The IAEA’s Vital Support of Development and International Security

Source: International Atomic Energy Agency – IAEA

(As prepared for delivery)

President, Secretary-General, Excellencies, Ladies and Gentlemen,

“The best way to predict the future is to build it.” It is a truth worth remembering, especially when political division, climate change, war, hunger, and disease seem to overshadow our effort.

We have the tools to deal with these challenges. We have the knowledge, the technology, the financial means, the diplomacy and the robust international institutions.

The IAEA serves its 180 Member States with the lifesaving and lifeaffirming tools of nuclear science and technology. These contribute directly to the SDGs.

Health comes first. At the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 we jumped into action, harnessing our equipment and knowledge for quick and reliable testing against COVID with the portable RT-PCR machines, or “labs in a suitcase”.

We launched what would become the largest emergency operation in the history of IAEA to nearly 130 States. In so doing, we reached tens of millions of people. For some countries these kits were the first, and sometimes the only equipment they had to conduct reliable testing against COVID-19.

Drawing on this and earlier experiencessupporting the fight against Ebola, avian influenza and Zika, we launched – in that same year – the Zoonotic Disease Integrated Action (ZODIAC). Under ZODIAC we have trained people from more than 95 countries in dealing with zoonotic diseases. Laboratories in developing countries have received equipment for 3 serology and molecular diagnostic or genetic sequencing. Many of these labs are now being used to combat Mpox.

The IAEA has more than 6 decades of experience in radiotherapy and medical imaging. But today the cancer crisis is hitting low and middleincome countries particularly hard and I am determined to make a greater impact in partnership with our Member States. That is why we launched Rays of Hope: Cancer Care for All at the African Union Summit in February 2022, with firm support from the World Health Organization (WHO). Africa is where the cancer care gap is the starkest: more than 20 African nations lack even a single radiotherapy machine. So far, 86 countries have reached out to the IAEA for support under Rays of Hope and concrete actions have been initiated in more than 30 States.

Under our new initiative, NUTEC: NUclear TEchnology for Controlling Plastic Pollution, 86 States around the world are participating in marine microplastic monitoring using nuclear and isotopic tracing techniques. This will help them to put in place better-informed policies that combat the plastic pollution threatening the ocean, its plants and creatures and therefore also the communities that rely on them for their livelihoods. Some 39 States are participating in plastic recycling using radiation technology, four of which are progressing towards establishing pilot-scale plants. This will allow them to reduce plastic waste and advance towards a circular economy. The Global Marine Monitoring Network continues to grow with 99 States now benefiting from capacity building efforts.

Atoms4Food was launched by the IAEA and the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) in October 2023. It offers tailor-made approaches in 4 Food and Agriculture, which for years has been the number 1 area of support sought by our Member States. Atoms4Foods supports countries in using innovative nuclear techniques to enhance agricultural productivity, reduce food losses, ensure food safety, improve nutrition, and adapt to the challenges of climate change. This supports farmers as well as the fight against deadly malnutrition.

There is no development without energy. Nuclear power provides about a quarter of the world’s low-carbon electricity. Much more is needed if we are to meet the climate goals set out on the Paris Agreement. In their historic first Global Stocktake, approved at COP28 in Dubai last year, the signatory countries to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change called for accelerating the deployment of low-emission energy technologies including nuclear power. The Pact for the Future adopted yesterday, in Action 26 reaffirmed the inalienable right of all countries to develop research, production and use of nuclear energy for peaceful purposes without discrimination, in conformity with their respective obligations.

Today, in addition to the 415 nuclear power reactors operating in 31 countries there are 62 reactors under construction in 15 countries, most of them in Asia. The IAEA is assisting States, many of them developing countries, either with enlarging their civilian nuclear programs, or with safely embarking on them. We are working with industry and regulators on small modular reactors (SMRs) which will make more affordable the price of entry to the nuclear energy club.

The IAEA is also playing an important role in maintenance of 5 international peace and security.

Mandated by the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), we conduct nuclear safeguards, making sure the increased amount of nuclear material around the world does not result in the secret proliferation of nuclear weapons. There is material for thousands of nuclear warheads in the world. Thanks to the robust international safeguards regime and our inspection system, who never stopped even during the COVID pandemic, the number of nuclear weapon States around the world is far fewer than had been feared before the IAEA was established and the NPT came into force.

The IAEA assists States in the creation and implementation of nuclearweapon-free zones, which already cover vast regions of the world. These are important steps towards a world without nuclear weapons.

Our work in Iran, Syria, other countries of the Middle East, and on different continents, contributes to international stability through nonproliferation and through the peaceful uses of nuclear technology.

Since February 2022 a large-scale conventional conflict has raged in a country with a large civilian nuclear program. Ukraine used to generate more than half its electricity from nuclear power plants. From the first months of the war, the IAEA has focused on assisting Ukraine in preventing a radiological or nuclear accident, which could have a serious transborder impact. Today, the IAEA has advisory and assistance missions stationed at all five of Ukraine’s nuclear power plants, including Zaporizhzhia, which is located right at the front line. Following months 6 of negotiations and consultations, on 30 May 2023 at the UN Security Council I outlined five concrete principles to help ensure nuclear safety and security at Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhya NPP. It received strong support from the Members of the Council.

The IAEA continues to monitor the safe discharge of water from the Fukushima Daichi Nuclear Power Station and engages in consultations with neighbouring and coastal countries with strong interest in the process. Our independent analysis and the data we publish relating to the discharge offer facts that dispel misunderstandings and fears about the process.

Ladies and gentlemen,

I firmly believe in supporting the ability of everyone, regardless of gender, to fully benefit and contribute to the IAEA’s work.

Conviction requires action. When I began my tenure as the IAEA’s Director General five years ago, one of my very first actions was to set a goal for gender parity by 2025 and to put in place the policies to achieve a more diverse workforce.

Five years ago, women represented less than 30% of the Agency. Today, they have surpassed 48%.

Mindful of the need to continue helping future generations, I also launched the Marie Sklodowska-Curie Fellowship Programme (MSCFP) in 2020. It drives diversity as well as scientific and technological innovation by encouraging women to pursue a career in the nuclear field. Since its launch, hundreds of women from over 120 countries have been awarded fellowships with generous stipends. They have studied in more than 70 7 countries and have also benefited from internships in many areas of the field. Our follow-up program, named after the scientist Lise Meitner, empowers early- and mid-career through career-enhancing opportunities like site visits.

The IAEA is a key multilateral player to make the Pact of the Future a reality. Thank you.

IAEA Board of Governors Elects New Chairperson for 2024-2025

Source: International Atomic Energy Agency – IAEA

Ambassador Philbert Abaka Johnson. (Photo: A. Barber-Huescar/IAEA)

The IAEA Board of Governors elected Ambassador Philbert Abaka Johnson as the Chairperson of the IAEA’s Board of Governors for 2024–2025. His one-year term commences today. He succeeds Ambassador Holger Federico Martinsen of Argentina.

Ambassador Johnson is the Permanent Representative of Ghana to the Agency, the United Nations Offices and other International Organizations in Vienna. Since his appointment in 2020, he has chaired the 54th Session of the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law (UNCITRAL), Subsidiary Body III of the Tenth Review Conference of the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT), the standing open-ended intergovernmental working group on improving the governance and financial situation of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (FINGOV), the Commission on Narcotic Drugs, and the Vienna-based African Group. He is currently serving as Co-Chair for the preparations of the Ministerial Conference on Nuclear Science, Application and Technology and Technical Cooperation in 2024.

A career diplomat with close to 30 years of experience, Ambassador Johnson’s first diplomatic assignment was in Liberia in 1995. He has since served in multiple Ghana Missions in Switzerland, the Russian Federation, Belgium, Canada and New York and has held numerous positions in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Regional Integration, including as the first Director of the Diaspora Affairs Bureau in 2014. Before his appointment in Vienna, he was the Director of Africa and Regional Integration Bureau and Head of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) National Office from 2019 to 2020 and contributed towards Ghana’s bid to host the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) Secretariat and the establishment of the ECOWAS Early Warning Centre in Accra.

Ambassador Johnson holds a Bachelor of Arts degree in History and a Diploma in Education from the University of Cape Coast, as well as two master’s degrees: a Master’s of International Affairs from the Legon Centre for International Affairs & Diplomacy in Ghana, and a Master’s of International Law and Economics from the World Trade Institute in Switzerland. He has participated in various courses on leadership and diplomacy and was the recipient of the Best Ghana Diplomatic Mission Award for 2024.

IAEA’s General Conference 2024 – The Week in a Nutshell

Source: International Atomic Energy Agency – IAEA

Nearly 3000 participants took part in the IAEA’s 68th General Conference in Vienna this week, with an additional 8700 people joining online. The conference sets the course of the Agency’s work for the coming year, as it seeks to use nuclear science and technology to improve lives worldwide. Watch the IAEA’s video news summary of the week.

Week in Review: 68th General Conference

Source: International Atomic Energy Agency – IAEA

The 68th annual IAEA General Conference is coming to a close, with final discussions around possible resolutions likely to last into the evening.

IAEA resolutions and decisions will guide the IAEA’s implementation of activities in the coming year. The resolutions and decisions will be posted here as they become available.

This year, almost 3000 participants registered for the conference, including 2671 Member State representatives. With 285> representatives from international organizations and non-governmental organizations, the highest number for a General Conference. Delegates from 150 of the 178 IAEA Member States attended.

In his opening statement to the General Conference on Monday, IAEA Director General Rafael Mariano Grossi laid out the Agency’s key role in global affairs. “Through the International Atomic Energy Agency’s unique mandate, we have the responsibility of addressing issues that affect all of humanity. Our priorities include reinforcing and preventing the erosion of a non-proliferation regime that has underpinned international peace and security for more than half a century; the ever-more-present existential threat of climate change, and the ongoing injustice of poverty, disease and hunger.”

Watch video of the opening of the conference.

The General Conference elected 11 countries to serve on the 35-member IAEA Board of Governors for the 2024–2025 period. The newly elected Board members are the following: Argentina, Colombia, Egypt, Georgia, Ghana, Italy, Luxembourg, Morocco, Pakistan, Thailand and Venezuela.

The General Conference and Board of Governors are the two IAEA policy making bodies. The 35-member Board examines and provides recommendations to the General Conference on the IAEA’s financial statements, programme and budget.

IAEA Director General’s Statement on the Announcement of an Agreement Between China and Japan

Source: International Atomic Energy Agency – IAEA

Since the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant accident in 2011, the IAEA has been actively contributing to all activities related to the safe decommissioning and dealing with the consequences of this accident. One important aspect of this work relates to the water stored at the plant and the need to handle it in a safe way. Following the adoption of the Basic Policy by Japan in April 2021, the Japanese authorities requested the IAEA to assist by reviewing plans to ensure they will be implemented in a safe and transparent way, and in accordance with internationally agreed safety standards. The IAEA, through its comprehensive report issued in July 2023 and the subsequent implementation of a process to monitor, in an independent way, the controlled discharges of the treated water, has fulfilled the commitment expressed by the Director General to oversee this process “before, during and after” its implementation and “until the last drop”. Today, the People’s Republic of China and Japan have made announcements indicating their mutual agreement to implement additional measures, which will facilitate the wider participation of other stakeholders under the framework of the IAEA. I confirm that this agreement has built on our existing sampling and monitoring activities in compliance with the IAEA statutory functions. The Agency will coordinate with Japan and other stakeholders, including China, to ensure that the additional measures are implemented appropriately under the framework of the IAEA, maintaining the integrity of the process with full transparency to ensure that water discharge levels are, and will continue to be, in strict compliance and consistent with international safety standards. The IAEA will continue its impartial, independent, and objective safety review during the discharge phase, including by having a continuous onsite presence, and by providing live online monitoring on our website. I wish to commend the government of Japan for its continued engagement with the IAEA, and the government of China for the constructive consultations held with the Agency in support of this bilateral process that comes to a positive conclusion today.

Once again, the IAEA, through the impartial exercise of its technical mandate, is happy to have contributed to a positive outcome to this important matter. The IAEA will continue liaising at the technical level to ensure smooth implementation of this agreement.

68th IAEA General Conference: Day 4 Highlights

Source: International Atomic Energy Agency – IAEA

Visitors to the IAEA General Conference have had the chance to learn more about the peaceful uses of nuclear science and technology and to talk to experts. (Photo: D. Calma/IAEA)

On Day 4 of the IAEA General Conference, eleven countries were newly elected to serve on the 35-member IAEA Board of Governors for the 2024–2025 period.

The newly elected Board members are the following: Argentina, Colombia, Egypt, Italy, Luxembourg, Georgia, Ghana, Morocco, Pakistan, Thailand and Venezuela.

A Senior Safety and Security Regulators Meeting took place today. Heads of regulatory bodies and other senior regulatory officials in the fields of nuclear, radiation, transport and radioactive waste safety and nuclear security discussed regulatory challenges and shared good practices.

Member States Side Events

At a Group of Friends of Food Security event, visitors learned how countries from the African Regional Group came together to address the challenges of food insecurity, supporting the efforts of Vienna-based Organizations and their Member States. This event was organized by Sudan and Italy.

The event 50 years of Chilean Research Reactor: The Chilean Research Reactor celebrates its half century of scientific and technological contributions to the country and its people highlighted the scientific and technological contributions of the Chilean research reactor RECH-1.

An International University-Industry Projects: Practical Solutions and Capacity Building to Triple Nuclear Energy side event by the Russian Federation looked at capacity building in the nuclear industry, as a necessary part of effectively meeting the pledge of tripling nuclear energy.

The Harnessing the Atom for Sustainable Development Goals: Sixty Years of Cooperation between the State of Kuwait and the International Atomic Energy Agency side event was organized by Kuwait. It presented 60 years of cooperation between the State of Kuwait and the IAEA, focusing on how the country has applied nuclear science and technology to address sustainable development goals.

New Members Elected to IAEA Board of Governors

Source: International Atomic Energy Agency – IAEA

The plenary at the 68th General Conference. (Photo: IAEA/ A.Barber Huescar).

Eleven countries have been newly elected to serve on the 35-member IAEA Board of Governors for the 2024–2025 period. The election took place on Thursday, 19 September, at the plenary session of the 68th IAEA General Conference.

The newly elected Board members are the following: Argentina, Colombia, Egypt, Italy, Luxembourg, Georgia, Ghana, Morocco, Pakistan, Thailand and the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela.

For the 2024-2025 period, the new composition of the 35-member IAEA Board will be as follows:  Algeria, Argentina, Armenia, Australia, Bangladesh, Belgium, Brazil, Burkina Faso, Canada, China, Colombia, Ecuador, Egypt, France, Georgia, Germany, Ghana, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, the Republic of Korea, Luxembourg, Morocco, the Kingdom of the Netherlands, Pakistan, Paraguay, the Russian Federation, South Africa, Spain, Thailand, Ukraine, the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, the United States of America and the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela.

The Board of Governors is one of the two policy-making bodies of the IAEA, along with the annual General Conference of IAEA Member States. The Board will meet on Monday, 23 September, to elect its officers.

Update 250 – IAEA Director General Statement on Situation in Ukraine

Source: International Atomic Energy Agency – IAEA

Director General Rafael Mariano Grossi this week informed the annual Member States gathering of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) about its expanding efforts to help prevent a nuclear accident during the military conflict in Ukraine, saying the IAEA had deployed more than 140 support and assistance missions to the country over the past two years.

“As the war in Ukraine has continued, so has our support to help maintain the safety and security of its nuclear facilities. Our assistance has grown and adapted. For example, we are taking a more proactive stance to monitoring those electrical substations that are essential in providing a stable electricity supply to Ukraine’s nuclear power plants, which is critical for maintaining nuclear safety,” Director General Grossi said in Monday’s opening statement to the General Conference, attended by senior officials from the IAEA’s 178 Member States. 

Two years after the IAEA established its presence at the Zaporizhzhya Nuclear Power Plant (ZNPP), the nuclear safety and security situation at the site remains precarious, he told delegates, adding: “Regular explosions, drone attacks, gunfire and repeated interruptions of external power supply, among other challenges, increase the risk of a nuclear accident.”

At the ZNPP this week, the IAEA team has continued to hear explosions at various distances, including several close to the site, but no damage to the plant was reported.

Separately, the team was informed by the ZNPP that two power lines supplying the nearby city of Enerhodar had been damaged by unspecified military activities on Tuesday, prompting the use of diesel generators to operate the pumping station for tap water – including to the ZNPP – as well as other “vital” facilities in the city. The lines were re-connected later in the week and the event had no impact on nuclear safety and security at the ZNPP, which continued to receive off-site power from the last remaining 750 (kilovolt) kV and 330 kV power lines.

On Tuesday, the IAEA team observed an emergency exercise conducted by the ZNPP. The simulated exercise scenario included a loss of coolant accident in the unit 1 reactor caused by a fictitious large earthquake, followed by a loss of all off-site power and the failure of all three of the unit’s emergency diesel generators. A secondary aspect of the exercise scenario simulated a fire in the ZNPP’s training centre and injuries to two personnel, which required an evacuation of the training centre and the response of the fire brigade and ambulance.

The IAEA team, observing the exercise from the temporary emergency centre and the training centre, reported that the ZNPP noted an appropriate response of participating staff as well as equipment reliability. The ZNPP also identified opportunities for improvement, including in the communication between the exercise players related to plant data about the accident and the reporting of personnel contamination monitoring.

The IAEA staff continued to conduct walkdowns across the site, including to the pumping station of the unit 5 reactor where they discussed the operational status of the pumps considering the decline in the water level of the ZNPP cooling pond, which has fallen 2.2 metres since the destruction of the Kakhovka dam in mid-2023. In the ZNPP’s current shutdown status, the cooling water provided by 11 wells dug after the dam was destroyed remains sufficient for nuclear safety and security.

The IAEA teams present at the Khmelnytskyy, Rivne and South Ukraine nuclear power plants (NPPs) and the Chornobyl site reported that nuclear safety and security is being maintained despite the effects of the ongoing conflict, including air raid alarms on several days over the past week.

The IAEA team at the South Ukraine NPP reported that several drones were flying at distances between 1.5 and 6 km from the plant on three separate nights over the past week. No damage to the plant or any casualties were reported. The IAEA team was required to shelter on two of these nights, including late on Wednesday when drones and gunfire were heard.

The IAEA teams deployed at Khmelnytskyy and at South Ukraine NPPs both conducted walkdowns of the on-site emergency response centres and were briefed on their current operational preparedness and needs.

Ukraine’s State Nuclear Regulatory Inspectorate informed the IAEA that the subcritical Neutron Source installation, located in the Kharkiv Institute of Physics and Technology (KIPT), was shelled on 14 September 2024, but did not suffer damage. This nuclear research facility located in north-eastern Ukraine was already heavily damaged in the conflict’s first year, but without any indication of radiological release or diversion of declared nuclear material.

The IAEA continued to deliver on its comprehensive programme of assistance to help Ukraine maintain nuclear safety and security. With a total of 66 deliveries since the start of the armed conflict, equipment worth over €11 million has so far reached different organizations in Ukraine.

In recent weeks, the Chornobyl site received 550 beds to improve the living conditions of its staff, the third such delivery under the IAEA medical assistance programme. Ukraine’s Ministry of Energy received several shipments of equipment and supplies to help the energy sector ensure reliable power supplies to the Ukrainian NPPs. The Rivne NPP and Ukraine’s VostGok uranium mining and processing plant received equipment to help them enhance nuclear security at their facilities. These deliveries were funded by contributions from Canada, France, Japan, New Zealand, Norway, and the United Kingdom.

In addition, the IAEA has been coordinating a series of training sessions for psychologists working at Ukrainian NPPs, drawing on local expertise to ensure sustainable mental health support is established at the national level for NPP staff. The training sessions began last month as part of the IAEA’s medical programme and are supported with funds from Japan.

68th IAEA General Conference: Day 3 Highlights

Source: International Atomic Energy Agency – IAEA

The two-day event emphasized the tangible impact and practical approach of  the Atoms4Food initiative, which was launched last year by the IAEA and the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization.

You can catch up on the video recording of the Scientific Forum  here, and read the latest  IAEA Bulletin on Atoms4Food to find out more.

At the annual Treaty Event on the sidelines of the 68th General Conference, Liberia and South Africa joined multiple multilateral treaties under IAEA auspices. Liberia pledged its commitment to nuclear safety and security by consenting to be bound by six legal instruments. South Africa deposited an instrument of acceptance of the African Regional Co-operative Agreement for Research, Development and Training Related to Nuclear Science and Technology (AFRA), established by African Member States to strengthen the contribution of nuclear science and technology to socioeconomic development on the African continent.

Side events

A new Anchor Centre at the Faculty of Medicine in Ramathibodi Hospital, Mahidol University, Thailand was formally established at Realizing Hope for All: Rays of hope Anchor Centres – One Year On event today. It brings the total number of Anchor Centres around the world to ten. Anchor Centres are central to the IAEA Rays of Hope: Cancer Care for All initiative and provide targeted support to neighbouring countries in key areas such as education, training, research, innovation and quality assurance. The event marked one year since the signing of the first five Anchor Centres at last year’s General Conference.

A Creating the Future Global Nuclear Workforce through Exchange and Practice: Lise Meitner Programme and Beyond event highlighted the capacity building support offered by the IAEA, including advisory services and training courses, as well the Lise Meitner Programme, an initiative launched in 2023 to provide early- and mid-career women professionals with opportunities to participate in a visiting professional programme and bolster their technical and soft skills. Also in focus was the Open-source Nuclear Codes for Reactor Analysis (ONCORE) framework for simulation tools which supports research, education and training for the analysis of advanced nuclear power reactors

A Sharing Experience of Communities Hosting Nuclear Facilities event highlighted how transparency and open dialogue with host communities are vital to the long-term sustainability of nuclear power programmes. The event featured speakers from municipal governments in Argentina, Canada, Hungary, Japan, and the United States of America as well as representatives from national ministries in Canada and Japan.

The SMR Platform: Advances in Nuclear Technology Developments for Microreactors side event explored recent advances in microreactor development as well as security aspects and ‘safeguards by design’ approaches. The IAEA’s newly redesigned Advanced Reactor Information System was also presented. It provides comprehensive and up-to-date information about advanced nuclear plant designs and concepts.  

Microreactors are generally designed to produce no more than 20 MW(e) and have been proposed as a solution for the electricity needs of remote communities and to power non-electric applications including desalination and chemical production.                                           

The IAEA’s ten-year vision to update safety standards for advanced nuclear power plants (NPPs) was presented at a Safety of Advanced Nuclear Power Plant Designs: Enabling the Future side event. This vision is underpinned by the findings in IAEA Safety Report No. 123, which reviews the applicability of safety standards to non-water-cooled reactors and small modular reactors.

An event on The Declaration of the Arab Roadmap for Cooperation in Radiological and Nuclear Emergency Preparedness and Response how the State Declarations Portal (SDP) highlighted how technology can make Member States’ reporting obligations easier to deliver. By reducing paper-based processes and enhancing institutional memory, SDP has significantly improved both the efficiency and security of safeguards-related information exchange with the IAEA.

At an event on Addressing Challenges in Managing Legacy Radioactive Waste representatives of Georgia, the Republic of Moldova and Ukraine shared the results of successful IAEA technical cooperation projects to analyse, transfer and store radioactive waste left from historic nuclear activities.  

The Powering the Future through Atoms4NetZero event illustrated the importance of energy scenario modelling for mapping out long-term energy strategies and how the IAEA’s Atoms4NetZero initiative can help countries reach their net zero targets with nuclear power.

At a Safeguards Traineeships: Forging the Future Safeguards Workforce, delegates attending the were briefed on the successes of the Safeguards Traineeship Programme and learnt about the new IAEA TechTrack initiative for young professionals.

Since 1983, the Safeguards Traineeship Programme has been instrumental in providing young people with hands-on experience in IAEA safeguards. Since its launch, 185 trainees from 77 countries have participated in the programme. In particular, the traineeship targets those from States with limited nuclear fuel cycles, and that are recipients of IAEA technical assistance.

Member States side events

Delegates heard how Canada’s nuclear sector has recently pioneered the use of nuclear power plants for medical isotope production, at the event Canada Fights Cancer: New Frontiers in Isotope Production . This event hosted members of Canada’s isotope and radiopharmaceutical sector in discussions around current and future opportunities for medical isotope and radiopharmaceutical production, utilization and collaborations. It was organized by Canada.

In the Effective Low – Cost Strategies to Mitigate the Loss of Critical Nuclear Knowledge side event, Brazil’s National Nuclear Energy Commission (CNEN) presented Brazil’s knowledge management practices in the nuclear field and related areas and discussed the impacts of the IAEA’s knowledge management events and tools on building this programme.

At The Implementation of Radon Action Plans event, countries discussed how to reduce exposure to radon, a carcinogenic radioactive gas, one of the leading causes of lung cancer according to the World Health Organization. Countries, including Portugal and Ireland, shared their experiences in recent years. The event was organized by Portugal.

Mr Grossi with Raja Ali Raza Anwar, Governor and Chairman of the Pakistani Atomic Energy Commission.

At the Pakistan – IAEA: Collaboration of Hope event, visitors heard now Pakistan’s Atomic Energy Cancer Hospital (AECH) was designated as an Anchor Centre under the IAEA’s Rays of Hope: Cancer Care for All initiative in September 2023.  The side event highlighted the contributions of AECH in the management of cancer burden in Pakistan and their potential role as an Anchor Centre.

The French New Nuclear Program: Revitalizing Nuclear Ambitions provided an in-depth exploration of France’s new nuclear programme. It includes the construction of six new EPR reactors, with an option for an additional eight units. The event covered progress to date, outlined the key challenges faced, pointed out synergies and lessons learned from past projects and discussed the strategies implemented to ensure successful delivery of the projects.

The Enhancing National Cancer Diagnosis and Treatment Infrastructure in Romania: Tripartite Collaboration with IAEA and the World Bank for Fighting Cancer through Rays of Hope Initiative event was organized by Romania. It presented how comprehensive joint projects carried out by the IAEA in collaboration with its Ministry of Health and the World Bank have focused on improving radiotherapy services in Romania, including training programmes for medical staff. 

Liberia Commits to the Safe and Secure Uses of Nuclear Technology by Joining Six IAEA Legal Instruments at Once

Source: International Atomic Energy Agency – IAEA

“Law is the basis of everything we do. We – the IAEA – cannot act, we cannot move, we cannot give you the support you need unless you have a normative structure establishing a solid basis to enable our experts to do their work. There are a number of very important legal instruments that keep you on track with everything, and I am very grateful for your actions today in joining some of them,” Mr Grossi said, addressing the representatives from Liberia and South Africa.

Resident Representative of the Republic of Liberia to the IAEA, Youngor Sevelee Telewoda, deposited five instruments on behalf of Liberia.

The Convention on Early Notification of a Nuclear Accident, adopted in 1986 following the Chornobyl nuclear plant accident, establishes a notification system for nuclear accidents that have an actual or a potential international transboundary release that could affect radiological safety in another country.

The Convention on Assistance in the Case of a Nuclear Accident or Radiological Emergency, also adopted in 1986 following the Chornobyl accident, sets out an international framework for co-operation to facilitate prompt assistance in the event of nuclear accidents or radiological emergencies.

The Convention on Nuclear Safety (CNS) aims to commit those parties operating land-based civil nuclear power plants to maintain a high level of safety by establishing fundamental safety principles. The convention obliges parties to submit reports on the implementation of their obligations for peer review.

The Convention on the Physical Protection of Nuclear Material (CPPNM) and its 2005 Amendment are the main international legal instruments in the area of nuclear security adopted under the IAEA’s auspices. The CPPNM establishes legal obligations regarding the physical protection of nuclear material used for peaceful purposes during international transport; the criminalization of certain offences involving nuclear material; and international cooperation, for example, in the case of theft, robbery or any other unlawful taking of nuclear material or credible threat thereof. The Amendment expands the CPPNM in all these areas.

South Africa accepts the African Regional Co-operative Agreement for Research, Development and Training Related to Nuclear Science and Technology

IAEA Director General Rafael Grossi and Rapulane Molekane, Resident Representative of South Africa to the IAEA. (Photo: D. Calma/IAEA)

Rapulane Molekane, Resident Representative of South Africa to the IAEA, deposited an instrument of acceptance of the African Regional Co-operative Agreement for Research, Development and Training Related to Nuclear Science and Technology (AFRA) on behalf of South Africa.

AFRA is an intergovernmental agreement established by African Member States to strengthen the contribution of nuclear science and technology to socioeconomic development on the African continent. AFRA, which first entered into force in 1990 and was revised in 2020, provides a framework for IAEA Member States in Africa to intensify their collaboration through programmes focused on the specific shared needs of its members. Its activities cover a wide range of peaceful applications of nuclear science and technology that contribute to the achievement of national and regional development goals. AFRA now has 38 parties.