Implementation of U.S. Department of Energy Physical Protection Upgrades in Lithuania and Uzbekistan*

Year
1996
Author(s)
Michael Haase - U. S. Department of Energy
Laverne Romesberg - Sandia National Laboratories
Roger Showalter - Sandia National Laboratories
Mark S. Soo Hoo - Sandia National Laboratories
James W. Corey - Ktech Corp.
Abstract
Since 1994, the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) has provided cooperative assistance to the non-nuclear weapons states of the Former Soviet Union. This effort, within DOE’s program of Material Protection, Control, and Accounting (MPC&A), identified the Institute of Nuclear Physics (INP) in Uzbekistan and the Ignalina Nuclear Power Plant (IN!PP)in Lithuania as sites for cooperative MPC&A projects. The INP, located just outside of Tashkent, is the site of a 10-megawatt WWR-SM research reactor. This reactor is expected to remain operational as a major nuclear research and isotope production reactor for Central Asia. The INPP, located 100 kilometers northeast of the capital city of Vilnius, consists of two Russian-made RBMK reactors with a combined power output of 3,000 megawatts (electric). This power plant has been the subject of international safety and security concerns, which prompted DOE’s cooperative assistance effort. This paper describes U.S. progress in a multinational effort directed at implementing physical protection upgrades in Lithuania and Uzbekistan. The upgrades agreed upon between DOE and the lNP and between DOE and the lNPP have been designed to interface with upgrades being implemented by other donor countries. DOE/INPP upgrade projects include providing training on U.S. approaches to physical protection, access control through the main vehicle portal, a hardened central alarm station, and improved guard force communications. DOE/INP upgrade projects in Uzbekistan include an access control system, a hardened tlesh fiel storage vault, an interior intrusion detection and assessment system, and an integrated alarm display and assessment system.