- Our
belief that sustainability must be the guiding principle of global development
– requiring worldwide policies that meet the needs and aspirations of
the present generation without compromising the opportunity of future
generations to fulfil their needs and aspirations;
- Our
confidence that nuclear power is a ‘sustainable development’ technology
because its fuel will be available for multiple centuries, its safety
record is superior among major energy sources, its consumption causes
virtually no pollution, its use preserves valuable fossil resources
for future generations, its costs are competitive and still declining,
and its waste can be securely managed over the long-term;
- Our
conviction that nuclear technology is a unique and indispensable tool
of sustainable global development –
- Unparalleled
in its capacity to generate electricity cleanly, safely and on a large
scale for a rapidly expanding world population whose future depends
on the availability of environmentally sound energy resources; and
- Highly
beneficial and cost-effective in worldwide efforts to promote agricultural
productivity, eradicate virulent pests, protect livestock health,
preserve food, develop water resources, enhance human nutrition, improve
medical diagnosis and treatment, and advance environmental science;
- Our
recognition that nuclear science is proving equally valuable in supporting
industrial societies and in helping the world’s poorest countries to
advance;
- Our
keen awareness of the need to strengthen and sustain public confidence,
both in the reliability of nuclear technology and in the people and
institutions responsible for using it;
- Our
commitment to ensuring that nuclear technology is used safely and peacefully;
- Our
resolve to prevent and expose unsafe or illicit practices regarding
nuclear material and to use all necessary precautions to protect individuals,
society and the environment from any harmful radiological effects arising
from nuclear material during use, storage, transport and waste disposal;
- Our
adherence to the principle and practice of transparency regarding all
types of civil nuclear activity, insofar as there exists a demonstrable
public interest in the availability of such information and consistent
with the public interest in protecting:
- Commercially
valuable knowledge; and
- The
confidentiality integral to full and candid participation in voluntary
systems of review and exchange designed to enhance and maintain
nuclear safety;
- Our
strong support for the work performed –
- By
governments, through the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA),
to promulgate nuclear safety standards for the worldwide nuclear industry
and to ensure that there has been no spread of nuclear weapons arising
from the civil nuclear fuel cycle; and
- In
industry, through the World Association of Nuclear Operators (WANO),
to develop and maintain, using a comprehensive system of technical
exchange and operational peer review, a rigorous safety culture at
nuclear facilities worldwide;
- Our
individual and common responsibility to uphold respective international
legal commitments embodied in –
- The
IAEA statute; safeguards agreements concluded pursuant to the Treaty
on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons; and regional and bilateral
accords providing for IAEA verification;
- The
Convention on Nuclear Safety; the Convention on the Physical Protection
of Nuclear Material; the Convention on Early Notification of a Nuclear
Accident; the Convention on Assistance in the Case of Nuclear Accident
or Radiological Emergency; the Convention on the Prevention of Marine
Pollution by Dumping of Wastes and Other Matter; and the Joint Convention
on the Safety of Spent Fuel Management and the Safety of Radioactive
Waste Management; and
- Other
international treaties and conventions that contribute to ensuring
the safe and peaceful use of nuclear technology throughout the world;
- Our
intention to cooperate, in a spirit of partnership, with those engaged
in the research, development and operation of other technologies that
yield energy without adverse effect on the biosphere; and
- Our
determination to promote, as a matter of ethical principle and urgent
public need, an ongoing debate on energy resources that focuses citizens
and governments alike on the real choices facing humankind and on the
severe dangers – for the prospects of global development and for the
biosphere – if decision-making on this fundamental policy is shaped
by ideology and myth rather than by science and facts.
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