22, in Marabá, ...

WordPress database error: [Table './brazzil3_live/wp_wfHits' is marked as crashed and last (automatic?) repair failed]
SHOW FULL COLUMNS FROM `wp_wfHits`