North Korea has begun new construction at a plutonium production reactor located at the Yongbyon nuclear complex that may be intended to restart the facility shut down under a 2007 agreement. A key step in that process will be to restore the disabled secondary cooling system.
Fans blow carbon dioxide on the reactor core to cool the 5 megawatt electric (MWe) reactor.The secondary cooling loop provides water to remove heat from the gas.
Under the 2007 Six Party agreement to disable facilities at Yongbyon, North Korea agreed to cut and remove portions of steel piping of the secondary cooling loop outside the reactor building and to remove the internal wood structure of the cooling tower.
North Korea subsequently agreed to demolish the cooling tower in 2008 to provide the Bush administration with a "striking visual" that would symbolize the disablement process.
Commercial satellite imagery shows that new construction activity started at the 5 MWe reactor in the six weeks between the beginning of February and the end of March 2013, prior to the Pyongyang's announcement earlier this week that it intended to reactivate the facility.
While imagery from February 7 shows no activity at the reactor site, March 27 imagery indicates that construction has begun along the roadway and toward the backside of the reactor building. There appears to be excavation that may be related to replacing the sections of the secondary cooling loop that were cut and removed in accordance with the Six Party agreement.
The water pipes that connected the reactor to the old cooling tower likely followed this road underground. (Across the road there is work in progress on the end of a building, and to the north, the roof is being replaced on another small building whose purpose is unknown.)...
Find the full analysis and latest satellite imagery of the 5-MWe reactor.
Source: 38north.org
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