WASHINGTON (AP) New satellite imagery offers further signs that North Korea has restarted a nuclear reactor capable of producing plutonium for bombs, a U.S. research institute said Wednesday.
North Korea in April announced plans to restart the reactor at Nyongbyon that was shuttered in 2007 under a disarmament deal. Satellite imagery at the end of August showed steam coming from an adjacent generator building, suggesting North Korea was in the process of starting it up.
The U.S.-Korea Institute at Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies says that a satellite photo from Sept. 19 shows hot water being released through a drainpipe that is part of a cooling system for the five megawatt reactor. That most likely shows the reactor is now operating and its generators are producing power.
The findings are being published on the institute's website, 38 North, and are based on analysis by Nick Hansen, a retired intelligence expert who closely monitors developments in the North's weapons programs.
North Korea has yet to announce that the reactor is working again. The United States has said that any move to do so would be a "very serious matter" and violate United Nations Security Council resolutions.