IAEA breaks ground on training center to fight nuclear terrorism, with Saudi funding
The Director General of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), Rafael Mariano Grossi, on Monday broke ground for a new facility that will help strengthen countries’ abilities to tackle nuclear terrorism in areas such as the illegal trafficking of nuclear material and the physical protection of facilities and major public events.
The IAEA Nuclear Security Training and Demonstration Centre will be located at the IAEA facility in Seibersdorf, 30 km south of Vienna, Austria, and is scheduled to be operational in 2023.
The construction of the Centre was marked with a groundbreaking ceremony on Monday attended by Director General Grossi and Member State representatives including Saudi Arabia’s governor to the agency Prince Abdullah Bin Khalid Bin Sultan.
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“This Centre will help us in supporting countries to remain ahead of the curve in guarding against nuclear terrorism,” Grossi said. “It will reinforce the central role the Agency plays in this area of international importance.”
The Centre, and the multi-purpose building that will house it, has so far drawn over €11.3 million in extra-budgetary funding, indicating strong support from IAEA Member States to the Agency’s work in nuclear security.
Saudi Arabia pledged €8.3 million, the United Kingdom pledged €2 million and the United States of America pledged €1 million.
Prince Abdullah Bin Khalid Bin Sultan, who is also Saudi Arabia’s ambassador to Austria and the Kingdom’s permanent representative to the UN and international organizations in Vienna, tweeted: “@iaeaorg Nuclear Security Center has been inaugurated! The Kingdom is proud to have contributed to creating this vital organization that will reduce trafficking and enhances the physical protection of nuclear materials. Many thanks to DG @rafaelmgrossi for his tireless efforts.”
“Thanks to the great generosity of our donor countries this new facility will expand the topic areas covered by the IAEA’s Seibersdorf complex,” Grossi added.
The Agency has been offering training in nuclear security since the early 1970s. Requests for such training, however, have increased in recent years due, in particular, to the 2016 entry into force of the Amendment of the Convention on the Physical Protection of Nuclear Material (CPPNM) – the most significant international legal instrument in the fight against nuclear terrorism.
In addition, the need to support Member States in the protection of nuclear material has become greater as more countries embark on nuclear power programs or start construction of research reactors.
The Centre will provide more than 2000 square meters of specialized technical infrastructure and equipment. Hands-on training will be conducted on demonstration systems and virtual reality environments. These platforms will emulate security systems used at nuclear power plants, research reactors and border crossings. Participants will practice procedures on access and alarm controls, inspect physical protection systems, better understand computer security risks, and learn how to sweep an area for radioactive material during major public events, among other activities. Exercises at the training center will also strengthen capabilities in radiological crime scene management and nuclear forensics.
The IAEA Seibersdorf facility houses eight nuclear applications laboratories working in food and agriculture, human health, environmental monitoring and assessment, as well as two safeguards analytical laboratories for nuclear verification.
The IAEA opened the facility at Seibersdorf in 1962 with fewer than 40 staff members and has since significantly expanded it as demands for its diverse services increased. Roughly 250 staff currently work at the facility.
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