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South Korea Minister says it has reached agreement with the US on nuclear fuel reprocessing

Cho Hyun, South Korean Foreign Ministry said that following the summit between U.S. president Donald Trump and South Korean president Lee Jae Myung earlier this week, both countries agreed to discuss nuclear reprocessing.

Cho, in an interview broadcast live on television, said: "We run 26 nuclear power stations and buy and bring in fuel every time. We feel the need to be able to reprocess and make our own fuel using concentrates."

"Cooperation with the U.S. will be essential in order to achieve this." We must change the nuclear agreement or use another method within the agreement between the countries. It is therefore very significant that we have decided to start discussions in this direction.

A bilateral agreement prohibits South Korea from reprocessing spent nuclear fuel, which could be used to create nuclear weapons.

Foreign Minister Cho said that South Korea is not interested in nuclear weapons, but rather industrial and environmental purposes.

Cho said on Thursday, "Any talk of wanting to have our own nuclear weapons or having nuclear capabilities via revision (of the accord) would be something the U.S. couldn't accept in terms overall nuclear nonproliferation." Reporting by Joyce Lee, Hyunjoo Ji and Ed Davies.

(source: Reuters)