OREANDA-NEWS. The IAEA and the World Association of Nuclear Operators (WANO) can maximize safety benefits, increase efficiency and avoid conflicint advice by increasing cooperation on safety peer review services they offer to nuclear operators, said several delegates at this week’s 7th Review Meeting of the Contracting Parties of the Convention on Nuclear Safety.

“Sharing resources and avoiding duplication of effort is an important enabler of more effective peer review services and increased safety,” said Juan Carlos Lentijo, IAEA Deputy Director General and Head of the Department of Nuclear Safety and Security.

Increasing the efficiency of the reviews will be particularly important in anticipation of the increasing number of nuclear facilities worldwide in coming decades, said WANO Chairman Jacques Regaldo. WANO is a non-profit organization established in 1989 by the world’s nuclear power operators to exchange safety knowledge and operating experience among operators of commercial nuclear power plants.

“By 2030, half of the nuclear power reactors will be based in Asia, and we will have many newcomers to nuclear power,” he said. “There is real value for WANO to work together with the IAEA and others to help maximize the safety and reliability of nuclear power plants.”

At a side event organized by WANO and the IAEA on the margins of the Review Meeting, representatives from the two organizations agreed to enhance their cooperation to strengthen operational safety globally and to support countries that are planning or considering launching nuclear power programmes.

“Our activities are complementary in nature and are bound by a common interest in keeping nuclear energy safe,” said Greg Rzentkowski, Director of Nuclear Installation Safety at the IAEA. “For example, we both respond to existing and emerging challenges such as the need for harmonized approaches to strong safety culture implementation for both operators and regulators as well as support to countries new to nuclear power.”