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CIVIL NUCLEAR
France calls for mandatory international nuclear checks
by Staff Writers
United Nations (AFP) Sept 22, 2011

France on Thursday called for an international rapid reaction force to handle nuclear crises and for mandatory international inspections of civilian nuclear programs.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy told a UN nuclear safety summit that "nuclear energy must go hand in hand with the highest level of safety and security."

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon called the summit in the wake of the 9.0 magnitude earthquake and tsunami in Japan on March 11 that left almost 20,000 dead or missing.

Ban said the Fukushima-Daiichi disaster in Japan and the Chernobyl catastrophe in Ukraine in 1985 had been "a wake-up call" to the world.

Sarkozy said it was an "anomaly" in international regulation that "it is easier for the international community to begin oversight on a military nuclear facility than on a civilian nuclear facility."

He said every country had the right to civilian nuclear energy but "these countries should first of all have an authority with independent oversight over nuclear energy."

Sarkozy added that an international rapid intervention force would be "a crucial element for nuclear safety and security" saying it would "not question national sovereignty."

The French leader, whose country relies on nuclear power for about 75 percent of its energy, said there should be compulsory international reviews of nuclear power programs.

"France would be ready to accept a mandatory review. Why? because nuclear energy must go hand in hand with the highest level of safety and security," he told the summit.

France has already made proposals at the International Atomic Energy Agency and other international forums, said its Minister for Ecology and Sustainable Development, Nathalie Kosciusko-Morizet.

The minister told AFP there was a global debate over whether international checks should be compulsory, but that France hoped to have firm proposals discussed at a nuclear safety conference in South Korea in June next year.

Japan's new Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda said his country was determined to raise its nuclear safety "to the highest level in the world."

He vowed to disclose all the information on the Fukushima disaster to the world and said a nuclear agency independent of the government would be set up next year.

Noda said Japan also wanted "the reinforcement of the international assistance mechanism in the case of nuclear accidents."

"Public confidence in the safety of nuclear power has been deeply shaken throughout the world," Yukiya Amano, director general of the IAEA, told the summit by video link.

"This is entirely understandable. Public anxiety must be taken very seriously. I believe confidence can be restored in time, but only if governments, regulators and plant operators -- and the IAEA -- work together effectively to strengthen nuclear safety everywhere," Amano declared.

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UN agency endorses post-Fukushima 'action plan'
Vienna (AFP) Sept 22, 2011 - The UN atomic agency's annual meeting endorsed on Thursday an "action plan" on nuclear safety drawn up in the wake of the Fukushima disaster in March.

The endorsement by the around 150-nation general council of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) in Vienna was a formality after being approved by the UN body's 35-member board of governors last week.

"Japan welcomes the endorsement by the general conference and board of governors decision to approve the action plan," said Takeshi Nakane, Japan's ambassador to the IAEA.

"This action plan will need to be implemented in a prompt and most effective manner through concrete measures and cooperation among member states, international organisations and other stakeholders."

The 12-point programme encourages fresh assessments of the world's 440 nuclear plants and emergency measures, as well as more voluntary "peer review" visits by foreign experts.

It has been widely criticised, however, with many of the original proposals, such as peer reviews being mandatory and 10 percent of the planet's plants being inspected in the next three years, being watered down.

The March 11 accident at Japan's Fukushima Daiichi plant after a massive earthquake and tsunami forced the evacuation of tens of thousands of people to escape leaking radiation. Engineers are still working to make the plant safe.

The scale of the worst atomic disaster since Chernobyl in 1986 sparked fresh worries worldwide about nuclear safety, with Germany opting to switch off all reactors by 2022 and Italian voters saying no to a return to atomic energy.

Most countries, however, notably in the developing world, have stuck to plans to expand their use of nuclear power, with the IAEA projecting between 90 and 350 new reactors will be built worldwide by 2030.





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CIVIL NUCLEAR
China to restart nuclear projects in 2012: report
Beijing (AFP) Sept 21, 2011
China will start approving new nuclear power projects next year after suspending them in the wake of the disaster at Japan's Fukushima atomic plant, state media said Wednesday. China ordered safety inspections of its nuclear plants and suspended approval of new projects after the March 11 earthquake and tsunami in northeast Japan sparked the world's worst atomic crisis since Chernobyl 25 yea ... read more


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