OECD Nuclear Energy Agency / L'Agence pour l'énergie nucléaire OECD-OCDE

 

 

 


NEA press room

Press kit

About the NEA

The Nuclear Energy Agency (NEA) is a specialised agency within the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), an intergovernmental organisation of industrialised countries, based in Paris, France. More... (pdf, 590 kb) Version française

Committee structure, HTML format

Secretariat structure, HTML format

Director-General: Mr. Luis Echávarri
Short biography Version française
Photo (low-resolution, jpg format 45 kb)
Other photos of Mr. Echávarri (at suitable resolution for publication) are available on request. Contact Karen Daifuku for details.

Deputy Director-General: Ms. Janice Dunn Lee
Short biography Version française
Photos of Ms. Dunn Lee (at suitable resolution for publication) are available on request. Contact Karen Daifuku for details.

NEA member country profiles

About the NEA

The Nuclear Energy Agency (NEA) is a specialised agency within the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), an intergovernmental organisation of industrialised countries, based in Paris, France.

The NEA mission

The mission of the NEA is to assist its member countries in maintaining and further developing, through international co-operation, the scientific, technological and legal bases required for the safe, environmentally friendly and economical use of nuclear energy for peaceful purposes. To achieve this, the NEA works as: a forum for sharing information and experience and promoting international co-operation; a centre of excellence which helps member countries to pool and maintain their technical expertise; a vehicle for facilitating policy analyses and developing consensus based on its technical work.

The NEA's current membership consists of 28 countries, in Europe, North America and the Asia-Pacific region:

 Australia

 France

 Japan

 Slovak Republic

 Austria

Germany Germany

 Korea

 Spain

Belgium

 Greece

 Luxembourg

 Sweden

 Canada  Hungary  Mexico  Switzerland

 Czech Republic

 Iceland

 Netherlands

 Turkey

 Denmark

 Ireland

 Norway

 United Kingdom

 Finland

 Italy

 Portugal

United States

Together they account for approximately 85% of the world's installed nuclear capacity. Nuclear power accounts for almost a quarter of the electricity produced in NEA member countries. The NEA works closely with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) in Vienna - a specialised agency of the United Nations - and with the European Commission in Brussels. Within the OECD, there is close co-ordination with the International Energy Agency and the Environment Directorate, as well as contacts with other directorates, as appropriate.

Staff and budget

The NEA has a staff of 69. The annual budget for the Main Secretariat is about 10.2 million euros and that of the Data Bank about 2.8 million euros.

NEA areas of work

Nuclear safety and regulation

Nuclear energy development

Radioactive waste management

Radiological protection and public health

Nuclear law and liability

Nuclear science

The Data Bank

Information and communication

NEA strengths

The NEA is the only intergovernmental nuclear energy organisation which brings together developed countries of North America, Europe and the Asia-Pacific region in a small, non-political forum with a relatively narrow, technical focus.

  • NEA membership represents much of the world's best nuclear expertise.

  • NEA scientific and technical work is in the forefront of knowledge and is known for its depth.

  • The NEA publishes consensus positions on key issues, providing member countries with credible references.

  • The NEA is cost-effective. It operates with a small staff, relying on member country experts, and provides significant added value.

  • The NEA's system of standing technical committees enables the Agency to be flexible and responsive.

  • NEA joint projects and information exchange programmes enable interested members and non-members to join forces in carrying out research or scientific intercomparison exercises on a cost-sharing basis.

  • The NEA, as part of a larger multi-disciplinary organisation, is uniquely placed to address nuclear energy in the context of broader cross-cutting issues such as sustainable development.
NEA committee structure

The NEA Secretariat serves seven specialised standing technical committees under the leadership of the Steering Committee for Nuclear Energy - the governing body of the NEA - which reports directly to the OECD Council.

The standing technical committees, representing each of the seven major areas of the Agency's programme, are comprised of member country experts who are both contributors to the programme of work and beneficiaries of its results. The approach is highly cost-efficient as it enables the Agency to pursue an ambitious programme with a relatively small staff that co-ordinates the work. The substantive value of the standing technical committees arises from the numerous important functions they perform, including:

  • providing a forum for in-depth exchanges of technical and programmatic information;

  • stimulating development of useful information by initiating and carrying out co-operation/research on key problems;

  • developing common positions, including "consensus opinions", on technical and policy issues;

  • identifying areas where further work is needed and ensuring that NEA activities respond to real needs;

  • organising joint projects to enable interested countries to carry out research on particular issues on a cost-sharing basis.

Related links and publications

NEA Annual Report 2007 Version française

NEA Annual Report 2006 Version française

NEA Annual Report 2005 Version française

NEA Annual Report 2004 Version française

NEA Annual Report 2003 Version française

NEA Annual Report 2002 Version française

NEA Annual Report 2001 Version française

NEA Annual Report, 2000 Version française

Strategic plan Version française

NEA Statute Statuts de l’Agence de l’OCDE pour l’énergie nucléaire

About the OECD

Last updated: 25 April 2008

 
 

 

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