Tsutomu Arai Director, International Nuclear Energy Cooperation Division Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
COOPERATION AND COORDINATION WITH RELEVANT INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS/INITIATIVES AMBASSADOR BONNIE D. JENKINS COORDINATOR FOR THREAT REDUCTION PROGRAMS.
Advertisements

Implications of the NPT on a Coordinated Approach to Triple S Dr M. S. Draper C.B.E. Past head – Non-Proliferation Policy UK Department of Energy and Climate.
Slide 1 Welcome Address Regulating Authorities E&P Service Industry E&P Operators.
Pakistan Nuclear Regulatory Authority
Nuclear Infrastructure Development Evaluation: Perspectives from the United States Dr. Marc A. Humphrey Office of Nuclear Energy, Safety and Security U.S.
Session V: Programme Roles and Responsibilities
Build /16/2017 © 2015 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. MICROSOFT MAKES NO WARRANTIES, EXPRESS, IMPLIED OR STATUTORY, AS TO THE INFORMATION.
INSAG DEVELOPMENT OF A DOCUMENT ON HIGH LEVEL SAFETY RECOMMENDATIONS FOR NUCLEAR POWER Milestone Issues: Group C. Nuclear Safety. A. Alonso (INSAG Member)
Oslo, 4 March 2005Managing Nuclear Material Stockpiles in the 21 st Century 1 Nuclear Material Security and Multilateral Agreements Stephan Klement Office.
Climate Change - International Efforts. Direct Observation of Climate Change Source: IPCC 4AR.
BEIJING BRUSSELS CHICAGO DALLAS FRANKFURT GENEVA HONG KONG LONDON LOS ANGELES NEW YORK SAN FRANCISCO SHANGHAI SINGAPORE TOKYO WASHINGTON, D.C. The Role.
The Impact of DNA Technologies On the Future of Criminal Offender DNA Databases Presented by Tim Schellberg Gordon Thomas Honeywell Governmental Affairs.
Vienna, 13 March 2015 IRENA Renewables: A Global Solution for Climate Change.
NUNAVUT TUNNGAVIK INCORPORATED Lands Policy Advisory Committee Draft Uranium Policy.
© Lloyd’s Regional Watch Content Guide CLICK ANY BOX AMERICAS IMEA EUROPE ASIA PACIFIC.
Ministry for Foreign Affairs Sweden Government Offices of Sweden Sweden and the Nuclear Security Summit Process Jan A. Lodding Deputy Director Disarmament.
Outcome of the 2012 Seoul Nuclear Security Summit and nuclear security culture April 24, 2012, CBN Security Culture Seminar JK Lee, Counselor, Permanent.
Nuclear Terrorism Threats Nuclear Security Global Nuclear Governance Nuclear Security Summit; background, significance, achievements 2012 Nuclear Security.
GTRI’s Nuclear Removal Programs Kelly Cummins Director of Former Soviet Union and Asian Threat Reduction National Nuclear Security Administration Presented.
IAEA International Atomic Energy Agency International Cooperation in Nuclear Security David Ek Office of Nuclear Security.
Foreign Obligations and Annual Inventories Jessica Norles Savannah River National Laboratory.
Japan’s Nuclear Energy Program
IAEA International Atomic Energy Agency Overview International Project on Innovative Nuclear Reactors and Fuel Cycles (INPRO) Presented by Jon R. Phillips.
Briefing to the ROK- United Nations Disarmament Conference
The Nuclear Renaissance Dr. Charles K. Ebinger Director, Energy Security Initiative Brookings.
The Nonproliferation Treaty. Atoms for Peace December 8, 1953 President Eisenhower spoke to the UN suggesting that peaceful uses of the atom be promoted.
ISBN What The Numbers Mean Exactly. The prefix element. The registration group identifier. The registrant and the publisher element. The publication element.
IAEA International Atomic Energy Agency Senior Regulators Meeting Technical Cooperation Programme Supporting Radiation Safety Infrastructure in Member.
Anita Nilsson Director, Office of Nuclear Security
IAEA International Atomic Energy Agency IAEA Nuclear Security Programme Enhancing cybersecurity in nuclear infrastructure TWG-NPPIC – IAEA May 09 – A.
1 THE NUCLEAR ENERGY POLICY FOR SOUTH AFRICA ELSIE MONALE ICRP WORKSHOP.
Windows Azure Inside a Datacenter  video 
IAEA International Atomic Energy Agency. IAEA Outline Earlier services integrated into IRRS IRRT missions IRRS missions IRRS and the European Nuclear.
Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry Experience and Future Activities for Introduction of Nuclear Power Masaomi KOYAMA Deputy Director Nuclear Energy.
International Atomic Energy Agency International Nuclear Security Axel Hagemann Office of Nuclear Security Department of Nuclear Safety and Security International.
1 NRC Assistance for Emerging Nuclear Power Programs Jack Ramsey, Senior Level Advisor Office of International Programs March 11, 2009.
Nuclear Power Infrastructure Development: How to Harmonize Efforts to Face to the Challenges Craig Welling Associate Deputy Assistant Secretary Office.
C O N T R A C T O R I N F O R M A T I O N E X C H A N G E LashCIE Presentation 1/98 1 Recent Accomplishments and Future Directions Dan Giessing U.S. Department.
IAEA International Atomic Energy Agency Milestones in the development of a national infrastructure for nuclear power The Nuclear Security dimension Technical.
The UN and the nuclear age were born almost simultaneously. The horror of the Second World War, culminating in the nuclear blasts at Hiroshima and Nagasaki,
23 January 2016 Gustavo C ARUSO Head, Regulatory Activities Section Division of Nuclear Installations Safety Department of Nuclear Safety and Security.
INDONESIA NATIONAL STRATEGY FOR NUCLEAR POWER PROGRAMME INFRASTRUCTURE AND STATUS OF IMPLEMENTATION Dr. A. Sarwiyana Sastratenaya Director, Center for.
2016 Global Manufacturing Competitiveness Index. 2Deloitte and US Council on Competitiveness I 2016 Global Manufacturing Competitiveness IndexCopyright.
DEVELOPMENT OF THE NATIONAL INFRASTRUCTURE FOR NUCLEAR POWER IN VIETNAM DEVELOPMENT OF THE NATIONAL INFRASTRUCTURE FOR NUCLEAR POWER IN VIETNAM Vuong Huu.
IAEA International Atomic Energy Agency TM/WS TOPICAL ISSUES ON INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT: MANAGING THE DEVELOPMENT OF NATIONAL INFRASTRUCTURE FOR NUCLEAR.
UNSC Resolution 1540 and Transport of Radioactive Materials: Challenges in Africa UNSC Resolution 1540 and Transport of Radioactive Materials: Challenges.
Office of Special Projects Issues arising from the Second Review Conference on Safety and Security at Chemical Plants and Relationships with CWC stakeholders.
Nuclear Safety & Security in the DPRK Sharon Squassoni Senior Fellow & Director Proliferation Prevention Program Asan Institute “The 2012 US-North Korea.
2012 Seoul 2012 Seoul Nuclear Security Summit Nuclear Security Summit 2012 Seoul 2012 Seoul Nuclear Security Summit Nuclear Security Summit October 24,
Global Aluminium Foil Market to Market Size, Growth, and Forecasts in Nearly 60 Countries Published on : Jul 2014.
Global Printing Ink Market to Market Size, Growth, and Forecasts in Over 70 Countries “This comprehensive publication enables readers the critical.
Global Aluminium Pipe and Tube Market to 2018 (Market Size, Growth, and Forecasts in Nearly 60 Countries) Published Date: Jul-2014 Reports and Intelligence.
IEC System of Conformity Assessment Schemes for Electrotechnical Equipment and Components.
THE GLOBAL NUCLEAR SAFETY AND SECURITY NETWORK-GNSSN Lingquan Guo Safety Knowledge Networks Safety And Security Coordination Section Department of Nuclear.
Batteries, chargers and charging stations
The United Nations Established in 1945, with to maintain international peace and security , to develop friendly relations among nations, to cooperate.
AAEA Role in Improving EPR Coordination Interventions among Arab Countries Abdelmajid Mahjoub Arab Atomic Energy Agency
Japan’s Nuclear Energy Program
Economic Exports.
Electrification Products
The OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises 经济合作与发展组织跨国企业准则
Locations where Black Panther was released in the theaters in 2018.
Sourcing. Costs. HARDWARE + SERVICE
Overview of RCF Activities
Arab Network for Nuclear Regulators ANNuR Abdelmajid Mahjoub Daw Mosbah Arab Atomic Energy Agency Tunis
IBM's Geographical Structure and where IBM Global Financing has clients IBM Global Financing, the world's largest IT captive financier, has a total asset.
BASIC IRRS TRAINING Information lecture 1.
A Framework for the Governance of Infrastructure - Getting Infrastructure Right - Jungmin Park, OECD Budgeting & Public Expenditures Division 2019 Annual.
SAFEGUARDS CAPACITY BUILDING ARGENTINE EXPERIENCE
Electrification business
Presentation transcript:

Tsutomu Arai Director, International Nuclear Energy Cooperation Division Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan

Contents 1. Introduction: Nuclear Renaissance 2. Global Nuclear Expansion: Risk and Risk Management  Nuclear Safety  Nuclear Security  Nuclear Non-Proliferation/Safeguards  Management of Radioactive Waste 3. Japan’s Nuclear Energy Diplomacy 4. Conclusion 2

1 Nuclear Renaissance Global competition for energy resources Climate change concerns World trend of introducing or expanding NPG  Countries planning to introduce NPG  Countries planning to expand NPG NPG, which lowers greenhouse gas (CO 2 ) emissions, could provide a basic source of power supply. 3

4 1.1 Countries and regions planning to introduce NPG Poland Georgia Albania Italy Libya Egypt Nigeria Ghana Tunisia Morocco Belarus Turkey Jordan Kazakhstan Israel Iran Yemen GCC Countries ( UAE, Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia) United Arab Emirates Bangladesh Chile Indonesia Malaysia Venezuela Philippine Thailand Vietnam Mongolia Singapore Algeria

5 1.2 Countries and regions planning to expand NPG United Kingdom Ukraine Switzerland Spain Sweden Sweden Czech Germany Netherlands Belgium France Slovenia Hungary Rumania Bulgaria Finland Slovakia Lithuania South Africa Russia Canada Japan South Korea China Argentina Brazil Pakistan India Taiwan Mexico Armenia United States Reference: World Nuclear Association web site URL 5

2. Global Nuclear Expansion: Risk and Risk Management  Nuclear safety  Nuclear safety prevention of accidents A large scale accident in one country could have negative impact on peaceful uses of nuclear energy in other countries.  Nuclear security counter-terrorism measures Should nuclear terrorism happen, the global trend of nuclear renaissance could be reversed.  Nuclear Non-Proliferation/Safeguards prevention of diversion of nuclear energy to nuclear weapons, etc. Compatibility of nuclear power utilization with non-proliferation requirements Global efforts are required for ensuring nuclear non-proliferation/safeguards, safety and security 6

2.1 Nuclear Safety : Challenges  Continued operation of old-type reactors  Safety of nuclear reactors has been improved since large accidents. (ex.) Three Mile Island accident (1979), Chernobyl accident (1986)  Human resources development  Countries introducing NPG should develop their human resources in the field of regulation as well as operation.  Countries expanding NPG should develop additional human resources and maintain nuclear safety culture. 7

2.1 Nuclear Safety : International Efforts  International conventions (ex.) Nuclear Safety Convention, RadWaste Safety Convention  IAEA activities Development of Nuclear Safety Standards Conduct of peer reviews ANSN (Asian Nuclear Safety Network)  Bilateral cooperation (ex.) Japan conducts bilateral cooperation between regulatory authorities of ROK, China, US, etc.  Non-governmental cooperation WANO (World Association of Nuclear Operators) 8

2.2 Nuclear Security: Challenges  Threat of nuclear terrorism  Nuclear power plants Theft of nuclear material for malicious acts, sabotage of facilities, etc.  Radioactive sources utilization theft of radioactive sources for malicious acts (ex. “dirty bomb”) International community has taken various measures to address threats of nuclear terrorism. 9

2.2 Nuclear Security  Security issues  Security of nuclear material Importance of physical protection of nuclear material both at facilities and during transport IAEA illicit trafficking data base (ITDB) 15 incidents ---unauthorized possession and related criminal activities involving HEU and plutonium (during ) 10

2.2 Security of Radioactive Sources  Need to secure radioactive sources (Co60, Cs137, etc.)  Radioactive sources are applied in various fields (medicine, industry, agriculture, etc.)  Relatively easy access to radioactive sources (ex. hospitals)  International documents  IAEA Code of Conduct on Safety and Security of Radioactive Sources (2003)  IAEA Guidance on the Import and Export of Radioactive Sources (2004)  IAEA Recommendation on Security of Radioactive Sources and Related Facilities (to be published)  The Communiqué of Nuclear Security Summit (2010) also refers to the security of radioactive substances 11

2.2 Nuclear Security: International Efforts  International Conventions  Nuclear Terrorism Convention  Convention on Physical Protection of Nuclear Material and its Amendment  IAEA guidelines and documents  INFCIRC/225 (Rev.5 will be published by the end of this year), other Nuclear Security Series documents  International efforts to improve capabilities IAEA supports (through its Nuclear Security Fund), GICNT(Global Initiative to Combat Nuclear Terrorism),G8 Global Partnership, GTRI (Global Threat Reduction Initiative), etc. 12

2.2 Nuclear Security Summit  Background: Need to strengthen nuclear security worldwide Collect political will to address nuclear security at the highest level  Participants: 47 countries and 3 international organizations (UN, IAEA and EU)  Outcomes: Share of the goal to secure all vulnerable nuclear material in four years, adoption of the Communiqué and Work Plan  Next Summit: 2012, In Seoul 13

2.2 Nuclear Security Summit: Outcomes  Full implementation of all existing efforts (implementation of relative conventions, GICNT, G8GP)  Support of the Nuclear Terrorism Convention, Convention on Physical Protection of Nuclear Material and its Amendment  Minimization of use of HEU where technically and economically feasible  Emphasis on the important role of the IAEA  Cooperation for prevention of illicit trafficking of nuclear material  Importance of the role of industry, promotion of nuclear security culture WINS(World Institute for Nuclear Security)  Security of radioactive substances Japan will start the radioactive source registration system from January

Communiqué of the Washington Nuclear Security Summit Nuclear terrorism is one of the most challenging threats to international security, and strong nuclear security measures are the most effective means to prevent terrorists, criminals, or other unauthorized actors from acquiring nuclear materials. In addition to our shared goals of nuclear disarmament, nuclear nonproliferation and peaceful uses of nuclear energy, we also all share the objective of nuclear security. Therefore those gathered here in Washington, D.C. on April 13, 2010, commit to strengthen nuclear security and reduce the threat of nuclear terrorism. Success will require responsible national actions and sustained and effective international cooperation. We welcome and join President Obama’s call to secure all vulnerable nuclear material in four years, as we work together to enhance nuclear security. Therefore, we: 15

Communiqué of the Washington Nuclear Security Summit 1. Reaffirm the fundamental responsibility of States, consistent with their respective international obligations, to maintain effective security of all nuclear materials, which includes nuclear materials used in nuclear weapons, and nuclear facilities under their control; to prevent non-state actors from obtaining the information or technology required to use such material for malicious purposes; and emphasize the importance of robust national legislative and regulatory frameworks for nuclear security; 2. Call on States to work cooperatively as an international community to advance nuclear security, requesting and providing assistance as necessary; 3. Recognize that highly enriched uranium and separated plutonium require special precautions and agree to promote measures to secure, account for, and consolidate these materials, as appropriate; and encourage the conversion of reactors from highly enriched to low enriched uranium fuel and minimization of use of highly enriched uranium, where technically and economically feasible; 16

Communiqué of the Washington Nuclear Security Summit 4. Endeavor to fully implement all existing nuclear security commitments and work toward acceding to those not yet joined, consistent with national laws, policies and procedures; 5. Support the objectives of international nuclear security instruments, including the Convention on the Physical Protection of Nuclear Material, as amended, and the International Convention for the Suppression of Acts of Nuclear Terrorism, as essential elements of the global nuclear security architecture; 6. Reaffirm the essential role of the International Atomic Energy Agency in the international nuclear security framework and will work to ensure that it continues to have the appropriate structure, resources and expertise needed to carry out its mandated nuclear security activities in accordance with its Statute, relevant General Conference resolutions and its Nuclear Security Plans; 7. Recognize the role and contributions of the United Nations as well as the contributions of the Global Initiative to Combat Nuclear Terrorism and the G-8- led Global Partnership Against the Spread of Weapons and Materials of Mass Destruction within their respective mandates and memberships; 17

Communiqué of the Washington Nuclear Security Summit 8. Acknowledge the need for capacity building for nuclear security and cooperation at bilateral, regional and multilateral levels for the promotion of nuclear security culture through technology development, human resource development, education, and training; and stress the importance of optimizing international cooperation and coordination of assistance; 9. Recognize the need for cooperation among States to effectively prevent and respond to incidents of illicit nuclear trafficking; and agree to share, subject to respective national laws and procedures, information and expertise through bilateral and multilateral mechanisms in relevant areas such as nuclear detection, forensics, law enforcement, and the development of new technologies; 10. Recognize the continuing role of nuclear industry, including the private sector, in nuclear security and will work with industry to ensure the necessary priority of physical protection, material accountancy, and security culture; 11. Support the implementation of strong nuclear security practices that will not infringe upon the rights of States to develop and utilize nuclear energy for peaceful purposes and technology and will facilitate international cooperation in the field of nuclear security; and 18

Communiqué of the Washington Nuclear Security Summit 12. Recognize that measures contributing to nuclear material security have value in relation to the security of radioactive substances and encourage efforts to secure those materials as well. Maintaining effective nuclear security will require continuous national efforts facilitated by international cooperation and undertaken on a voluntary basis by States. We will promote the strengthening of global nuclear security through dialogue and cooperation with all states. Thus, we issue the Work Plan as guidance for national and international action including through cooperation within the context of relevant international fora and organizations. We will hold the next Nuclear Security Summit in the Republic of Korea in April 13,

2.3 Nuclear Nonproliferation  Light water reactors (using LEU) will be mainly deployed in countries introducing NPG  Nonproliferation issues  Prevention of spread of sensitive technologies/equipment (ex) enrichment and reprocessing technology  Strengthening of the IAEA safeguards Increase of facilities to be covered by the IAEA safeguards Need to address budget increase and to enhance effectiveness of safeguard activities Contribution of the NSG (Nuclear Suppliers Group) through the improvement and strengthening of international export controls of nuclear-related materials, equipment and technologies. 20

2.4 Management of Radioactive Waste  Global nuclear expansion Increase of spent fuel and radioactive waste worldwide  Radioactive waste disposal  Technical issue (ensuring safety and security)  Financial issue (cost to process and dispose)  Public acceptance (ex.) Interim storage of HLW at Rokkasho, Aomori Pref. in Japan Public acceptance is a common problem for all countries utilizing NPG. 21

3.1 Japan’s Domestic Nuclear Energy Activities: General  Starting the operation of the first nuclear power plant in 1966, and adding the capacity continuously.  10 electric power companies are now operating 54 LWRs (30 BWRs and 24 PWRs) that supply about 30% of electricity.  2 units are under construction and 12 units are in preparation. 22

3.2 Japan’s Domestic Nuclear Energy Activities: Ensuring 3S  Non-Proliferation/Safeguards  Conclusion of Comprehensive Safeguards Agreement and its Additional Protocol  The Integrated Safeguards have been applied since  Nuclear Safety  Concluding all international conventions related to nuclear safety  Sharing experience and lessons learned from the earthquake in Niigata Pref. in 2007  Nuclear Security  Conclusion of Nuclear Terrorism Convention and Convention on Physical Protection of Nuclear Material  Implementation of INFCIRC/225/Rev.4  Implementation of CoC, Import-Export Guidance 23

3.3 Japan’s Nuclear Energy Diplomacy: Bilateral Agreements  Ensuring 3S (nuclear Non-Proliferation/Safeguards, Safety and Security) including conclusion of Additional Protocol  Other factors Prospect for concrete plan to introduce NPG, general bilateral relations (including economic relations) Additional Protocol  Strengthening the safeguards system, in particular the Agency’s ability to detect undeclared nuclear material and activities in States with Comprehensive Safeguards Agreements.  Verifying not only the correctness of States’ declarations of nuclear material, but also their completeness (i.e. the absence of undeclared nuclear material and activities). 24

3.3 Japan’s Nuclear Energy Diplomacy: Basic Elements of Bilateral Agreements  Peaceful use  Non-Proliferation/Safeguards  Nuclear safety  Physical protection / nuclear security  Control on transfer to third countries +α 25

3.3 Japan’s Nuclear Energy Diplomacy: Status of Japan’s Bilateral Agreements  Concluded: 6 countries and 1 international organization Australia, Canada, China, France, UK, US, Euratom  Signed: 3 countries Russia, Kazakhstan, Jordan  Agreed on substance: 3 countries UAE, Vietnam, South Korea  In negotiation: 2 countries South Africa, India 26

Conclusion  Taking measures for ensuring non-proliferation/ safeguards, safety and security by each country using nuclear energy for peaceful purposes  International efforts are required to address common challenges, including international cooperation in capacity building for countries introducing NPG  Development of proliferation-resistance technology as a long-term goal 27

Thank you!