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WEI HUANG
Director of NEPIK, IAEA
The IAEA Programme on Nuclear Energy
IAEA Administration
2
DDG MT
MP-5
DDG NE
MP-1
DDG MT
MP-5
DDG NA
MP-2
DDG NS
MP-3
DDG TC
MP-6
DDG SG
MP-4
DDG NE
MP-1
Departments (MP1-3)
3
NE-MP1
NA-MP2
NS-MP3
PMO,OIOS,OLA,OPIC
DGOC
Nuclear Power;
Nuclear Fuel Cycle;
Nuclear knowledge
Management and Capacity
building
Joint FAO/IAEA;
Human Health;
Physical & chemical Science;
Environment Labs;
Nuclear Security;
Nuclear Installation Safety;
Radiation, Transport and
Waste Safety
Departments(MP4-6)
4
NE-MP4 NS-MP5 TC-MP6
Asia and Pacific;
Africa;
Latin America;
Europe;
PACT;
Support & Coordination;
Operations A
Operations B
Operations C;
Information management;
Concepts and Planning;
Technical and Science
Service;
Budget and Finance
General Service
Conference and
Document Service
Human Resource
Information Technology
5
“It is each country’s
sovereign decision
whether to add nuclear
power to its energy mix.
For those who choose to
do so, the IAEA role is to
help them build the
expertise to use nuclear
power safely, securely,
and sustainably.”
Y. Amano, IAEA DG
Basic Principle
6
Assist MSs considering the
introduction of nuclear power
programmes in planning and
building infrastructures;
Provide integrated support to MSs
with existing nuclear power
programmes to plan expansion and
to improve performance;
Help MSs to build capacity in
nuclear science, energy system
analysis, technology evaluations,
knowledge management and long-
term planning;
Support innovation in all areas of
nuclear power;
Act as objective and reliable
resource of nuclear information;
Facilitate and assist international
research and development
collaboration.
Nuclear Energy Department
Assist newcomers
Provide support for improved operating
performance and safe, secure, efficient and
reliable long-term operation
Provide collaborative frameworks to benefit
from advances in water-cooled reactor
technology, to facilitate development of fast
reactors and gas-cooled reactors, and to
expand non-electric applications
Nuclear Power service
7
Global Nuclear Power-PRIS
8
Support to NPP operators
9
Life extension
Maintenance and outage management
NPP I&C
Technology Innovation & Development
10
Technology Innovation & Development
11
Assistance to Newcomers
12
13
Milestone Approach Scheme
14
International Project on Innovative Nuclear Reactors and Fuel Cycles(INPRO)
Widely recognized need to ensure nuclear energy
development in a sustainable manner leads to the
establishment of INPRO in 2000 as IAEA flagship
project;
With global view of nuclear energy systems, INPRO
promotes technical and institutional innovations in
nuclear energy through international cooperation which
contributes to sustainable nuclear energy;
Component: Methodology, collaborative projects and
Dialogue Forum
Considerable progress over 16 years, with now 41
members representing 85% of world’s GDP and 75%
population.
15
Holistic Nature of NESA
Nuclear Energy System
Assessment (NESA) using the
INPRO methodology covers:
Innovative and evolutionary
designs of all reactor types
and Nuclear Fuel Cycle
facilities.
Cover all components (or
facilities) of a Nuclear
Energy System (no matter
where located).
Nuclear Fuel Cycle Service
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Increase sustainable
uranium production;
Improve nuclear fuel
performance and safety;
Properly manage spent
fuel through long term
storage and/or
reprocessing and
recycling; and
Develop materials, fuels
and fuel cycles for new,
innovative nuclear
reactors.
17
Nuclear Fuel Service
HEU repatriated
Fuel R&D
Increase sustainable uranium
production, improve nuclear fuel
performance, properly manage
spent fuel through long-term
storage, reprocessing and recycling,
and develop new fuels and fuel
cycles for innovative nuclear
reactors.
Red Book
LEU Bank
Waste Technology/Decommissioning
• Assisting to develop consistent policies and
related strategies;
• Assisting with the predisposal and disposal
stages of waste management and to manage
disused sealed radioactive sources;
• Assisting with planning and implementing
decommissioning strategies and projects; and
• Supporting cleaning-up of legacy waste and
environmental remediation actions of
radiologically contaminated sites.
19
Spent fuel and Waste Disposal
SF Storage Waste Disposal
20
Research Reactors
754 (RRs) (including Critical &
Sub-critical facilities) in 67 MSs;
243 still in operation in 55 MSs
Assist Member States in
every step of the
research reactor life
cycle, including in the
development of the
national nuclear
infrastructure needed to
support safe and secure
construction and
operation, as well as
effective utilization of
the facilities.
21
Research Reactors
Internet Reactor Lab(IRL)
International Centre based on
Research Reactor (ICERR).
22
Responsible for providing support to the member
states in the field of nuclear economics and
energy system planning, sustainable development
issues, information management and
dissemination, and nuclear knowledge
management in a coordinated manner.
Capacity Building and Knowledge Management Service
23
Backgroundo One of priorities in 2016-2017 Program and Budget
Cycle;
o Approved in Sept. 2015 in General Conference;
o Function since Mar. 2016.
PurposeEffective and comprehensive engagement with various
relevant stakeholder in energy planning, nuclear
information and nuclear management in a coordinated
and integrated manner to ensure a timely result-based
response to Member States’ needs and overall IAEA
objectives.
Staff: 85 professional and general service.
NEPIK:Division of Planning, Information and Knowledge
Management, Department of Nuclear Energy
24
NEPIK ADMINISTRATION TEAM
NEPIK DIRECTOR
MR. W.HUANG
SH-PESS
MR.D. SHROPSHIRE
UH-3E
MS.A. VAN HEEK
UH-PCB
MR.A.JALA
SH-NIS
MR.D.SAVIC
INIS COORDINATOR
MR.Z.HAKOPOV
LIBRARY COORDINATOR
MS.A.Andrea
SH-NKM
MR.J. DE GROSBOIS
IT
Coordinator
25
MP 1.3 Budget(2016)
Sub-program / Program2016
2015 Budget Estimates at
2015 prices
Variance over 2015
EUR %
1.3.1 Energy Modelling, Data and
Capacity Building
↓ 1 873 556 1 800 547 (73 009) (3.9%)
1.3.2 Energy Economy
Environment (3E) Analysis 1 368 685 1 509 051 14 366 10.3%
1.3.3 Nuclear Knowledge
Management (NKM)
2 230 513 2 280 449 49 936 2.2%
1.3.4 Nuclear Information 4 963 322 4 634 384 (328 938) (6.6%)
1.3 Capacity Building and
Nuclear Knowledge for
Sustainable Energy
Development Total
10 436 076 10 224 431 (211 645) (2.0%)
26
Objective
To strengthen Member State capacities to elaborate
sustainable energy strategies; to conduct studies for
energy and electricity system planning, energy
investment planning and energy environment policy
formulation; and to improve Member States'
understanding of nuclear technology's compatibility
with national sustainable development objectives and
its possible contributions to SDGs;
To increase Member State capacities to establish,
manage and utilize their nuclear knowledge base
and to provide knowledge management and nuclear
education related guidance, services and assistance.
To procure, preserve and provide printed and
electronic information in the area of nuclear
science and technology to the IAEA Secretariat and
Member States.
27
Outputs
Publications(NE series, Non-NE series);Modeling Tools;
Information Service;
Capacity building(Expert Missions, Assist Visit, NEM/NKM School, Training courses, Workshops…);
Networking(INMA, INLN, Regional
Networks.);
Meetings(TM,CS, and others);
CRPs(Coordinated Research Projects);
NKM TWG;
International Conferences (COP22,IPCC…).
Publications
Analysis for Sustainable Energy Development
29
Global Nuclear Power Projection
377 390417
382,9431
598
898
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
800
900
1000
2015 2020 2030 2050
GW
(e)
Year
low high
31
MAED
WASP
MESSAGE
FINPLAN
SIMPACTS
ISED
Model for the Analysis of Energy Demand
Wien Automatic System Planning Package
Model for Energy Supply System Alternatives and their General Environmental impacts
Financial Analysis of Electric Sector Expansion Plans
Simplified Approach for Estimating Impacts of Electricity
Generation
Indicators for Sustainable Energy Development
Analytical Models
IAEA & SDGs
32
Role in Achieving SDGs
33
“Many countries expect nuclear power to play an important
role in their energy mix in the coming decades. It is one of the
lowest emitters of carbon dioxide among energy sources,
considering emissions through the entire lifecycle.”
—IAEA Director General Y. Amano
34
Nuclear Information: INIS
•Established in 1971. 154
members – 130 MS & 24
int. organizations
•Over 3.8 million
bibliographic records &
half a million full-texts
•136,221 records added
to the INIS repository in
2015
•2013: 50,000
searches and 3,000
downloads a month
•1.5 million unique
searches and over 2
million document
downloads
35
Nuclear Information:Library
14,000 visitors
annually;
20,000 loans;
Electronic access to
50,000 journals。
IAEA support in NKMSIA
EA
Su
pp
ort
IAE
A S
up
po
rt
Nuclear Education
R&D
Design, Manufacturing, Construction
Operation & Maintenance
Refurbishment
Decommissioning
36
NKMS methods
37
Networks NEM and NKM Schools KM Asist visits
E-learning Digital Repositories
STAR-NETUNENE
NTEC
ENEN
BNEN
Education
38
An opportunity to share
experiences and lessons learned
in the nuclear sector related to
managing nuclear knowledge
and to share practical
approaches to KM that can be
used at the organizational,
national, and international levels
to develop and maintain a strong
nuclear knowledge base.
Various issues related to
specific human competencies,
methodological or process
knowledge and technology-
related knowledge that are
needed to support the safe and
sustainable application of
nuclear technology will be
addressed.
39
"We will use the anniversary to highlight
the IAEA's significant contribution to
global peace, security and
development,"DG Amano