Chapter 2 Fifth Agreement to Extend the 1987 Regional Cooperative Agreement
for Research, Development and Training related to Nuclear Science and
Technology done at Bali on 15 April 2011
Introduction
2.1
On 20 March 2012, the Fifth Agreement to Extend the 1987 Regional
Cooperative Agreement for Research, Development and Training related to Nuclear
Science and Technology done at Bali on 15 April 2011 was tabled in the
Commonwealth Parliament.
Background
2.2
The Regional Cooperative Agreement for Research, Development and
Training related to Nuclear Science and Technology for Asia and the Pacific
(RCA) is forty years old this year. This makes it the oldest regional
cooperative agreement within the International Atomic Energy Agency's (IAEA)
framework. The RCA was revised in 1987 and is now a regionally significant
intergovernmental agreement which incorporates seventeen countries in the
Asia-Pacific.[1]
2.3
The Fifth Extension Agreement extends the RCA for a further five-year
period. The Agreement entered into force generally on 31 August 2011, and will
enter into force for Australia on the date of receipt by the Director General
of the IAEA of Australia's instrument of acceptance.[2]
2.4
Australia became a Party to the 1972 RCA in 1977 and became a Party to
the 1987 RCA upon its entry into force in that year.[3]
As of 5 June 2012, six member states had accepted the extension of the RCA
agreement.[4] The 1987 RCA will
continue in force from 12 June 2012.[5]
2.5
The 1987 RCA is based on a previous agreement of the same name
negotiated in 1977. The basic principle behind the RCA is for the signatory
parties to cooperate with each other to promote research, development and
training projects in nuclear science and technology.[6]
2.6
The purpose of the 1987 update was to enhance overall coordination and
supervision of cooperative projects carried out under RCA arrangements. The
1987 RCA was extended in 1992, 1997, 2002 and 2007. RCA projects are
implemented under the auspices of the Technical Cooperation Programme
administered by the IAEA.[7]
2.7
The RCA contains a process for developing cooperative projects between
parties. Briefly, the process is as follows:
n a party wishing to
undertake a cooperative project initiates the project by submitting a proposal
to the IAEA, which will then notify all the other parties to the RCA;
n the other parties
respond if they are interested in participating in the cooperative project; and
n the project is
approved, provided two parties to the RCA in addition to the initiating party
agree to the project.[8]
2.8
Once a project has been agreed, the IAEA prepares an agreement which:
n defines the
participating parties, the project, and how it will be implemented;
n provides for adequate
health and safety measures;
n prevents military use
of any assistance provided to a party as part of the project; and
n includes a dispute
settling mechanism and a description of the liabilities of the parties.[9]
2.9
The Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation (ANSTO) is
Australia's designated point of contact for participation in the 1987 RCA.[10]
National interest summary
2.10
The 1987 RCA has been continually extended due to its usefulness in
providing a regional framework for initiating cooperative projects and
coordinated research programming between IAEA Member States in the Asia-Pacific
region.[11]
2.11
Extension of the 1987 RCA for a further five years will have important
benefits for Australia from a security, economic and political perspective. As
a regional agreement under the aegis of the IAEA, the 1987 RCA is an important
mechanism in fulfilling the technical cooperation provisions of the Treaty
on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT). Australia’s
participation helps contribute to a non-proliferation regime which has kept our
immediate neighbourhood free of nuclear weapons proliferation for the past
forty years. The 1987 RCA also allows Australia to participate in
international collaborative projects and to maintain and extend a national
capacity in cutting-edge nuclear technologies. Finally, the 1987 RCA
facilitates Australian technical and political cooperation with sixteen
regional countries in nuclear science and technology, which in turn contributes
to maintaining and improving bilateral and multilateral relationships in the
Asia-Pacific region.[12]
Reasons for Australia to take the proposed treaty action
2.12
Australia has important national interests in maintaining its participation
in the 1987 RCA.[13] Australia is a
designated member of the IAEA Board of Governors, the only such Board member
without a civil nuclear power program. Cooperation through the RCA is an
important means for Australia to share its recognised leading expertise on
civil nuclear research and technology. [14]
Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty
2.13
Agreements such as the 1987 RCA provide an important means of fulfilling
the technical cooperation provisions of the NPT. Under the NPT, non-nuclear-weapon
States Parties have forsworn nuclear weapons and must accept IAEA safeguards
for the purpose of verifying their fulfilment of NPT obligations. Continued
membership of the 1987 RCA is one way for Australia to fulfil its undertaking
to cooperate with other Parties in the peaceful uses of nuclear energy as it establishes
a framework for Parties to cooperate with each other in respect of research,
development and training projects in nuclear science and technology.[15]
2.14
The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) and Australian
Safeguards and Non-Proliferation Office (ASNO) expanded on the Agreement’s
relationship with the NPT:
The [RCA] helps us fulfil the technical cooperation
provisions within the nuclear non-proliferation treaty. There are three
pillars to the treaty. One is about non-proliferation. The second is a
commitment by countries that have nuclear weapons to disarm. The third is about
the peaceful use of nuclear energy and the cooperative aspect of that. This
particular agreement is part of that third commitment, and that is why it is
really important.
Article IV of the nuclear non-proliferation treaty provides
that all parties to that treaty have the right to develop research, production
and use of nuclear energy for peaceful purposes and are obliged to facilitate
the fullest possible exchange of equipment, material and scientific and
technological information for the peaceful use of nuclear energy. The
mechanisms for the implementation of that obligation are primarily through the
[IAEA] and instruments such as the [RCA].[16]
[The RCA] contributes to one of the three pillars that were part
of that [NPT] grand deal... One of the critical aspects of that grand deal was
to assure those who did not have nuclear weapons that they would not be
disadvantaged in the peaceful application of nuclear technologies for purposes
of—I am adding this now—radiopharmaceuticals, agriculture or environment et
cetera. So it is a part of fulfilling the grand deal, rather than specifically
that the projects and the activities under this would be targeting issues of
disarmament or non-proliferation per se.[17]
2.15
On a practical level, DFAT and ASNO explained how Australian Government
agencies assessed the various projects that might be conducted under the RCA’s
auspices, but which might contribute directly or indirectly to nuclear
proliferation:
If there was to be a project which could be of relevance to a
weapons program then we would look very seriously at whether we could
participate. If, under a project we had assessed as a whole to be of no
relevance, there was a particular activity we thought could be relevant, we
would again decline to take part in that activity. [18]
We take those issues very seriously. The safeguards act in
Australia covers issues of nuclear material transfers of a special group of
technologies called 'associated technologies', which are the most sensitive
technologies to reactor function as well as enrichment reprocessing. There are
laws and regulations around whether we are allowed to exchange those materials
or technologies or not, and they would apply. There are other mechanisms that
would deal with those specific issues to ensure that Australia's cooperation is
restricted to peaceful uses only.[19]
If there is an issue where we might have the slightest
concern we talk to ASNO [Australian Safeguards and Non-Proliferation Office] about
it before we proceed.[20]
2.16
Finally, through projects which strengthen regional regimes governing
the safety and security of radioactive materials, the 1987 RCA also assists in
preventing potentially dangerous material and technical know-how from being
utilised by terrorist organisations.[21]
Nuclear science and technology
2.17
Over the past 40 years, the successive RCAs have evolved to become an
important vehicle for Australia's cooperation with regional countries in
nuclear science and technology.[22] The 1987 RCA also helps
Australia maintain and extend its national capacity in leading-edge nuclear
technologies. Examples include medical, industrial, environmental and
agricultural technologies.[23] They have enabled
Australia to participate in mutually beneficial research and training related
to nuclear science and technology with sixteen countries in the Asia-Pacific
region. Such cooperation has had a positive flow-on effect on our bilateral
and multilateral relationships in the region, with significant political
benefits.[24]
Obligations
2.18
Australia’s obligations under the Fifth Extension Agreement derive from
the 1987 RCA. The 1987 RCA places a number of obligations on the Parties,
which are to be implemented within the framework of their national laws. In
particular, the 1987 RCA requires that the Parties:
n promote
and coordinate cooperative research, development and training projects in
nuclear science and technology through their appropriate national institutions;
n attend
meetings to consider, approve and evaluate cooperative projects and conduct
other business relating to the 1987 RCA;
n make
available the necessary scientific and technical facilities and personnel for
the implementation of cooperative projects in which the Party is participating;
n take
reasonable and appropriate steps for the acceptance of scientists, engineers or
technical experts designated by other participating governments or by the IAEA
to work at designated installations for the purpose of implementing cooperative
projects in which the Party is participating;
n submit
to the IAEA an annual report on the implementation of the portion of cooperative
projects assigned to it;
n contribute,
financially or otherwise, to the implementation of cooperative projects and
notify the IAEA annually of any such contributions;
n ensure
that the IAEA's safety standards and measures are applied to relevant
cooperative projects; and
n ensure
that any assistance provided to the Party under the 1987 RCA is used only for
peaceful purposes, in accordance with IAEA’s statute.[25]
2.19
The Fifth Extension Agreement simply serves to extend the 1987 RCA by a
further five years to 11 June 2017 and thus there are no new obligations
imposed on Australia by the Agreement.[26]
Implementation
2.20
No legislation is required to give effect to the Fifth Extension
Agreement,[27] and no changes to the
existing roles of the Commonwealth or the States and Territories will arise as
a consequence of implementing the Fifth Extension Agreement.[28]
Costs
2.21
Australia has the option of contributing financially and ‘in-kind’ to
facilitate the effective implementation of cooperative projects. Financial
contributions to project costs will be assessed on a case-by-case basis and
provided for through normal budgetary processes.[29]
2.22
Australia's contributions ‘in-kind’ are given through: the placement of
RCA and IAEA fellowship and scientific visitor awardees for study and training
in Australia; the provision of courses and experts to provide assistance to the
IAEA or to individual RCA Member States on behalf of the IAEA; and the hosting
of RCA meetings sponsored by the IAEA. These costs are met by relevant
agencies from their existing resources.[30]
Further issues
The Fukushima disaster
2.23
The Committee was interested in hearing how the on-going Fukushima
nuclear disaster that began following the earthquake and tsunami of March 2011 had
affected this treaty and its re-negotiation.
2.24
DFAT and ANSTO explained that the Fifth Agreement was simply ‘rolled
over’ and that there were no changes within the treaty text as a result of the
accident. [31]
However, this did not mean that there was no change to the international
regulatory architecture. Changes in the safety standards in the IAEA would
effectively change and update the RCA. DFAT explained:
Article IX, paragraph 1 in the agreement states: ‘In
accordance with its applicable laws and regulations, each Government Party
shall ensure that the Agency’s safety standards and measures relevant to a
co—operative project are applied to its implementation.’
If there were changes in those safety standards of the agency—and
you are aware of various activities that have gone on since Fukushima looking
at that—that would be gathered up in that particular
paragraph. So we would not need to change the RCA because it is referencing
agency safety standards, 'agency' meaning the IAEA.[32]
2.25
Despite this explanation, the Committee notes that there may have been
an opportunity missed to upgrade the agreement rather than simply ‘rolling it
over’. The Australian Conservation Foundation (ACF) argued that Australia, as
a major supplier of nuclear fuel, should have taken the opportunity to
strengthen the safety and non-proliferation aspects of the agreement following
the Fukushima accident. They stated:
I do not expect this treaty to be everything, but it should
be something more than: 'This is what we arranged last time pre-Fukushima and
we'll just roll it over.' Let us not 'just roll it over'. Let us have a genuine
look at how it can be strengthened, tightened and improved. Let us, as a
country with deep responsibilities for fuelling this industry, step up to being
a country that takes seriously our responsibility for policing and making safer
this sector.[33]
Conclusion
2.26
The RCA is a useful mechanism in providing a regional framework for
initiating cooperative projects and coordinated research between IAEA Member
States in the Asia-Pacific. Its continued operation over a forty year period
provides tangible evidence of its usefulness.
2.27
The Committee notes that the majority of the twenty projects conducted
under the RCA are medical and agricultural projects dealing with such issues as
improving cancer management with hybrid
nuclear medicine imaging and implementing best practices of food irradiation
for sanitary and phytosanitary purposes.[34]
2.28
Although the RCA’s role in the non-proliferation architecture is
limited, it does perform a role in promoting the NPT’s objectives.
Furthermore, as part of a broader regulatory architecture for nuclear
activities, it also plays a role in implementing improved standards following
events such as those that occurred at Fukushima.
2.29
Notwithstanding the concerns of the ACF, the Committee is satisfied that
the agreement should be renewed. However, on the next iteration of the
agreement some of the non-proliferation and safety issues canvassed by the ACF
could be reviewed by the agreement’s parties.
Recommendation 1 |
|
The Committee supports the Fifth Agreement to Extend the
1987 Regional Cooperative Agreement for Research, Development and Training
related to Nuclear Science and Technology done at Bali on 15 April 2011 and
recommends that binding treaty action be taken. |