EU Regulators Commit to Stronger Nuclear Safety Measures
June 11, 2008 // Published as a news service by IHS
| |
| Tools for Engineers |
| IHS sells standards collections and regulatory information for the oil & gas, petrochemical and utilities industries. For more information and a price quote, please complete the form below. |
|
Nuclear safety
regulators from all 27 member states of the European Union (EU) recently reached
agreement on steps to further strengthen nuclear safety,
radioactive waste management
and
nuclear facility decommissioning
arrangements in the EU.
These areas are under the jurisdiction of individual countries, and member states are seeking better ways to learn from
each other.
At the meeting of the European High Level Group on Nuclear Safety
and Waste Management on May 30, all delegates committed to the following improvements:
- All member states are already signatories of the Nuclear Safety Convention and
nearly all have signed the Joint Convention on the Safety of Spent Fuel Management and
the Safety of Radioactive Waste Management, which set basic rules for
arrangements in these areas.
Participating member state regulators
committed themselves to openly exchange all information emerging from the
review processes under these conventions. In addition, common lessons learned will
be sought to enhance nuclear safety or radioactive waste management arrangements
in all members states.
- Member state regulators will invite International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) peer review teams to
thoroughly review arrangements in their regulatory bodies and seek to identify and learn from areas of international best practices.
IAEA peer reviews are well-established processes that are initiated voluntarily by the reviewed country.
With the May 30 agreement, member state regulators made such an invitation mandatory, while recognizing that completing such a program across all
member states may take some years, given the resources available to the IAEA and
the worldwide need.
Hence, it was also agreed that, in the meantime, all member states
would undertake a self-assessment against the IAEA standards, inviting
suitable experts from other member states, as appropriate.
- Member state regulators agreed to work together to improve radioactive
waste and spent fuel management practices in the EU, strengthen co-operation
and monitor enhancements to decommissioning and the safe
management of spent fuel and radioactive waste.
Future
discussions in the High Level Group should be held on the establishment and
implementation of a radioactive waste management plan in all member
states.
- Member state regulators agreed to improve the transparency of their work and make it more
open to the general public. This includes the creation of a web site on the EU level to simplify access to relevant data about nuclear
safety in all member states.
Nuclear regulators also
discussed the implications of any potential EU common rules in their area.
International conventions and safety standards put the responsibility for
nuclear safety on individual countries, including the establishment of an
appropriate regulatory system. Such regulatory systems already exist in every
member state with nuclear facilities.
It was recognized by EU officials that citizens should be
guaranteed that the best nuclear safety standards and responsible management
of radioactive waste are implemented everywhere in Europe. The High Level Group
has initiated a detailed study to determine the pros and cons of other potential common
arrangements to inform future nuclear safety decisions.
Source: European Commission.
Frost: N. American Biofuels Market Faces Challenges
Jun 26, 2008
Biofuels enjoy many inherent advantages such as regulatory, infrastructural, environmental, geopolitical and agricultural support, according to Frost & Sullivan.
DOE Seeks to Invest up to $90M in Advanced Geothermal Energy Technology, Research
Jun 26, 2008
The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) issued a funding opportunity announcement (FOA) for up to $90 million over four years to advance the R&D and demonstration of next-generation geothermal energy technology which will harness the earth's interior heat extracted from hot water or rocks.
EPSA: FERC Briefing Confirms Importance of Both Existing, New Generation to Reliability
Jun 26, 2008
The following statement was released by Electric Power Supply Association (EPSA) President and CEO John E. Shelk after a briefing from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) on the rapidly rising costs associated with existing and new power generation infrastructure:
Trilliant Uses Freescale Tech Based on IEEE 802.15.4 Protocol to Deploy Wireless Smart Grid in N. America
Jun 24, 2008
Trilliant Inc. delivered a two-way fixed wireless smart grid deployment in North America based on the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc. (IEEE) 802.15.4 compliant media access control/physical layer (MAC/PHY) from Freescale Semiconductor.
FAQ on EU Response to High Oil Prices
Jun 23, 2008
This document contains responses from the European Union (EU) to frequently asked questions about rising oil prices.
Farm Bill Addresses Commercialization of Advanced Biofuels
Jun 23, 2008
The U.S. Congress passed a farm bill that is designed to accelerate the commercialization of advanced biofuels, including cellulosic ethanol, encourage the production of biomass crops and expand the U.S. Department of Agriculture Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency Program.
EPSA Releases Paper on Rising Costs of New Power Plants
Jun 23, 2008
In advance of a briefing on rising power plant costs expected at the June 19 meeting of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC), the Electric Power Supply Association (EPSA) released an issue summary, The Rising Cost of New Power Generation Projects Argues for Greater Reliance on Competitive Markets and Procurement.
More...