Having received almost half the required funding for renovating the IAEA’s unique nuclear science and technology laboratories, Director General Rafael Mariano Grossi thanked the countries that have contributed to the project and asked for more support at an event held today on the margins of the IAEA’s regular Board of Governors meeting.
“The Nuclear Applications Laboratories in Seibersdorf are the unsung heroes of IAEA efforts to deliver the benefits of peaceful nuclear technologies to its 173 Member States,” he said. “They provide important support to Member States in addressing challenges with climate change and the environment.”
Mr Grossi recognized the five countries that have provided a total of €8.1 million in extrabudgetary contributions to this final phase of the Renovation of the Nuclear Applications Laboratories (ReNuAL) initiative: Japan, Russia, Switzerland, the United Kingdom and the United States. The event featured the accomplishments of the project so far and outlined the next steps in the final phase, informally referred to as ReNuAL2.
“With this contribution, Russia shows its commitment to ensuring the peaceful uses of nuclear technologies continue to be available for all Member States through the IAEA’s laboratories in Seibersdorf,” said Mikhail Ulyanov, Ambassador and Permanent Representative of Russia to the International Organizations in Vienna.