ETRR-2


ETRR-2 or ET-RR-2, or is the second nuclear reactor in Egypt supplied by the Argentine company Investigacion Aplicada in 1992. The reactor is owned and operated by Egyptian Atomic Energy Authority at the Nuclear Research Center in Inshas, northeast of Cairo.

History

Since 1990, Egypt started to search for a new research reactor to replace the aging ETRR-1 and the Israeli press claimed that Egypt was cooperating with Pakistan, Iraq and Argentina to build a plutonium-producing reactor for nuclear weapons. Finally, Egypt announced international tender and among the bidders were the Canadian Atomic Energy of Canada Limited, the French Framatome and the Argentinian INVAP.
In September 1992, a contract was signed between INVAP and the Egyptian Atomic Energy Authority and a branch office of INVAP in Nasr City was established to oversee the project with the construction works began in 1993 jointly by Argentina and Egypt.
In November 1997, ETRR-2 achieved initial criticality, and was inaugurated by the former Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak and the Argentine president Carlos Menem in February 1998.

Overview

ETRR-2 is a Material Testing Reactor, multi-purpose open pool type 22 MW reactor with an initial fuel load of 19.75% enriched uranium U235 imported from Russia and the last shipment was delivered by Argentina in 1997. Since that, Egypt has fabricated the fuel rods for the ETRR-2 from the Fuel Manufacturing Pilot Plant, which is located at the Nuclear Research Center in Inshas. The reactor core is cooled and moderated by light water and beryllium reflector. The spent fuel from the ETRR-2 reactor stored in a water-filled spent fuel pool near the reactor waiting for final disposal in deep geological formations.
According to the Wisconsin Project on Nuclear Arms Control and the International Institute for Strategic Studies, ETRR-2 could produce over of plutonium annually which is enough for one nuclear weapon per year.

Unreported nuclear experiments

In 2004–2005, an investigation by International Atomic Energy Agency discovered that between 1999 and 2003, Egypt conducted about 4 unreported experiments using a total of 0.24 g of natural uranium compounds irradiated at the ETRR-2 to test the production of fission product isotopes for medical purposes. The irradiated compounds had been dissolved in three laboratories located in the Nuclear Chemistry Building, but no plutonium or U-233 was separated during these experiments. Also, during the investigation Egypt disclosed the Radioisotope Production Facility which was a new facility under construction at Inshas, designed for the separation of radioisotopes from enriched 19.7% U-235 irradiated at the ETRR-2 reactor. Egypt should have reported the decision to construct the new facility no later than 1997.
Egypt justified its reporting failures as the government and the IAEA had “differing interpretations” of Egypt's safeguards obligations, emphasizing that the country's “nuclear activities are strictly for peaceful purposes.” Accordingly, Egypt showed full cooperation during the 2004–2005 investigation and had taken corrective actions by submitting inventory change reports and providing a modified design information for the ETRR-2 reactor and the Radioisotope Production Facility.
In 2009, The IAEA's Safeguards Implementation Report for 2008, concludes that earlier issues of undeclared nuclear activities and material reported to the Board of Governors in February 2005 are no longer outstanding as the IAEA found no discrepancies between what have been declared during the investigation and IAEA's findings, and no evidences of extraction of plutonium or enrichment of uranium.

Reactor specifications

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General data

Safeguards: IAEAInitial Cost: 75 M US$Annual Cost: 6 M US$Total Staff: 25No of Operators: 8

Technical data

Reactor Type: Open poolThermal Power, Steady : 22,000.00Max Flux SS, Thermal : 2.8E14Max Flux SS, Fast : 2.2E14Thermal Power, Pulsed : 0.00Moderator: Light WaterCoolant: Light WaterForced Cooling: 2000 M3/H, upwardCoolant Velocity in Core: 4.7 M/SReflector: BEReflector Number of Sides: 4Control Rods Material: AG, IN, CDControl Rods number: 6

Experimental facilities

Horizontal Channels: 5Horizontal Max Flux : 4.0E9Horizontal Use: Neutron research and radiographyVertical Channels: noneCore Irradiation Facilities: 3Core Max Flux : 1.25E14, thermalReflector Irradiation Facilities: 26Loops Number: 2Loops Max Flux: 8E13Loops use: research, instrumental neutron activation analysis

Fuel data

Origin of Fissile Material: RussiaEnrichment Supplier: INVAP, ArgentinaEquilibrium Core Size: 40 DIA. X 48 X 80Plates per Element: 19Dimensions of Plates: 64 X 800 X 1.5Cladding Material: Aluminum AlloyCladding Thickness, mm: 0.4Fuel Thickness, mm: 0.7Uranium Density, g/cm3: 3.017Burnup on Discharge, max %: 63.7Burnup Average, %: 61.7Last Shipment Year: 1997Last Receipt Year: 1997Fuel Fabricator: Argentina

Utilization

Hours per Day: 24Days per Week: 1Weeks per Year: 48MW Days per Year: 920Materials/fuel test experiments: YesIsotope production: YesNeutron Scattering: NoNeutron radiography: YesNeutron capture therapy: NoActivation Analysis: YesTransmutation: YesGeochronology: NoTeaching: YesTraining: YesOther Uses: medical and nuclear solid state research, condensed matter research, nuclear engineering experiments