The Occupational Radiation Protection Appraisal (ORPAS) mission, which took place in March 2025, evaluated the regulatory and practical implementation of the protection arrangements in Kenya. It was conducted at the request of the government of Kenya and hosted by the Kenya Nuclear Regulatory Authority (KNRA) in the capital Nairobi.
The team comprised eight international experts from Botswana, Burkina Faso, Ghana, Namibia, Morocco, Senegal, the United Republic of Tanzania and Zimbabwe, as well as two from the IAEA. They carried out interviews with KNRA representatives and visited hospitals, laboratories and industrial facilities in Nairobi, including a nuclear medicine department, dosimetry laboratory and non-destructive testing laboratory.
“These visits offered the team a firsthand look at how radiation protection measures are implemented across different sectors,” said Joseph Amoako, Associate Professor of Health Physics at the School of Nuclear and Allied Sciences-University of Ghana and mission team leader, adding that, ‘’the preparation and arrangements put in place before we arrived ensured a successful mission.”
Kenya, an IAEA member country since 1965, established the KNRA in 2019 to strengthen the national regulatory framework for nuclear and radiation safety was well as nuclear security. Cooperation with the IAEA has seen the development of a new research reactor programme and advancement in its infrastructure for planned nuclear power.