Int'l organizations to re-assess nuclear emergency response
International organizations to re-assess nuclear
emergency response framework
Vienna, 25 March 2011
“The CTBTO stands ready to further cooperate with and provide expert advice to the IAEA and other relevant organizations and for its global monitoring system to continue contributing to disaster prevention and mitigation,” the Executive Secretary of the Preparatory Commission for the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Organization (CTBTO) Tibor Tóth said today.
He made this
pledge during a video conference called by United Nations
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to re-examine the
international emergency response framework in case of
nuclear accidents. In a statement Among the participating
organizations were the International Atomic Energy Agency
(IAEA), the World Meteorological Organization (WMO), the UN
Development Programme (UNDP), the World Health Organization
(WHO) and the UN Office for Disarmament Affairs (UNODA).
CTBTO further improves data sharing with Member
States Earlier in the morning, the CTBTO briefed its
Member States on its latest findings. Representatives of the
IAEA, WHO and WMO were also present. Following the nuclear
accident at the Fukushima power plant, the CTBTO has been
providing information on the detection of radioactive
isotopes at monitoring stations worldwide. The CTBTO has
also provided information on the predicted global dispersion
of radioactive material. With information made available by
the IAEA since yesterday on the release level of radioactive
substances at the Fukushima power plant – the so-called
source term – CTBTO experts are now able to also provide
quantitative measurements as part of its global dispersion
predictions.
Each CTBTO Member States are granted equal
access to all monitoring data and analysis bulletins.
Currently, 120 Member States and 1200 scientific and expert
institutions make use of this opportunity, including
radiation protection institutions. As of today, a number of
interactive tools were added for States and institutions to
obtain detailed information on the dispersion of radioactive
materials. Global network to detect nuclear
explosions The CTBTO is building a global verification
system Nearly 270 monitoring stations,
of which 63 are radionuclide sensors, are already
operational and send data to the International Data Centre
in Vienna, Austria, for processing and analysis. While the
system is designed to detect nuclear blasts, it also picks
up a vast amount of data that could be used for civil and
scientific purposes ENDS