| PREAMBLE
The Contracting Parties
- Recognizing that the operation of nuclear reactors
generates spent fuel and radioactive waste and that other
applications of nuclear technologies also generate radioactive
waste;
- Recognizing that the same safety objectives apply both
to spent fuel and radioactive waste management;
- Reaffirming the importance to the international
community of ensuring that sound practices are planned and
implemented for the safety of spent fuel and radioactive waste
management;
- Recognizing the importance of informing the public on
issues regarding the safety of spent fuel and radioactive waste
management;
- Desiring to promote an effective nuclear safety culture
worldwide;
- Reaffirming that the ultimate responsibility for
ensuring the safety of spent fuel and radioactive waste management
rests with the State;
- Recognizing that the definition of a fuel cycle policy
rests with the State, some States considering spent fuel as a
valuable resource that may be reprocessed, others electing to
dispose of it;
- Recognizing that spent fuel and radioactive waste
excluded from the present Convention because they are within
military or defence programmes should be managed in accordance
with the objectives stated in this Convention;
- Affirming the importance of international co-operation
in enhancing the safety of spent fuel and radioactive waste
management through bilateral and multilateral mechanisms, and
through this incentive Convention;
- Mindful of the needs of developing countries, and in
particular the least developed countries, and of States with
economies in transition and of the need to facilitate existing
mechanisms to assist in the fulfillment of their rights and
obligations set out in this incentive Convention;
- Convinced that radioactive waste should, as far as is
compatible with the safety of the management of such material, be
disposed of in the State in which it was generated, whilst
recognizing that, in certain circumstances, safe and efficient
management of spent fuel and radioactive waste might be fostered
through agreements among Contracting Parties to use facilities in
one of them for the benefit of the other Parties, particularly
where waste originates from joint projects;
- Recognizing that any State has the right to ban import
into its territory of foreign spent fuel and radioactive waste;
- Keeping in mind the Convention on Nuclear Safety
(1994), the Convention on Early Notification of a Nuclear Accident
(1986), the Convention on Assistance in the Case of a Nuclear
Accident or Radiological Emergency (1986), the Convention on the
Physical Protection of Nuclear Material (1980), the Convention on
the Prevention of Marine Pollution by Dumping of Wastes and Other
Matter as amended (1994) and other relevant international
instruments;
- Keeping in mind the principles contained in the
interagency "International Basic Safety Standards for Protection
against Ionizing Radiation and for the Safety of Radiation
Sources" (1996), in the IAEA Safety Fundamentals entitled "The
Principles of Radioactive Waste Management" (1995), and in the
existing international standards relating to the safety of the
transport of radioactive materials;
- Recalling Chapter 22 of Agenda 21 by the United Nations
Conference on Environment and Development in Rio de Janeiro
adopted in 1992, which reaffirms the paramount importance of the
safe and environmentally sound management of radioactive waste;
- Recognizing the desirability of strengthening the
international control system applying specifically to radioactive
materials as referred to in Article 1(3) of the Basel Convention
on the Control of Transboundary Movements of Hazardous Wastes and
Their Disposal (1989);
Have agreed as follows:
CHAPTER 1. OBJECTIVES, DEFINITIONS AND SCOPE OF
APPLICATION
Article 1. OBJECTIVES
The objectives of this Convention are:
- to achieve and maintain a high level of safety
worldwide in spent fuel and radioactive waste management, through
the enhancement of national measures and international
co-operation, including where appropriate, safety-related
technical co-operation;
- to ensure that during all stages of spent fuel and
radioactive waste management there are effective defenses against
potential hazards so that individuals, society and the environment
are protected from harmful effects of ionizing radiation, now and
in the future, in such a way that the needs and aspirations of the
present generation are met without compromising the ability of
future generations to meet their needs and aspirations;
- to prevent accidents with radiological consequences and
to mitigate their consequences should they occur during any stage
of spent fuel or radioactive waste management.
Article 2. DEFINITIONS
For the purposes of this Convention:
- "closure" means the completion of all operations
at some time after the emplacement of spent fuel or radioactive
waste in a disposal facility. This includes the final engineering
or other work required to bring the facility to a condition that
will be safe in the long term;
- "decommissioning" means all steps leading to the
release of a nuclear facility, other than a disposal facility,
from regulatory control. These steps include the processes of
decontamination and dismantling;
- "discharges" means planned and controlled
releases into the environment, as a legitimate practice, within
limits authorized by the regulatory body, of liquid or gaseous
radioactive materials that originate from regulated nuclear
facilities during normal operation;
- "disposal" means the emplacement of spent fuel
or radioactive waste in an appropriate facility without the
intention of retrieval;
- "licence" means any authorization, permission or
certification granted by a regulatory body to carry out any
activity related to management of spent fuel or of radioactive
waste;
- "nuclear facility" means a civilian facility and
its associated land, buildings and equipment in which radioactive
materials are produced, processed, used, handled, stored or
disposed of on such a scale that consideration of safety is
required;
- "operating lifetime" means the period during
which a spent fuel or a radioactive waste management facility is
used for its intended purpose. In the case of a disposal facility,
the period begins when spent fuel or radioactive waste is first
emplaced in the facility and ends upon closure of the facility;
- "radioactive waste" means radioactive material
in gaseous, liquid or solid form for which no further use is
foreseen by the Contracting Party or by a natural or legal person
whose decision is accepted by the Contracting Party, and which is
controlled as radioactive waste by a regulatory body under the
legislative and regulatory framework of the Contracting Party;
- "radioactive waste management" means all
activities, including decommissioning activities, that relate to
the handling, pretreatment, treatment, conditioning, storage, or
disposal of radioactive waste, excluding off-site transportation.
It may also involve discharges;
- "radioactive waste management facility" means
any facility or installation the primary purpose of which is
radioactive waste management, including a nuclear facility in the
process of being decommissioned only if it is designated by the
Contracting Party as a radioactive waste management facility;
- "regulatory body" means any body or bodies given
the legal authority by the Contracting Party to regulate any
aspect of the safety of spent fuel or radioactive waste management
including the granting of licences;
- "reprocessing" means a process or operation, the
purpose of which is to extract radioactive isotopes from spent
fuel for further use;
- "sealed source" means radioactive material that
is permanently sealed in a capsule or closely bonded and in a
solid form, excluding reactor fuel elements;
- "spent fuel" means nuclear fuel that has been
irradiated in and permanently removed from a reactor core;
- "spent fuel management" means all activities
that relate to the handling or storage of spent fuel, excluding
off-site transportation. It may also involve discharges;
- "spent fuel management facility" means any
facility or installation the primary purpose of which is spent
fuel management;
- "State of destination" means a State to which a
transboundary movement is planned or takes place;
- "State of origin" means a State from which a
transboundary movement is planned to be initiated or is initiated;
- "State of transit" means any State, other than a
State of origin or a State of destination, through whose territory
a transboundary movement is planned or takes place;
- "storage" means the holding of spent fuel or of
radioactive waste in a facility that provides for its containment,
with the intention of retrieval;
- "transboundary movement" means any shipment of
spent fuel or of radioactive waste from a State of origin to a
State of destination.
Article 3. SCOPE OF APPLICATION
- This Convention shall apply to the safety of spent fuel
management when the spent fuel results from the operation of
civilian nuclear reactors. Spent fuel held at reprocessing
facilities as part of a reprocessing activity is not covered in
the scope of this Convention unless the Contracting Party declares
reprocessing to be part of spent fuel management.
- This Convention shall also apply to the safety of radioactive
waste management when the radioactive waste results from civilian
applications. However, this Convention shall not apply to waste
that contains only naturally occurring radioactive materials and
that does not originate from the nuclear fuel cycle, unless it
constitutes a disused sealed source or it is declared as
radioactive waste for the purposes of this Convention by the
Contracting Party.
- This Convention shall not apply to the safety of management of
spent fuel or radioactive waste within military or defence
programmes, unless declared as spent fuel or radioactive waste for
the purposes of this Convention by the Contracting Party. However,
this Convention shall apply to the safety of management of spent
fuel and radioactive waste from military or defence programmes if
and when such materials are transferred permanently to and managed
within exclusively civilian programmes.
- This Convention shall also apply to discharges as provided for
in Articles 4, 7, 11, 14, 24 and 26.
CHAPTER 2 SAFETY OF SPENT FUEL MANAGEMENT
Article 4. GENERAL SAFETY REQUIREMENTS
Each Contracting Party shall take the appropriate steps to ensure
that at all stages of spent fuel management, individuals, society
and the environment are adequately protected against radiological
hazards.
In so doing, each Contracting Party shall take the appropriate
steps to:
- ensure that criticality and removal of residual heat
generated during spent fuel management are adequately addressed;
- ensure that the generation of radioactive waste
associated with spent fuel management is kept to the minimum
practicable, consistent with the type of fuel cycle policy
adopted;
- take into account interdependencies among the different
steps in spent fuel management;
- provide for effective protection of individuals,
society and the environment, by applying at the national level
suitable protective methods as approved by the regulatory body, in
the framework of its national legislation which has due regard to
internationally endorsed criteria and standards;
- take into account the biological, chemical and other
hazards that may be associated with spent fuel management;
- strive to avoid actions that impose reasonably
predictable impacts on future generations greater than those
permitted for the current generation;
- aim to avoid imposing undue burdens on future
generations.
Article 5. EXISTING FACILITIES
Each Contracting Party shall take the appropriate steps to review
the safety of any spent fuel management facility existing at the
time the Convention enters into force for that Contracting Party and
to ensure that, if necessary, all reasonably practicable
improvements are made to upgrade the safety of such a facility.
Article 6. SITING OF PROPOSED FACILITIES
- Each Contracting Party shall take the appropriate steps to
ensure that procedures are established and implemented for a
proposed spent fuel management facility:
- to evaluate all relevant site-related factors likely
to affect the safety of such a facility during its operating
lifetime;
- to evaluate the likely safety impact of such a
facility on individuals, society and the environment;
- to make information on the safety of such a facility
available to members of the public;
- to consult Contracting Parties in the vicinity of
such a facility, insofar as they are likely to be affected by
that facility, and provide them, upon their request, with
general data relating to the facility to enable them to evaluate
the likely safety impact of the facility upon their territory.
- In so doing, each Contracting Party shall take the appropriate
steps to ensure that such facilities shall not have unacceptable
effects on other Contracting Parties by being sited in accordance
with the general safety requirements of Article 4.
Article 7. DESIGN AND CONSTRUCTION OF FACILITIES
Each Contracting Party shall take the appropriate steps to ensure
that:
- the design and construction of a spent fuel management
facility provide for suitable measures to limit possible
radiological impacts on individuals, society and the environment,
including those from discharges or uncontrolled releases;
- at the design stage, conceptual plans and, as
necessary, technical provisions for the decommissioning of a spent
fuel management facility are taken into account;
- the technologies incorporated in the design and
construction of a spent fuel management facility are supported by
experience, testing or analysis.
Article 8. ASSESSMENT OF SAFETY OF FACILITIES
Each Contracting Party shall take the appropriate steps to ensure
that:
- before construction of a spent fuel management
facility, a systematic safety assessment and an environmental
assessment appropriate to the hazard presented by the facility and
covering its operating lifetime shall be carried out;
- before the operation of a spent fuel management
facility, updated and detailed versions of the safety assessment
and of the environmental assessment shall be prepared when deemed
necessary to complement the assessments referred to in paragraph
(i).
Article 9. OPERATION OF FACILITIES
Each Contracting Party shall take the appropriate steps to ensure
that:
- the licence to operate a spent fuel management facility
is based upon appropriate assessments as specified in Article 8
and is conditional on the completion of a commissioning programme
demonstrating that the facility, as constructed, is consistent
with design and safety requirements;
- operational limits and conditions derived from tests,
operational experience and the assessments, as specified in
Article 8, are defined and revised as necessary;
- operation, maintenance, monitoring, inspection and
testing of a spent fuel management facility are conducted in
accordance with established procedures;
- engineering and technical support in all safety-related
fields are available throughout the operating lifetime of a spent
fuel management facility;
- incidents significant to safety are reported in a
timely manner by the holder of the licence to the regulatory body;
- programmes to collect and analyse relevant operating
experience are established and that the results are acted upon,
where appropriate;
- decommissioning plans for a spent fuel management
facility are prepared and updated, as necessary, using information
obtained during the operating lifetime of that facility, and are
reviewed by the regulatory body.
Article 10. DISPOSAL OF SPENT FUEL
If, pursuant to its own legislative and regulatory framework, a
Contracting Party has designated spent fuel for disposal, the
disposal of such spent fuel shall be in accordance with the
obligations of Chapter 3 relating to the disposal of radioactive
waste.
CHAPTER 3 SAFETY OF RADIOACTIVE WASTE MANAGEMENT
Article 11. GENERAL SAFETY REQUIREMENTS
Each Contracting Party shall take the appropriate steps to ensure
that at all stages of radioactive waste management individuals,
society and the environment are adequately protected against
radiological and other hazards.
In so doing, each Contracting Party shall take the appropriate
steps to:
- ensure that criticality and removal of residual heat
generated during radioactive waste management are adequately
addressed;
- ensure that the generation of radioactive waste is kept
to the minimum practicable;
- take into account interdependencies among the different
steps in radioactive waste management;
- provide for effective protection of individuals,
society and the environment, by applying at the national level
suitable protective methods as approved by the regulatory body, in
the framework of its national legislation which has due regard to
internationally endorsed criteria and standards;
- take into account the biological, chemical and other
hazards that may be associated with radioactive waste management;
- strive to avoid actions that impose reasonably
predictable impacts on future generations greater than those
permitted for the current generation;
- aim to avoid imposing undue burdens on future
generations.
Article 12. EXISTING FACILITIES AND PAST PRACTICES
Each Contracting Party shall in due course take the appropriate
steps to review:
- the safety of any radioactive waste management facility
existing at the time the Convention enters into force for that
Contracting Party and to ensure that, if necessary, all reasonably
practicable improvements are made to upgrade the safety of such a
facility;
- the results of past practices in order to determine
whether any intervention is needed for reasons of radiation
protection bearing in mind that the reduction in detriment
resulting from the reduction in dose should be sufficient to
justify the harm and the costs, including the social costs, of the
intervention.
Article 13. SITING OF PROPOSED FACILITIES
- Each Contracting Party shall take the appropriate steps to
ensure that procedures are established and implemented for a
proposed radioactive waste management facility:
- to evaluate all relevant site-related factors likely
to affect the safety of such a facility during its operating
lifetime as well as that of a disposal facility after closure;
- to evaluate the likely safety impact of such a
facility on individuals, society and the environment, taking
into account possible evolution of the site conditions of
disposal facilities after closure;
- to make information on the safety of such a facility
available to members of the public;
- to consult Contracting Parties in the vicinity of
such a facility, insofar as they are likely to be affected by
that facility, and provide them, upon their request, with
general data relating to the facility to enable them to evaluate
the likely safety impact of the facility upon their territory.
- In so doing, each Contracting Party shall take the appropriate
steps to ensure that such facilities shall not have unacceptable
effects on other Contracting Parties by being sited in accordance
with the general safety requirements of Article 11.
Article 14. DESIGN AND CONSTRUCTION OF FACILITIES
Each Contracting Party shall take the appropriate steps to ensure
that:
- the design and construction of a radioactive waste
management facility provide for suitable measures to limit
possible radiological impacts on individuals, society and the
environment, including those from discharges or uncontrolled
releases;
- at the design stage, conceptual plans and, as
necessary, technical provisions for the decommissioning of a
radioactive waste management facility other than a disposal
facility are taken into account;
- at the design stage, technical provisions for the
closure of a disposal facility are prepared;
- the technologies incorporated in the design and
construction of a radioactive waste management facility are
supported by experience, testing or analysis.
Article 15. ASSESSMENT OF SAFETY OF FACILITIES
Each Contracting Party shall take the appropriate steps to ensure
that:
- before construction of a radioactive waste management
facility, a systematic safety assessment and an environmental
assessment appropriate to the hazard presented by the facility and
covering its operating lifetime shall be carried out;
- in addition, before construction of a disposal
facility, a systematic safety assessment and an environmental
assessment for the period following closure shall be carried out
and the results evaluated against the criteria established by the
regulatory body;
- before the operation of a radioactive waste management
facility, updated and detailed versions of the safety assessment
and of the environmental assessment shall be prepared when deemed
necessary to complement the assessments referred to in paragraph
(i).
Article 16. OPERATION OF FACILITIES
Each Contracting Party shall take the appropriate steps to ensure
that:
- the licence to operate a radioactive waste management
facility is based upon appropriate assessments as specified in
Article 15 and is conditional on the completion of a commissioning
programme demonstrating that the facility, as constructed, is
consistent with design and safety requirements;
- operational limits and conditions, derived from tests,
operational experience and the assessments as specified in Article
15 are defined and revised as necessary;
- operation, maintenance, monitoring, inspection and
testing of a radioactive waste management facility are conducted
in accordance with established procedures. For a disposal facility
the results thus obtained shall be used to verify and to review
the validity of assumptions made and to update the assessments as
specified in Article 15 for the period after closure;
- engineering and technical support in all safety-related
fields are available throughout the operating lifetime of a
radioactive waste management facility;
- procedures for characterization and segregation of
radioactive waste are applied;
- incidents significant to safety are reported in a
timely manner by the holder of the licence to the regulatory body;
- programmes to collect and analyse relevant operating
experience are established and that the results are acted upon,
where appropriate;
- decommissioning plans for a radioactive waste
management facility other than a disposal facility are prepared
and updated, as necessary, using information obtained during the
operating lifetime of that facility, and are reviewed by the
regulatory body;
- plans for the closure of a disposal facility are
prepared and updated, as necessary, using information obtained
during the operating lifetime of that facility and are reviewed by
the regulatory body.
Article 17. INSTITUTIONAL MEASURES AFTER CLOSURE
Each Contracting Party shall take the appropriate steps to ensure
that after closure of a disposal facility:
- records of the location, design and inventory of that
facility required by the regulatory body are preserved;
- active or passive institutional controls such as
monitoring or access restrictions are carried out, if required;
and
- if, during any period of active institutional control,
an unplanned release of radioactive materials into the environment
is detected, intervention measures are implemented, if necessary.
CHAPTER 4. GENERAL SAFETY PROVISIONS
Article 18. IMPLEMENTING MEASURES
Each Contracting Party shall take, within the framework of its
national law, the legislative, regulatory and administrative
measures and other steps necessary for implementing its obligations
under this Convention.
Article 19. LEGISLATIVE AND REGULATORY FRAMEWORK
- Each Contracting Party shall establish and maintain a
legislative and regulatory framework to govern the safety of spent
fuel and radioactive waste management.
- This legislative and regulatory framework shall provide for:
- the establishment of applicable national safety
requirements and regulations for radiation safety;
- a system of licensing of spent fuel and radioactive
waste management activities;
- a system of prohibition of the operation of a spent
fuel or radioactive waste management facility without a licence;
- a system of appropriate institutional control,
regulatory inspection and documentation and reporting;
- the enforcement of applicable regulations and of the
terms of the licences;
- a clear allocation of responsibilities of the bodies
involved in the different steps of spent fuel and of radioactive
waste management.
- When considering whether to regulate radioactive materials as
radioactive waste, Contracting Parties shall take due account of
the objectives of this Convention.
Article 20. REGULATORY BODY
- Each Contracting Party shall establish or designate a
regulatory body entrusted with the implementation of the
legislative and regulatory framework referred to in Article 19,
and provided with adequate authority, competence and financial and
human resources to fulfill its assigned responsibilities.
- Each Contracting Party, in accordance with its legislative and
regulatory framework, shall take the appropriate steps to ensure
the effective independence of the regulatory functions from other
functions where organizations are involved in both spent fuel or
radioactive waste management and in their regulation.
Article 21. RESPONSIBILITY OF THE LICENCE HOLDER
- Each Contracting Party shall ensure that prime responsibility
for the safety of spent fuel or radioactive waste management rests
with the holder of the relevant licence and shall take the
appropriate steps to ensure that each such licence holder meets
its responsibility.
- If there is no such licence holder or other responsible party,
the responsibility rests with the Contracting Party which has
jurisdiction over the spent fuel or over the radioactive waste.
Article 22. HUMAN AND FINANCIAL RESOURCES
Each Contracting Party shall take the appropriate steps to ensure
that:
- qualified staff are available as needed for
safety-related activities during the operating lifetime of a spent
fuel and a radioactive waste management facility;
- adequate financial resources are available to support
the safety of facilities for spent fuel and radioactive waste
management during their operating lifetime and for
decommissioning;
- financial provision is made which will enable the
appropriate institutional controls and monitoring arrangements to
be continued for the period deemed necessary following the closure
of a disposal facility.
Article 23. QUALITY ASSURANCE
Each Contracting Party shall take the necessary steps to ensure
that appropriate quality assurance programmes concerning the safety
of spent fuel and radioactive waste management are established and
implemented.
Article 24. OPERATIONAL RADIATION PROTECTION
- Each Contracting Party shall take the appropriate steps to
ensure that during the operating lifetime of a spent fuel or
radioactive waste management facility:
- the radiation exposure of the workers and the public
caused by the facility shall be kept as low as reasonably
achievable, economic and social factors being taken into
account;
- no individual shall be exposed, in normal situations,
to radiation doses which exceed national prescriptions for dose
limitation which have due regard to internationally endorsed
standards on radiation protection; and
- measures are taken to prevent unplanned and
uncontrolled releases of radioactive materials into the
environment.
- Each Contracting Party shall take appropriate steps to ensure
that discharges shall be limited:
- to keep exposure to radiation as low as reasonably
achievable, economic and social factors being taken into
account; and
- so that no individual shall be exposed, in normal
situations, to radiation doses which exceed national
prescriptions for dose limitation which have due regard to
internationally endorsed standards on radiation protection.
- Each Contracting Party shall take appropriate steps to ensure
that during the operating lifetime of a regulated nuclear
facility, in the event that an unplanned or uncontrolled release
of radioactive materials into the environment occurs, appropriate
corrective measures are implemented to control the release and
mitigate its effects.
Article 25. EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS
- Each Contracting Party shall ensure that before and during
operation of a spent fuel or radioactive waste management facility
there are appropriate on-site and, if necessary, off-site
emergency plans. Such emergency plans should be tested at an
appropriate frequency.
- Each Contracting Party shall take the appropriate steps for
the preparation and testing of emergency plans for its territory
insofar as it is likely to be affected in the event of a
radiological emergency at a spent fuel or radioactive waste
management facility in the vicinity of its territory.
Article 26. DECOMMISSIONING
Each Contracting Party shall take the appropriate steps to ensure
the safety of decommissioning of a nuclear facility. Such steps
shall ensure that:
- qualified staff and adequate financial resources are
available;
- the provisions of Article 24 with respect to
operational radiation protection, discharges and unplanned and
uncontrolled releases are applied;
- the provisions of Article 25 with respect to emergency
preparedness are applied; and
- records of information important to decommissioning are
kept.
CHAPTER 5. MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS
Article 27. TRANSBOUNDARY MOVEMENT
- Each Contracting Party involved in transboundary movement
shall take the appropriate steps to ensure that such movement is
undertaken in a manner consistent with the provisions of this
Convention and relevant binding international instruments.
In so doing:
- a Contracting Party which is a State of origin shall
take the appropriate steps to ensure that transboundary movement
is authorized and takes place only with the prior notification
and consent of the State of destination;
- transboundary movement through States of transit
shall be subject to those international obligations which are
relevant to the particular modes of transport utilized;
- a Contracting Party which is a State of destination
shall consent to a transboundary movement only if it has the
administrative and technical capacity, as well as the regulatory
structure, needed to manage the spent fuel or the radioactive
waste in a manner consistent with this Convention;
- a Contracting Party which is a State of origin shall
authorize a transboundary movement only if it can satisfy itself
in accordance with the consent of the State of destination that
the requirements of subparagraph (iii) are met prior to
transboundary movement;
- a Contracting Party which is a State of origin shall
take the appropriate steps to permit re-entry into its
territory, if a transboundary movement is not or cannot be
completed in conformity with this Article, unless an alternative
safe arrangement can be made.
- A Contracting Party shall not licence the shipment of its
spent fuel or radioactive waste to a destination south of latitude
60 degrees South for storage or disposal.
- Nothing in this Convention prejudices or affects:
- the exercise, by ships and aircraft of all States, of
maritime, river and air navigation rights and freedoms, as
provided for in international law;
- rights of a Contracting Party to which radioactive
waste is exported for processing to return, or provide for the
return of, the radioactive waste and other products after
treatment to the State of origin;
- the right of a Contracting Party to export its spent
fuel for reprocessing;
- rights of a Contracting Party to which spent fuel is
exported for reprocessing to return, or provide for the return
of, radioactive waste and other products resulting from
reprocessing operations to the State of origin.
Article 28. DISUSED SEALED SOURCES
- Each Contracting Party shall, in the framework of its national
law, take the appropriate steps to ensure that the possession,
remanufacturing or disposal of disused sealed sources takes place
in a safe manner.
- A Contracting Party shall allow for reentry into its territory
of disused sealed sources if, in the framework of its national
law, it has accepted that they be returned to a manufacturer
qualified to receive and possess the disused sealed sources.
CHAPTER 6. MEETINGS OF THE CONTRACTING PARTIES
Article 29. PREPARATORY MEETING
- A preparatory meeting of the Contracting Parties shall be held
not later than six months after the date of entry into force of
this Convention.
- At this meeting, the Contracting Parties shall:
- determine the date for the first review meeting as
referred to in Article 30. This review meeting shall be held as
soon as possible, but not later than thirty months after the
date of entry into force of this Convention;
- prepare and adopt by consensus Rules of Procedure and
Financial Rules;
- establish in particular and in accordance with the
Rules of Procedure:
- guidelines regarding the form and structure of the
national reports to be submitted pursuant to Article 32;
- a date for the submission of such reports;
- the process for reviewing such reports.
- Any State or regional organization of an integration or other
nature which ratifies, accepts, approves, accedes to or confirms
this Convention and for which the Convention is not yet in force,
may attend the preparatory meeting as if it were a Party to this
Convention.
Article 30. REVIEW MEETINGS
- The Contracting Parties shall hold meetings for the purpose of
reviewing the reports submitted pursuant to Article 32.
- At each review meeting the Contracting Parties:
- shall determine the date for the next such meeting,
the interval between review meetings not exceeding three years;
- may review the arrangements established pursuant to
paragraph 2 of Article 29, and adopt revisions by consensus
unless otherwise provided for in the Rules of Procedure. They
may also amend the Rules of Procedure and Financial Rules by
consensus.
- At each review meeting each Contracting Party shall have a
reasonable opportunity to discuss the reports submitted by other
Contracting Parties and to seek clarification of such reports.
Article 31. EXTRAORDINARY MEETINGS
An extraordinary meeting of the Contracting Parties shall be
held:
- if so agreed by a majority of the Contracting Parties
present and voting at a meeting; or
- at the written request of a Contracting Party, within
six months of this request having been communicated to the
Contracting Parties and notification having been received by the
secretariat referred to in Article 37 that the request has been
supported by a majority of the Contracting Parties.
Article 32. REPORTING
- In accordance with the provisions of Article 30, each
Contracting Party shall submit a national report to each review
meeting of Contracting Parties. This report shall address the
measures taken to implement each of the obligations of the
Convention. For each Contracting Party the report shall also
address its:
- spent fuel management policy;
- spent fuel management practices;
- radioactive waste management policy;
- radioactive waste management practices;
- criteria used to define and categorize radioactive
waste.
- This report shall also include:
- a list of the spent fuel management facilities
subject to this Convention, their location, main purpose and
essential features;
- an inventory of spent fuel that is subject to this
Convention and that is being held in storage and of that which
has been disposed of. This inventory shall contain a description
of the material and, if available, give information on its mass
and its total activity;
- a list of the radioactive waste management facilities
subject to this Convention, their location, main purpose and
essential features;
- an inventory of radioactive waste that is subject to
this Convention that:
- is being held in storage at radioactive waste
management and nuclear fuel cycle facilities;
- has been disposed of; or
- has resulted from past practices.
This inventory shall contain a description of the material
and other appropriate information available, such as volume or
mass, activity and specific radionuclides;
- a list of nuclear facilities in the process of being
decommissioned and the status of decommissioning activities at
those facilities.
Article 33. ATTENDANCE
- Each Contracting Party shall attend meetings of the
Contracting Parties and be represented at such meetings by one
delegate, and by such alternates, experts and advisers as it deems
necessary.
- The Contracting Parties may invite, by consensus, any
intergovernmental organization which is competent in respect of
matters governed by this Convention to attend, as an observer, any
meeting, or specific sessions thereof. Observers shall be required
to accept in writing, and in advance, the provisions of Article
36.
Article 34. SUMMARY REPORTS
The Contracting Parties shall adopt, by consensus, and make
available to the public a document addressing issues discussed and
conclusions reached during meetings of the Contracting Parties.
Article 35. LANGUAGES
- The languages of meetings of the Contracting Parties shall be
Arabic, Chinese, English, French, Russian and Spanish unless
otherwise provided in the Rules of Procedure.
- Reports submitted pursuant to Article 32 shall be prepared in
the national language of the submitting Contracting Party or in a
single designated language to be agreed in the Rules of Procedure.
Should the report be submitted in a national language other than
the designated language, a translation of the report into the
designated language shall be provided by the Contracting Party.
- Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraph 2, the
secretariat, if compensated, will assume the translation of
reports submitted in any other language of the meeting into the
designated language.
Article 36. CONFIDENTIALITY
- The provisions of this Convention shall not affect the rights
and obligations of the Contracting Parties under their laws to
protect information from disclosure. For the purposes of this
Article, "information" includes, inter alia, information relating
to national security or to the physical protection of nuclear
materials, information protected by intellectual property rights
or by industrial or commercial confidentiality, and personal data.
- When, in the context of this Convention, a Contracting Party
provides information identified by it as protected as described in
paragraph 1, such information shall be used only for the purposes
for which it has been provided and its confidentiality shall be
respected.
- With respect to information relating to spent fuel or
radioactive waste falling within the scope of this Convention by
virtue of paragraph 3 of Article 3, the provisions of this
Convention shall not affect the exclusive discretion of the
Contracting Party concerned to decide:
- whether such information is classified or otherwise
controlled to preclude release;
- whether to provide information referred to in
sub-paragraph (i) above in the context of the Convention; and
- what conditions of confidentiality are attached to
such information if it is provided in the context of this
Convention.
- The content of the debates during the reviewing of the
national reports at each review meeting held pursuant to Article
30 shall be confidential.
Article 37. SECRETARIAT
- The International Atomic Energy Agency, (hereinafter referred
to as "the Agency") shall provide the secretariat for the meetings
of the Contracting Parties.
- The secretariat shall:
- convene, prepare and service the meetings of the
Contracting Parties referred to in Articles 29, 30 and 31;
- transmit to the Contracting Parties information
received or prepared in accordance with the provisions of this
Convention.
The costs incurred by the Agency in carrying out the functions
referred to in sub-paragraphs (i) and (ii) above shall be borne by
the Agency as part of its regular budget.
- The Contracting Parties may, by consensus, request the Agency
to provide other services in support of meetings of the
Contracting Parties. The Agency may provide such services if they
can be undertaken within its programme and regular budget. Should
this not be possible, the Agency may provide such services if
voluntary funding is provided from another source.
CHAPTER 7. FINAL CLAUSES AND OTHER PROVISIONS
Article 38. RESOLUTION OF DISAGREEMENTS
In the event of a disagreement between two or more Contracting
Parties concerning the interpretation or application of this
Convention, the Contracting Parties shall consult within the
framework of a meeting of the Contracting Parties with a view to
resolving the disagreement. In the event that the consultations
prove unproductive, recourse can be made to the mediation,
conciliation and arbitration mechanisms provided for in
international law, including the rules and practices prevailing
within the IAEA.
Article 39. SIGNATURE, RATIFICATION, ACCEPTANCE, APPROVAL,
ACCESSION
- This Convention shall be open for signature by all States at
the Headquarters of the Agency in Vienna from 29 September 1997
until its entry into force.
- This Convention is subject to ratification, acceptance or
approval by the signatory States.
- After its entry into force, this Convention shall be open for
accession by all States.
- (i) This Convention shall be open for signature subject to
confirmation, or accession by regional organizations of an
integration or other nature, provided that any such organization
is constituted by sovereign States and has competence in respect
of the negotiation, conclusion and application of international
agreements in matters covered by this Convention.
- In matters within their competence, such
organizations shall, on their own behalf, exercise the rights
and fulfil the responsibilities which this Convention attributes
to States Parties.
- When becoming party to this Convention, such an
organization shall communicate to the Depositary referred to in
Article 43, a declaration indicating which States are members
thereof, which Articles of this Convention apply to it, and the
extent of its competence in the field covered by those Articles.
- Such an organization shall not hold any vote
additional to those of its Member States.
- Instruments of ratification, acceptance, approval, accession
or confirmation shall be deposited with the Depositary.
Article 40. ENTRY INTO FORCE
- This Convention shall enter into force on the ninetieth day
after the date of deposit with the Depositary of the twenty-fifth
instrument of ratification, acceptance or approval, including the
instruments of fifteen States each having an operational nuclear
power plant.
- For each State or regional organization of an integration or
other nature which ratifies, accepts, approves, accedes to or
confirms this Convention after the date of deposit of the last
instrument required to satisfy the conditions set forth in
paragraph 1, this Convention shall enter into force on the
ninetieth day after the date of deposit with the Depositary of the
appropriate instrument by such a State or organization.
Article 41. AMENDMENTS TO THE CONVENTION
- Any Contracting Party may propose an amendment to this
Convention. Proposed amendments shall be considered at a review
meeting or at an extraordinary meeting.
- The text of any proposed amendment and the reasons for it
shall be provided to the Depositary who shall communicate the
proposal to the Contracting Parties at least ninety days before
the meeting for which it is submitted for consideration. Any
comments received on such a proposal shall be circulated by the
Depositary to the Contracting Parties.
- The Contracting Parties shall decide after consideration of
the proposed amendment whether to adopt it by consensus, or, in
the absence of consensus, to submit it to a Diplomatic Conference.
A decision to submit a proposed amendment to a Diplomatic
Conference shall require a two-thirds majority vote of the
Contracting Parties present and voting at the meeting, provided
that at least one half of the Contracting Parties are present at
the time of voting.
- The Diplomatic Conference to consider and adopt amendments to
this Convention shall be convened by the Depositary and held no
later than one year after the appropriate decision taken in
accordance with paragraph 3 of this Article. The Diplomatic
Conference shall make every effort to ensure amendments are
adopted by consensus. Should this not be possible, amendments
shall be adopted with a two-thirds majority of all Contracting
Parties.
- Amendments to this Convention adopted pursuant to paragraphs 3
and 4 above shall be subject to ratification, acceptance,
approval, or confirmation by the Contracting Parties and shall
enter into force for those Contracting Parties which have
ratified, accepted, approved or confirmed them on the ninetieth
day after the receipt by the Depositary of the relevant
instruments of at least two thirds of the Contracting Parties. For
a Contracting Party which subsequently ratifies, accepts, approves
or confirms the said amendments, the amendments will enter into
force on the ninetieth day after that Contracting Party has
deposited its relevant instrument.
Article 42. DENUNCIATION
- Any Contracting Party may denounce this Convention by written
notification to the Depositary.
- Denunciation shall take effect one year following the date of
the receipt of the notification by the Depositary, or on such
later date as may be specified in the notification.
Article 43. DEPOSITARY
- The Director General of the Agency shall be the Depositary of
this Convention.
- The Depositary shall inform the Contracting Parties of:
- the signature of this Convention and of the deposit
of instruments of ratification, acceptance, approval, accession
or confirmation in accordance with Article 39;
- the date on which the Convention enters into force,
in accordance with Article 40;
- the notifications of denunciation of the Convention
and the date thereof, made in accordance with Article 42;
- the proposed amendments to this Convention submitted
by Contracting Parties, the amendments adopted by the relevant
Diplomatic Conference or by the meeting of the Contracting
Parties, and the date of entry into force of the said
amendments, in accordance with Article 41.
Article 44. AUTHENTIC TEXTS
The original of this Convention of which the Arabic, Chinese,
English, French, Russian and Spanish texts are equally authentic,
shall be deposited with the Depositary, who shall send certified
copies thereof to the Contracting Parties.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF THE UNDERSIGNED, BEING DULY AUTHORIZED TO THAT
EFFECT, HAVE SIGNED THIS CONVENTION.
Done at Vienna on the day of 199..
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