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Kodak Acknowledges Operating Secret Nuke Reactor In New York For 30

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  • Kodak Acknowledges Operating Secret Nuke Reactor In New York For 30

    KODAK ACKNOWLEDGES OPERATING SECRET NUKE REACTOR IN NEW YORK FOR 30 YEARS

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    May 16, 2012 - 19:48 AMT

    PanARMENIAN.Net - Kodak the company that gave us the Instamatic
    cameras has acknowledged that for 30 years it operated a small nuclear
    reactor in a basement on its corporate campus in Rochester, New York,
    unbeknown to almost everyone save a few scientists and engineers,
    Belfast Telegraph reported.

    The firm, which began operating the device, called a californium
    neutron flux multiplier (CFX), in 1974, insists there was nothing
    unsafe about it.

    None the less, it came pre-loaded with nearly 1.5kg of uranium
    enriched up to a level of 93.4 per cent, which is just about right
    for an atomic warhead.

    The size of a fridge, the device was kept in a basement behind
    2ft-thick concrete walls and was operated remotely. While Kodak
    apparently did not deliberately seek to keep its existence a secret
    - it claims it was mentioned at least twice in published company
    research - it did not exactly advertise it either. Seemingly neither
    the authorities in Rochester nor state-wide knew it was there.

    "It's such an odd situation because private companies just don't
    have this material," Miles Pomper, a senior research associate at
    the Centre for Nonproliferation Studies in Washington DC, told the
    Democrat and Chronicle, the Rochester newspaper which carried the
    first report about the reactor.

    The company finally "decommissioned" its in-house reactor under
    federal government supervision in 2007 and the uranium was sent to
    a safe site in California. For more than three decades it had been
    used by a tiny cadre of staff to help test chemicals for impurities
    and perform neutron radiography, a form of imaging.

    Experts say that Kodak, which filed for bankruptcy this year, had
    one of only two CFX reactors ever made. The other belonged to the U.S.

    Department of Energy. However, the government has issued special
    licences to a small number of private companies over the decades to
    operate other kinds of mini-reactors, including Dow Chemical and GE.

    Kodak insists it did away with its unusual piece of kit because it
    had found cheaper and easier ways to perform the same tasks. It had
    nothing to do with security concerns, the company insisted.

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