Update 328 – IAEA Director General Statement on Situation in Ukraine

Source: International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) –

Two Ukrainian nuclear power plants (NPPs) have been operating at reduced capacity for the past ten days after a military attack damaged an electrical substation critical for nuclear safety and security, Director General Rafael Mariano Grossi of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) said today.

Substations are critical nodes in a country’s electrical grid, serving as facilities where voltage levels are transformed and controlled to ensure reliable power transmission. For nuclear power plants (NPPs), they are indispensable for maintaining off-site power supplies that support safety systems and cooling functions, making their integrity vital for nuclear safety and security. 

Following the latest military activity targeting a substation, during the night of 7 November, the Khmelnitskyy and Rivne NPPs were each disconnected from one of their two 750 kilovolt (kV) power lines. In addition, the grid operator ordered a reduction in electricity output of some of their reactors.

Today, although one of the affected lines has since been restored, the other remains out of service. Three reactors continue to operate at limited power, at the request of the grid operator.

“Reliable off-site power is vital for the maintenance and operation of nuclear safety functions. To this end, Agency experts will, through dedicated expert missions, continue to assess the functionality of substations critical for nuclear safety and security,” Director General Grossi said.

The Zaporizhzhya Nuclear Power Plant (ZNPP) remains connected to the grid after repairs carried out under the protection of IAEA-brokered localized ceasefires in late October and ten days ago. 

Ending a month-long outage of off-site power, this has allowed the resumption of maintenance of the plant’s safety systems. 

However, one of the two off-site power lines that were re-connected thanks to the recent repairs – the 750 kilovolt (kV) Dniprovska line – was again disconnected on Friday evening after the actuation of a protection system. The cause is still being investigated. The IAEA is engaging with both sides to assist in the timely restoration of the line, Director General Grossi said.

The IAEA continues to implement its comprehensive programme of assistance to Ukraine in nuclear safety and security. 

As part of the programme, the IAEA completed partial deliveries of items to the Joint Stock Company Mykolaivoblenergo consisting of electrical cabinets, circuit breakers surge arresters and similar items needed to maintain a reliable power supply for the safe operation of Ukraine’s NPPs.  Additional items, that are still in production, will be delivered in the coming months. These deliveries were possible with the support from Austria, France, Germany, Italy and the European Union.

In addition, the South Ukraine NPP received 12 gamma dose rate monitoring stations intended to enhance its radiation monitoring capability. The stations, once in operation, will feed also the IAEA’s International Radiation Monitoring Information System (IRMIS) with monitoring data, providing information on the radiological situation on the ground in the plant’s normal operation and during an accident. The delivery was supported by the European Union.

Ukraine’s Central Enterprise for the Management of Radioactive Waste received IT equipment and the Chornobyl NPP received an off-road vehicle. Both deliveries were funded by the United Kingdom and aimed at enhancing nuclear security measures at the two sites. 

These deliveries brought the total organised during the conflict by the IAEA to 174, amounting to over €20.5 million.

Update 327 – IAEA Director General Statement on Situation in Ukraine

Source: International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) –

Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhya Nuclear Power Plant (ZNPP) has regained its access to back-up electricity from the grid for the first time in six months, after today’s completion of repairs to a second power line under the protection of a localized ceasefire brokered by the IAEA, Director General Rafael Mariano Grossi said. 

The re-connection of the 330 kilovolt (kV) Ferosplavna-1 power line to the ZNPP today at 19:43 local time marks another significant step in efforts to prevent a nuclear accident during the military conflict, coming two weeks after the restoration of the 750 kV Dniprovska line ended a month-long outage of off-site power at the site.

“Immediately after the Zaporizhzhya Nuclear Power Plant lost all off-site power on 23 September, we began working closely with both the Russian Federation and Ukraine to enable the repairs of both power lines, which are indispensable for being able to maintain nuclear safety and security at the site during this devastating war,” Director General Grossi said.

“As the damaged sections of the power lines were located in an active combat zone, this required complex negotiations with both sides to establish carefully coordinated temporary truce arrangements so that their technicians could work without risking their own lives. It took several weeks to get to this point, with the plant once again having access to two power lines. It is a good day for nuclear safety and security, although the overall situation remains highly precarious and our important mission in Ukraine is far from over,” he said.

The repairs of the remaining damaged section of Ferosplavna-1 got under way on Saturday morning around three kilometres from the ZNPP’s site perimeter after the area had been demined the day before. Technicians repaired a damaged cable between two pylons, with an IAEA team monitoring their work. The line – which had been cut since 7 May 2025 – was finally re-connected to the plant this evening.

It came just over two weeks after the successful repairs of the Dniprovska line on 23 October 2025 restored off-site power to the ZNPP, which for a month had relied on emergency diesel generators for the electricity it needs for essential nuclear safety and security functions.

For the first time since May 2025, the ZNPP once again has redundancy in its external power supply. However, the external electricity situation at the plant remains extremely fragile. During more than three and a half years of conflict, the site has lost all access to external electricity ten times. Before the conflict, it was connected to the grid through ten power lines.

The ZNPP’s six reactors have not produced electricity for more than three years and its six reactors are all shut down. But it still needs electricity to power the pumps used for cooling its reactor cores and spent fuel and to avoid a meltdown with a possible radioactive release. 

Despite today’s re-establishment of back-up power at the ZNPP, developments elsewhere in Ukraine underlined the highly precarious nuclear safety and security situation during the conflict. 

Two operating NPPs – Khmelnitskyy and Rivne – had to reduce output of electricity today following an overnight attack on an electrical substation critical for nuclear safety and security. Last week, Rivne also temporarily reduced output following damage to another substation, underscoring the importance of such energy infrastructure for the safe operation of NPPs.

“Electrical substations are critical for our efforts to maintain nuclear safety and security during the war. Their continued degradation is a deep source of concern in this regard. I continue to call for maximum military restraint in order to maintain nuclear safety and avoid an accident with serious radiological consequences,” Director General Grossi said.

IAEA Completes International Physical Protection Advisory Service Mission in Kenya

Source: International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) –

The IPPAS team visited the Kenya Bureau of Standards to assess the nuclear security measures in the facility. (Credit: Kenya Bureau of Standards)

An International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) team of experts completed today the first International Physical Protection Advisory Service (IPPAS) mission in Kenya. 

The IPPAS mission was conducted from 10 to 21 November and was hosted by the Kenya Nuclear Regulatory Authority (KNRA). The six-person mission team reviewed the security of radioactive material, associated facilities and activities in the country. 

Kenya uses radiation sources across medical, research, and industrial sectors. The country is preparing to establish its first nuclear research reactor and is considering the development of a nuclear power programme to support growing energy demand.

As part of the review, the IPPAS team visited eight facilities, including the Central Radioactive Waste Processing Facility, Quality Assurance Systems, the Kenya Bureau of Standards, the International Livestock Research Institute, Kenyatta National Hospital, Nairobi Hospital, and the Aga Khan University Hospital, which is a privately owned facility used for brachytherapy. The team also visited the Kenya Agricultural and Livestock Research Organization, which promotes the application of research findings and technology in the field of agriculture.

Kenya is party to the Convention on Physical Protection of Nuclear Material (CPPNM) and its Amendment and has expressed its political commitment to the Code of Conduct on the Safety and Security of Radioactive Sources

The IPPAS team, led by Moustapha Tall, Director of Inspection of the Authority for Radiation Protection, Nuclear Safety and Security of Senegal, included experts from Ghana, Spain, Türkiye, the United States, as well as one IAEA staff member. The team held discussions with officials from the Ministry of Interior, Kenya Police Service, Directorate of Criminal Investigation, Department of Defence, National Counter Terrorism Centre, Kenya Airports Authority and Kenya Civil Aviation Authority.

The team noted that Kenya has developed several draft regulations related to the security of nuclear and other radioactive material and encouraged their prompt adoption. To further strengthen its nuclear security framework, the team also encouraged Kenya to establish a more formalized approach to cooperation among the various competent authorities with nuclear security responsibilities. 

The team also recommended further efforts to ensure that KNRA has adequate human, financial, and technical resources to fulfil its oversight mission, which will be indispensable for Kenya to be able proceed with embarking on nuclear power. Good practices were identified, which may be used by other IAEA Member States to build long term improvement in global nuclear security.

“The first IPPAS mission in Kenya provided recommendations and suggestions to help the country further enhance its nuclear security procedures and practices,” said Elena Buglova, Director of the IAEA’s Division of Nuclear Security. “The findings are highlighting the importance of a robust regulatory framework for nuclear security, supported by effective coordination and resources.” 

“The IPPAS mission is a key step in Kenya’s efforts to enhance nuclear security,” said James Keter, Director General of the KNRA. “The recommendations will help us build stronger nuclear security framework to ensure our nuclear and radioactive materials do not fall in the hands of criminal or terrorist groups and there will be no sabotage on associated facilities and activities. This will protect the members of public and the environment from risks associated with nuclear and radioactive materials.”

Background

The mission was the 109th IPPAS mission conducted by the IAEA since the programme began in 1995.

IPPAS missions are intended to assist States in strengthening their national nuclear security regime. The missions provide peer advice on implementing international instruments, along with IAEA guidance on the protection of nuclear and other radioactive material and associated facilities.

During missions, a team of international experts observes a nation’s system of physical protection, compares it with international good practices and makes recommendations for improvement. IPPAS missions are conducted both on a nationwide and facility-specific basis.

Six Global Trends in Nuclear Power You Should Know

Source: International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) –

Nuclear power delivers low-carbon, reliable electricity. As more countries aim for net-zero emissions, nuclear energy is increasingly seen as a crucial partner to renewable sources like wind and solar. 

The IAEA’s Power Reactor Information System (PRIS) tracks the status of nuclear power reactors globally.  All information and data items are provided voluntarily by countries and collected by the IAEA via data providers nominated officially by Member States. 

Here are six key trends from the Nuclear Power Status in 2025 that show how nuclear energy uptake is evolving:

1. Global Nuclear Capacity can Increase by more than double by 2050

According to the IAEA projections, global nuclear power capacity could double by 2050 — reaching between 561 GW(e) (low estimate) and 992 GW(e) (high estimate). This growth would make nuclear a key player in the clean energy transition.

2.  416 Nuclear Reactors are in operation around the world

PRIS is tracking reactor level data, and as status of reactors is updated on ongoing basis, it can vary from one day to another. As of 19 November 2025 there is 376.3 GW(e) of nuclear capacity provided by 416 reactors in operation across the world. In 2024, 421 operating reactors with total capacity of 377.0 GW(e) generated about 2617.3 TWh of electricity — enough to supply hundreds of millions of homes with low-carbon energy.

The United States remains the world’s largest nuclear power producer, with 94 reactors (96,952 (MW(e)) generating about 781.9 TWh of electricity in 2024.

China is rapidly expanding its nuclear fleet, operating 57 reactors (55.3 GW(e ) and building 29 (29.6 GW(e)) more. In 2024, it produced over 417.5 TWh of nuclear electricity. 

Nuclear energy also plays a big role in Europe’s electricity mix.  France leads the way with 57 nuclear reactors (63.0 GW(e)) generating about 67,3% of the country’s electricity in 2024— the highest share in the world. 

Other countries with high nuclear electricity production share include Slovakia with 60,6% of its electricity from nuclear, Hungary relies on it for 47,1% and Finland uses nuclear for 39,1% of its electricity needs.

3. 63 Reactors are Under Construction

Globally, there are 63 reactors under construction, which will add 66.2 (GW(e)) of capacity once completed. This shows that many countries are investing in nuclear energy to meet growing electricity needs, reduce emissions and climate goals.

4. New Nuclear Units Connected to the Grid

Several new nuclear units were connected to the grid during the period of 2024- 2025, including:

  • Barakah-4 (PWR, 1310 MW(e)) in the United Arab Emirates
  • Flamanville-3 (EPR, 1000 MW(e)) in France
  • Vogtle-4 (PWR, 1117 MW(e)) in the United States
  • Kakrapar-4 (PHWR, 630 MW(e)) and Rajasthan-7 (PHWR, 630 MW(e)) in India
  • Fangchenggang-4 (PWR, 1000 MW(e)) and Zhangzhou-1 (PWR, 1126 MW(e)) in China.

These additions reflect global momentum in deploying advanced nuclear technologies.

5. More Countries are Entering the Nuclear Scene

Nuclear power is growing worldwide.

South Africa is Africa’s only current nuclear power producers, with two reactors (1.9 GW(e)) providing about 3.9% of its national electricity. But, for the first time, Egypt is constructing four nuclear power reactors with total capacity of 4.4 GW(e) — marking a significant step toward diversifying their energy sources and developing local expertise.

South Asia is expanding nuclear capacity too, Bangladesh is building its first two reactors (2.2 GW(e)), while India is constructing six more (4.8 GW(e). Across Europe, Türkiye is constructing four reactors (4.5 GW(e)), Ukraine two (2.1 GW(e)), and Russia five (5.0 GW(e) — strengthening energy security and low-carbon power generation.

6. Non-Electric Uses of Nuclear Energy are Growing

In 2024, nuclear reactors provided 2,644 gigawatt hours of electrical equivalent of heat for:

  • District heating (94.1%)
  • Industrial heating (4.1%)
  • Desalination (1,9%)

China and Russia lead in these non-electric applications, showing how nuclear energy can support broader energy needs.

Nuclear At COP30: Facts, Youth, Momentum

Source: International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) –

Sharing the facts, engaging with youth, building momentum: it’s the second week of COP30 and the IAEA’s Atoms4Climate campaign is going strong. Focusing on energy, food, water and oceans, the IAEA and its partners at COP are getting the word out about nuclear.

Universities Launch Nuclear Law Courses with IAEA Support

Source: International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) –

Since the inception of nuclear law, a widening gap has emerged between its growing importance  and the limited number of academic programmes available at universities and higher-education  institutions. Beyond specialised workshops and seminars for select audiences, there is a pressing need for academic programmes that can offer in-depth training at scale to meet the demands of a rapidly expanding energy sector. 

The UPP helps to fill that gap. Nuclear law now forms part of standard university academic programmes, with increasing cohorts of learners and researchers in the field. Since the launch of the Programme, the IAEA has supported partner universities in capacity-building and course development by training professors and teaching staff, designing syllabi, developing teaching methodology and providing teaching materials. The  initiative’s goal is to ensure that universities can deliver nuclear law courses independently and to the highest academic standards within their national educational systems.

The University of Buenos Aires was the first to launch its postgraduate course in nuclear law in May 2024 and is now running its second session. As of 30 October 2025, the other five partner institutions have also launched their courses.

“The creation of the Diploma in Nuclear Law at the University of Buenos Aires embodies a forward-looking commitment to cultivating a new generation of legal experts who, in line with the IAEA’s mission, will ensure that the peaceful uses of nuclear energy advance human development, international security, and the rule of law in a responsible and sustainable manner,” said Emiliano J. Buis, professor and course coordinator at the School of Law, University of Buenos Aires, Argentina. 

Other academic leaders have also echoed their appreciation for the timeliness and need for the programme. 

For Alexandria University in Egypt, the new postgraduate course in nuclear law “is critical for enhancing awareness and understanding of the legal frameworks regarding peaceful uses of nuclear science and technology and is ideal for regulatory bodies, industry professionals and legal practitioners working in this field,” said Walid El-Barky, professor and Dean of the Faculty of Engineering, Alexandria University, Egypt.

In Brazil, the nuclear law course at the Institute of Nuclear Engineering is taught by Brazilian professors who are specialists in nuclear law and regulation. Many of them have been trained by the IAEA, both in law and in technical matters. “The Institute regards this initiative as a successful and pivotal starting point for consolidating legal expertise within Brazil’s nuclear sector and beyond,” said Rômulo de Castro Souza Lima, professor and course coordinator at the Institute of Nuclear Engineering of the National Nuclear Energy Commission, Brazil.

In the UAE, “the nuclear law course at Khalifa University draws students with technical and legal backgrounds from across the region, providing a foundation in law for nuclear technology deployment,” said François Foulon, professor and course coordinator at the Department of Mechanical and Nuclear Engineering, Khalifa University, UAE.  

At the University of the West Indies, the graduate-level course in nuclear law prepares students to navigate the complex intersections of law, science, and sustainable development. “The launch of the course positions our university as a regional leader in advancing legal education in one of the most consequential fields of our times,” said Ramona Biholar, Deputy Dean (Graduate Studies and Research) and course coordinator, Faculty of Law, The University of the West Indies on Mona Campus, Jamaica.

Natalie Zimmelman, Chief Executive Officer, Wits Plus, University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa, said that the nuclear law short course, launched as part of the UPP, “is critical to ensuring the safe, secure and peaceful uses of nuclear technology and aligns with the university’s strong commitment to civic action and responsibility.” 

Introductory Statement to the Board of Governors

Source: International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) –

Before I begin my remarks, let me welcome the Democratic Republic of Timor-Leste in recently submitting its application for IAEA membership.   

Mr Chairperson,

Just a few weeks ago I was at the United Nations in New York, marking its 80th anniversary and delivering to the UN General Assembly our annual report. 

Among discussions about the UN system and its relevance today, it was absolutely clear that the IAEA stands out as crucial to peace and security and that it delivers on the world’s priorities, from non-proliferation to economic development.

IAEA inspectors are back in the Islamic Republic of Iran and have carried out inspections and design information verifications at many of the facilities unaffected by June’s military attacks. But more engagement is needed to restore full inspections, including at the affected sites, so that Iran fulfils its obligations under its NPT Agreement. I am in regular contact with Tehran and urge Iran to facilitate Agency access at its affected facilities and especially of its inventories of Low Enriched Uranium (LEU) and High Enriched Uranium (HEU), whose status needs urgently to be addressed. I will return to the subject in more detail later in my statement. 

This month was notable for the key positive success in our mediation to allow indispensable repairs to the Dniprovska and Ferosplavna power lines, ending a month of loss of off-site electricity to the Zaporizhzhya Nuclear Power Plant. The constructive engagement of both sides under the monitoring of the IAEA is another manifestation of the crucial role of the Agency in the very fragile and perilous situation at Zaporizhzhya NPP. This morning, I can confirm that a subsequent interruption of one of the lines has been resolved.  

Here in Vienna this week, the IAEA’s Technical Assistance and Cooperation Committee met, and the Board has before it the proposed TC programme for the 2026–2027 cycle. This programme has been developed in close cooperation between the Secretariat and Member States, building on Country Programme Frameworks, and on national and regional development priorities. To give you an idea of its scope and geographical reach: it consists of 452 new project proposals, 92 in Latin America and the Caribbean, 115 in Africa, 88 in Europe and Central Asia, and 151 in Asia and the Pacific. Six new interregional projects have also been proposed. Almost seventy percent of the proposed programme focuses on food and agriculture, health and nutrition, and safety, reflecting the priorities of Member States.

As of the end of October this year, we have received €70.6 million in contributions to the TCF, which represents a rate of attainment of 72.1%. Though this is below the rate recorded at this time last year; I trust Member States will maintain their strong support. Receiving the outstanding contributions is crucial to implementing the programme you approved for this year. I urge all Member States to pay their contributions to the TCF in full and on time. I also invite Member States that are in a position to do so to support the programme with extrabudgetary contributions. 

With the cleareyed view that budgets of our Member States are limited, I have been determined to increase the positive impact the IAEA makes across the world, most notably in those places that require our assistance most. We have done this through strengthened partnerships, including with non-traditional donors and development agencies.

It is also precisely why I launched the key initiatives: Zoonotic Disease Integrated Action (ZODIAC), NUTEC Plastics, Rays of Hope, Atoms4Food and Atoms4NetZero. They are an integral part of the TC Programme, raising awareness, building partnerships and mobilizing resources to enable us to strengthen and expand our work in the key areas of pandemic preparedness, plastic pollution, access to cancer treatment, food security and clean energy.

The Atoms4Food initiative continues to improve food security by making agricultural systems more effective and sustainable using nuclear techniques and technology. This month, new missions, to assess the situation and the needs, were completed in Peru and Benin, with Türkiye next in line. 

Through Zoonotic Disease Integrated Action (ZODIAC), we are using science and international collaboration to detect dangerous viruses and prevent the next pandemic. The initiative is helping to establish nine whole genome sequencing hubs in low- and middle-income countries. The Senegal hub, with support from ZODIAC and the VETLAB Network, sequenced the full genome of the Rift Valley Fever virus affecting Senegal, Mauritania and Gambia. This is crucial for outbreak control and just one example of how science is at the heart of what the IAEA does. 

Rays of Hope is another example of our growing work with non-traditional partners. The IAEA and St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital are developing new training curricula to strengthen global capacity in paediatric cancer care, with experts from our Anchor Centres contributing to harmonized education for radiation oncologists, medical physicists and radiation therapists. 

Rays of Hope and ZODIAC are supporting experts in making the most of AI. We launched a global 12-part webinar series on AI for medical physicists, attracting over 3,000 participants worldwide, to promote the safe and effective integration of AI in clinical practice. Meanwhile, ZODIAC is supporting AI-driven diagnostic model development in the fight against respiratory diseases.

Next week in Manila, the International High-Level Forum on NUTEC Plastics, hosted by the Philippines, will mark five years of NUTEC Plastics achievements.

Much of our work relies on the use of our laboratories and I am pleased to say the refurbishment of our Seibersdorf facilities under the ReNuAL programme is now complete. The space now includes a visitor centre where more than 30 interactive exhibits covering our full mandate inspire visitors, including future generations of scientists, engineers and problem-solvers. I encourage you to come and visit us in Seibersdorf. We are reaching out to schools, universities, educational centres and other areas of society to come and see what nuclear science and technology can do for the benefit of all. 

Mr Chairperson,

The need for nuclear energy is no longer a topic of debate. The world agrees that we must invest in more nuclear capacity. Many countries are looking to nuclear for energy security and to meet their social, economic and environmental goals.  

Today, sixty-three reactors totalling nearly 20 gigawatts of installed capacity are under construction in 15 countries, three of which are newcomers to nuclear power. About 30 countries – including African countries – are looking to build their first reactors. 

The growing global momentum behind nuclear is reflected in the data. 

In 31 countries, 416 nuclear power reactors, making up more than 376 gigawatts of installed capacity, are providing almost 10 per cent of the world’s total electricity generation.

The upward momentum is reflected in the IAEA’s latest projections. Its high-case scenario shows global nuclear power generating capacity increasing more than two and a half times to 992 gigawatts by 2050. In the low-case projections, capacity rises 50 per cent to 561 gigawatts. Small modular reactors, or SMRs, account for about one quarter of the capacity added in the high case and for about 5 per cent in the low case scenario.

Achieving the high case scenario will bring with it greater economic growth, greater energy security and a greater mitigation of carbon emissions. The IAEA is supporting its Member States towards that end, including through its work with the G20, the G7 and the United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP). 

In October, I travelled to Durban, South Africa, for the first ever high level G20 meeting on nuclear energy, where I stressed the significant interest in Africa for nuclear power and the IAEA’s support to making it happen. A few weeks later, at the G7 meeting of ministers of energy and the environment, I discussed the return to realism about nuclear energy and the steps necessary to unlock its full potential. 

At COP30 in Belém, Brazil, the IAEA held more than a dozen events at its Pavilion “Atoms4Climate”, engaging Member States and partners across themes such as SMRs, climate-smart agriculture, water and soil protection, fusion energy, and blue carbon ecosystems. 

Following the World Bank Group’s decision to end the decades-long exclusion of nuclear energy from its financing instruments, we have been working closely together to operationalize this historic shift, including the identification of a first project. This momentum is now expanding across the international financial community. I have recently concluded new MoUs with the OPEC Fund for International Development and with the Development Bank of Latin America and the Caribbean (CAF), both aimed at strengthening collaboration on the financing of nuclear energy, including support for countries considering nuclear power. These partnerships mark an important step in building the financial architecture needed to help countries deploy nuclear energy, including in the form of SMRs, as part of their long-term energy strategies.

The AI–nuclear nexus is growing fast. Technology companies are turning to nuclear power, notably also to Small Modular Reactors, to power data centres, while AI is helping make nuclear systems safer, smarter and more efficient. On 3-4 December, the IAEA will host the first ever International Symposium on Artificial Intelligence and Nuclear Energy at our headquarters here in Vienna. The Symposium will explore how nuclear energy can help meet growing electricity demand from the data centres driving AI and the ways AI can support the nuclear power industry. 

Through the Nuclear Harmonization and Standardization Initiative (NHSI), we are bringing together, in two separate tracks, industry and regulators from around the world. This is key, because SMRs will be a globally traded technology, requiring international collaboration on regulation and design. As we meet, NHSI participants are collecting examples and lessons on regulatory cooperation; and two further technical documents are expected to be published by the end of this year. In addition, a pilot multinational pre-licensing joint review of the EAGLES reactor has begun, with involvement of regulators of Belgium and Romania, and Italy as observer. 

Further – but not that much further – down the line, we see fusion energy moving towards commercialisation. To support its journey, the IAEA held the 30th IAEA Fusion Energy Conference and the 2nd Ministerial Meeting of the World Fusion Energy Group in Chengdu last month, bringing together participants from governments, research institutions, and industry. At the conference, we launched new international guidance to assist countries in establishing national fusion programmes and designated the Southwestern Institute of Physics as an IAEA Collaborating Centre on Research and Training in Fusion Energy.

The IAEA has been closely involved in the development of the ITER project since the beginning and I, in my role as IAEA Director General, remain the depository of the ITER Agreement. This month I saw for myself the steady and confident advances this important and unique international fusion energy project is making. ITER is a major player in supporting fusion development and early demonstration and commercialization. Our efforts through the World Fusion Energy Group align, and they reinforce the necessary coherence and convergence in global efforts to develop fusion energy. I toured the facility and met with ITER Director General Pietro Barabaschi and Anne-Isabelle Etienvre, chairman of CEA – both agreed to support the IAEA’s Lise Meitner programme. Therefore, in 2026, the next cohort of our programme for early to mid-career women will head to ITER and CEA sites in Cadarache for technical tours and lectures, networking, mentoring and leadership sessions.

Making sure the sector has the talent it needs is also important in the legal branch. The use of nuclear technology and material for the benefit of all rests on a specialized legal framework that needs to be kept up to task in a continuously changing environment. It is a complex and interdisciplinary section of the legal field. That is why three years ago we launched the IAEA’s University Partnership Programme on Nuclear Law. This pilot initiative has now come to fruition. Through the IAEA’s support, including training of professors and teaching staff, designing of syllabi, development of teaching methodology and provision of teaching materials, six academic institutions located in Argentina, Brazil, Egypt, Jamaica, South Africa and the UAE now offer postgraduate courses in nuclear law, taught by each institution’s own faculty staff and as part of their standard academic programme leading to recognized higher education qualifications.

Mr Chairperson,

At the beginning of December, the IAEA will hold the International Conference on Nuclear and Radiological Emergencies, hosted by the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, focussing on how emergency preparedness and response can adapt to new technologies, emerging threats, and increasingly complex risk environments.

Today, the greatest risk to nuclear safety remains the war in Ukraine. Just because an accident has not yet happened, does not mean it can’t. In fact, the risk is growing as the military conflict is escalating. 

Since early May this year, the Zaporizhzhya Nuclear Power Plant had been relying on just one off-site power line. In late September the plant was disconnected from that last remaining line. This resulted in the tenth and by far longest total loss of off-site power event since the start of the conflict, increasing greatly the risk of a nuclear accident.

Following successful negotiations with Ukraine and the Russian Federation, the activities to repair the two power lines – Dniprovska and Ferosplavna – commenced on 18 October on both sides of the frontline, and off-site power from Ukraine’s electrical grid to the Zaporizhzhya Nuclear Power Plant was able to be restored. Agency staff observed the repair works in the field. A subsequent interruption of the Dniprovska has already been resolved. 

I once again call for the full compliance, at all times, with the IAEA’s Five Concrete Principles. It is of paramount importance that a nuclear accident at the Zaporizhzhya Nuclear Power Plant is prevented.

Meanwhile, even with all six reactors remaining in cold shutdown, a longer-term solution for cooling water at Zaporizhzhya Nuclear Power Plant needs to be found. 

Zaporizhzhya Nuclear Power Plant is not the only plant affected by the instability of the electricity grid. Military activity continues to plague the power grid throughout Ukraine. Khmelnytskyy and Rivne NPPs have been operating at reduced capacity for almost two weeks, due to damages, including very recent ones, to electrical substations critical for nuclear safety and security.

The Agency continues to monitor the status of Ukraine’s electrical infrastructure, focusing on electrical substations, critical nodes in a country’s electrical grid where voltage levels are transformed and controlled to ensure reliable power transmission.

Last month the Chornobyl site completed temporary repairs on some damages on the New Safe Confinement (NSC) as a result of February’s drone strike. Nevertheless, the NSC has not yet regained its ability to perform the confinement function and the IAEA will conduct, in the coming weeks, a comprehensive safety assessment of the NSC.  

Since the start of the armed conflict, the Agency has delivered over €20 million worth of specialized equipment and supplies—more than 170 shipments—to support Ukraine’s safe and secure operation of nuclear and related facilities, including electrical equipment, radiation monitoring, medical support, and isotope hydrology capacity-building. 

Meanwhile, the IAEA continues to verify the safety of ALPS-treated water discharge from Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station in Japan.

Under additional measures, experts from Belgium, China, France, the Republic of Korea, New Zealand, the Russian Federation, and Switzerland are participating in these activities, adding transparency to the assessment. 

Tritium concentrations in the discharged water remains far below operational limits and align with the international safety standards. 

Task Force missions will continue to review all relevant Japanese technical and regulatory aspects. 

Mr Chairperson,

You have before you my quarterly report on the NPT Safeguards Agreement with the Islamic Republic of Iran.

On 9 September 2025, I signed an agreement with Foreign Minister Araghchi in Cairo that provides an understanding of the procedures for Agency inspections, notifications and safeguards implementation in Iran, in the aftermath of the military attacks in June. 

Since then, Iran has facilitated access to the Agency for inspections and design information verification, with advanced notice, at almost all the unaffected facilities in Tehran. This is welcome. 

The Agency has yet to receive from Iran a report for the affected facilities and associated nuclear material which, in line with its obligations under the safeguards agreement, needs to be provided without delay. To date, the Agency has not conducted verification activities at any of the nuclear facilities in Iran affected by the military attacks.

Though I note Iran’s cooperation on inspections at a number of facilities, further constructive engagement is needed.  I urge Iran to facilitate the full and effective implementation of safeguards activities in Iran in accordance with its NPT Safeguards Agreement and I reiterate my disposition to work with Iran on this matter. 

As I have already said, the establishment of the current status of Iran’s inventories of LEU and HEU needs to be addressed urgently. The Agency’s 5-month-long lack of access to this nuclear material in Iran means the material’s verification – according to standard safeguards practice – is long overdue.

It is critical the Agency be able to verify this material as soon as possible.

In the Syrian Arab Republic, I met His Excellency President Ahmed Al-Sharaa in June. He agreed to cooperate with full transparency to clarify, resolve and close the outstanding safeguards issues to do with Syria’s past nuclear activities.

As soon as conditions allow, we plan to visit Dair Alzour to conduct further analysis, access relevant documentation and to talk to those involved in past nuclear activities.

I am committed to achieving clarity regarding past nuclear activities in Syria in order to bring matters to a resolution.

The Secretariat has continued to engage Australia and Brazil on safeguards-relevant aspects of their respective naval nuclear propulsion programmes. I have provided two reports with updates on the consultations and will continue to keep the Board and Member States informed on relevant developments.

The Board has before it for approval a draft Additional Protocol to the Safeguards Agreement between the Agency and the Kingdom of the Netherlands concluded in connection with the NPT and Protocol I to the Treaty of Tlatelolco

The number of States with safeguards agreements in force remains 191, and 144 of these States have additional protocols in force. I look forward to the remaining three States Parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons without comprehensive safeguards agreements bringing such agreements into force without delay. I also encourage States that have not yet concluded additional protocols to do so as soon as possible. I am pleased to say that since the last Board meeting in September, Grenada has amended its original Small Quantities Protocol. I reiterate my calls for the remaining 12 States with SQPs based on the original standard text to amend or rescind them as soon as possible.

I will carry on my efforts to strengthen the indispensable legal framework on which the continued peaceful uses of nuclear science and technology rest.

The IAEA continues to monitor the nuclear programme of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea. 

The Agency has observed that the 5MW(e) reactor at Yongbyon likely continues to operate in its seventh cycle. Between January and September 2025, indicators were observed at the Radiochemical Laboratory consistent with the reprocessing of a core load of irradiated fuel from the reactor’s sixth operating cycle. 

The ongoing operation of enrichment facilities at Kangson and Yongbyon is of serious concern. 

In addition, the Agency is continuing to monitor the construction of a new building at Yongbyon which has dimensions and features similar to the Kangson enrichment plant.

There are indications that the light water reactor (LWR) at Yongbyon continued in stable operation until early-August 2025 but has likely been shut down since then. 

There were no indications of significant changes at the Nuclear Test Site at Punggye-ri, which remains prepared to support a nuclear test. 

The continuation and further development of the DPRK’s nuclear programme are clear violations of relevant UN Security Council resolutions and are deeply regrettable. The Agency continues to maintain its enhanced readiness to play its essential role in verifying the DPRK’s nuclear programme.

Mr Chairperson,

Partnerships and Resource Mobilization remain a priority for me, as we cannot bring the benefits of nuclear science and technology to our recipients alone. In the past two years, we had a 31% increase in extrabudgetary contributions, and support from non-traditional donors more than doubled – reflecting growing recognition of the Agency’s work. In March, we launched a US $2.6 million water resources management project with the World Bank and Niger. In June I signed an agreement with the World Bank under which the IAEA and the Bank will work together in supporting the safe and secure use of nuclear energy in developing countries; it marks the Bank’s first concrete step in decades towards reengaging with nuclear energy. 

Dear colleagues,

In accordance with the Rules and Regulations, I informed Member States through the Quarterly Note of the Financial Situation of the Agency issued on 13 November and further updated on 18 November, that the Agency currently faces a serious liquidity situation due to delays in payments of 2025 assessed contributions.  

The total outstanding balance of overdue assessed contributions amounts to approximately €135 million. 

Mindful of the current challenges, and as per our practice, the Secretariat has been requesting that Member States pay their outstanding 2025 and advance 2026 assessed contributions to help the Agency alleviate the situation. This has allowed the Agency to have enough funds to cover November operations.

I thank those who have already advanced their payments and additionally appeal to those in a position to do so, to do the same.

It should be noted that if significant payments are not received soon, a situation could occur, in which, despite using the Working Capital Fund in full, the Agency might not be able to meet its legal obligations, including payroll. We cannot ignore this. 

I appeal to those Member States with outstanding contributions, to settle their overdue payments in a timely manner. 

The current challenges can be overcome, and I am confident that with your support we will continue to be able to do our indispensable work. 

Press Arrangements for IAEA Board of Governors Meeting, 19-21 November 2025

Source: International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) –

The IAEA Board of Governors will convene its regular November meeting at the Agency’s headquarters starting at 10:00 CET on Wednesday, 19 November, in Board Room C, Building C, 4th floor, in the Vienna International Centre (VIC). 

Board discussions are expected to include, among others: applications for membership of the Agency; report of the Technical Assistance and Cooperation Committee; nuclear and radiation safety: draft Safety Requirements: Regulations for the Safe Transport of Radioactive Material; nuclear verification: the conclusion of safeguards agreements and of additional protocols (if any), application of safeguards in the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, implementation of the NPT safeguards agreement in the Syrian Arab Republic, naval nuclear propulsion: Australia, naval nuclear propulsion: Brazil, and NPT safeguards agreement with the Islamic Republic of Iran; nuclear safety, security and safeguards in Ukraine; transfer of the nuclear materials in the context of AUKUS and its safeguards in all aspects under the NPT; and restoration of the sovereign equality of Member States in the IAEA.

The Board of Governors meeting is closed to the press. 

Director General Rafael Mariano Grossi will open the meeting with an introductory statement, which will be released to journalists after delivery and posted on the IAEA website.  

Press Conference 

Director General Grossi is expected to hold a press conference at 12:30 CET on Wednesday, 19 November, in the Press Room of the M building. 

A live video stream of the press conference will be available. The IAEA will provide a media package of the video footage of the press conference and the Director General’s opening statement and will make photos available on Flickr.  

Photo Opportunity 

There will be a photo opportunity with the IAEA Director General and the Chair of the Board, Ambassador Ian David Grainge Biggs of Australia, before the start of the Board meeting, on 19 November at 10:00 CET in Board Room C, in the C building in the VIC. 

Press Working Area 

The Press Room on the M-Building’s ground floor will be available as a press working area, starting from 9:00 CET on 19 November. 

Accreditation

All journalists interested in covering the meeting in person – including those with permanent accreditation – are requested to inform the IAEA Press Office of their plans. Journalists without permanent accreditation must send copies of their passport and press ID to the IAEA Press Office by 14:00 CET on Tuesday, 18 November. 

We encourage those journalists who do not yet have permanent accreditation to request it at UNIS Vienna

Please plan your arrival to allow sufficient time to pass through the VIC security check. 

To keep abreast of the IAEA’s latest developments, follow the IAEA on Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, X and Weibo.

Related resources

IAEA Donates Advanced Mammography Unit to Expand Breast Cancer Screening in the Amazon

Source: International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) –

The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) has donated a state-of-the-art digital mammography unit to the João de Barros Barreto University Hospital in Belém, Brazil, under the IAEA’s Rays of Hope initiative. The donation, which expands access to breast cancer screening and diagnosis in the Amazon region, was handed over on the sidelines of the 2025 United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP30), highlighting the Agency’s commitment to strengthen resilience of health systems amid growing challenges.

The new equipment will raise the hospital’s capacity to perform examinations for over 2000 women per year in Belém and across the Amazon region. Featuring advanced digital imaging technology, the mammography unit will enhance the accuracy and speed of breast cancer detection.

Belem, , widely known as the gateway to the Amazon, serves as a vital hub for healthcare in northern Brazil. Spread across a vast geographical area, cancer care in the Amazon is challenging due to the remoteness of many communities and the concentration of health services in a few urban centres. Strengthening health systems in this region is difficult due to weak infrastructure, training needs and logistical barriers, which make access to timely diagnosis and treatment difficult for many patients.

The João de Barros Barreto University Hospital is a publicly funded institution that provides free healthcare services, while also serving as a centre for medical education, research, and training of health sciences students. The donation ceremony brought together IAEA staff, hospital representatives, and officials from the Brazilian National Nuclear Energy Commission (CNEN) to mark the handover of the new digital mammography unit.

Breast cancer is the most common cancer among women in Brazil. According to the National Cancer Institute, an estimated 73,610 new cases are expected in 2025, with an incidence rate of 66.5 per 100,000 women. Despite progress in early detection and treatment, breast cancer remains a leading cause of cancer-related deaths in the country, especially in underserved areas such as the Amazon. Expanding screening and diagnostic capacity is key to reducing mortality and improving women’s health outcomes.

Today’s donation builds on continuing IAEA support to expand breast cancer screening across the Amazon Basin. In 2023, under Rays of Hope, the Agency helped install mobile mammography systems on vessels operating along the Amazon River, bringing essential diagnostic services to remote and hard-to-reach communities.

“Through Rays of Hope, the IAEA supports countries like Brazil in strengthening sustainable, resilient health systems that protect women’s health and reduce inequalities, even in the most remote areas of the Amazon,” said Raul Ramirez Garcia, Section Head of the Division for Latin America and the Caribbean at the IAEA, at the event.

“The arrival of this mammography unit marks an important step forward for women’s health in the Amazon region,” said Regina Feio Barroso, Superintendent of the João de Barros Barreto University Hospital. “Mammography is essential for the early diagnosis and success of breast cancer treatment, and this equipment will expand access to high-quality, equitable, and compassionate care in our hospital”.

The IAEA’s Rays of Hope initiative was launched in 2022 to expand access to life-saving cancer diagnosis and treatment in low- and middle-income countries. To date, over 90 countries have requested support and more than €90 million has been mobilized by donors and partners for the initiative. In Brazil, the IAEA continues to work closely with national and regional partners to strengthen capacities in radiology, nuclear medicine, and radiotherapy. 

IAEA Mission Recognizes Uganda’s Commitment to Improve Radiation Safety

Source: International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) –

During the IRRS mission to Uganda, personnel are scanned after an inspection at the Interim Radioactive Sources Management Facility in Mpoma. (Photo: Atomic Energy Council)

An International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) team of experts has commended Uganda for its commitment to the continuous improvement of radiation safety, as reflected in its developing legal and regulatory frameworks. 

The IAEA Integrated Regulatory Review Service (IRRS) mission, which concluded on 12 November, was conducted at the request of the Government of Uganda and hosted by the Atomic Energy Council (AEC). The IRRS team also encouraged further enhancements, including the development of a national policy and strategy for safety to align more closely with IAEA safety standards.

Uganda does not have any nuclear power plants but uses radiation sources in medical and industrial applications. Uganda is one of more than 20 countries considering introducing nuclear power to diversify its energy mix. The East African country is also considering building a research reactor. 

The 10-day IRRS mission, which began on 3 November, covered all facilities, activities and exposure situations. IRRS missions are designed to strengthen the effectiveness of the national nuclear and radiation safety regulatory infrastructure, based on IAEA safety standards and international good practices, while recognizing the responsibility of each country to ensure nuclear and radiation safety.

The IRRS team – comprising 10 regulatory experts from 10 countries, as well as 2 IAEA staff members – conducted interviews and discussions with AEC staff. Members of the IRRS team also visited the AEC Interim Radioactive Sources Management Facility in Mpoma, as well as two facilities with radiation sources in Kampala – an industrial facility, Coca Cola Beverages Uganda Limited, and a medical facility, Sir Albert Cook Medical Centre.

“Uganda has continuously developed the regulatory framework for radiation protection and safety in line with the IAEA safety standards, while also increasing the number of competent staff at the AEC,” said Ritva Bly, the IRRS team leader and Principal Advisor at the Radiation and Nuclear Safety Authority of Finland. “The Government of Uganda together with AEC should continue to make efforts to improve further, as set out in the mission report, while also taking into account the intention to develop a nuclear power programme.” 

The team identified good performances, including:

  • Stakeholder mapping to ensure effective communication with stakeholders;
  • Awareness raising activities for staff to reinforce the AEC’s mandate, mission, vision and values;
  • Recording GPS coordinates of facilities in order to support future navigation, geomapping and inspection planning; and
  • Providing guides to support operators in developing radiation protection programmes. 

The team also provided recommendations and suggestions to help Uganda enhance its regulatory framework for radiation safety, including to:

  • Establish a national policy and strategy for safety, as well as for the management of radioactive waste;
  • Ensure clear allocation of responsibilities for safety within the governmental, legal and regulatory framework for safety and make provisions for the effective coordination of regulatory functions;
  • Further develop the application of the graded approach to all regulatory functions; and
  • Continue promulgating regulations on radiation protection and safety that are aligned with IAEA safety standards and proceed to further develop appropriate guides for implementation.

“The IRRS mission has provided Uganda with a valuable opportunity to benchmark our regulatory framework against global standards,” said Noah Deogratias Luwalira, AEC Secretary and Chief Executive Officer. “We are encouraged by the recognition of the progress we have made and are equally committed to addressing the areas identified for improvement to ensure that Uganda’s regulatory system remains strong, effective and in full alignment with IAEA safety standards.”

“As Uganda advances towards nuclear power, our foremost responsibility remains protection of people and the environment from harmful effects of ionizing radiation,” said Obwoya Kinyera Sam, AEC Chairperson. “We have embraced the IRRS recommendations as a roadmap for strengthening our capacity and effectiveness as a regulator in the nuclear industry.”

IAEA Safety Standards

The IAEA Safety Standards provide a robust framework of fundamental principles, requirements and guidance to ensure safety. They reflect an international consensus and serve as a global reference for protecting people and the environment from the harmful effects of ionizing radiation.