The world’s top experts in nuclear law are meeting at IAEA headquarters this week to examine the current nuclear law framework in the changing landscape of technology, opportunities and challenges – and chart a vision for the future.
More than 900 lawyers, representatives of national authorities, international organizations, nuclear industry and civil society from 127 countries are participating at the IAEA’s First International Conference on Nuclear Law: The Global Debate (ICNL) to discuss emerging issues and trends in nuclear law and the applicable legal frameworks.
Rafael Mariano Grossi, Director General of the IAEA, remarked in his opening speech that nuclear law is ”not only about behaviour and abiding by very important concepts and principles of law; but also driven by technological development.” He added that “nuclear energy a force for the greater good and at the same time poses … challenges that must be solved.” Setting the scene for the conference, Grossi posed that the global debate is about whether “the conventions we have, the treaties we have, and the standards we have continue or need to be adjusted.”
Nuclear law permeates the entire nuclear sector: in the form of international treaties on the safety and security of nuclear power plants, agreements enabling the verification of nations’ nuclear non-proliferation commitments, provisions enabling emergency preparedness and response and those addressing questions of compensation and civil liability for nuclear damage – nuclear law underpins all the peaceful uses of nuclear science and technology.