The 60th annual regular session of the IAEA General Conference is scheduled to take place in Vienna, Austria on 26-30 September, BelTA learned from Liliya Dulinets, Head of the International Cooperation, Personnel Training, and Information Office of the Nuclear Energy Department of the Belarusian Energy Ministry.
A Belarusian delegation led by Deputy Energy Minister Mikhail Mikhadyuk will take part in the work of the IAEA General Conference. The delegation will include representatives of the Nuclear Energy Department of the Energy Ministry, the Nuclear and Radiation Safety Department of the Emergencies Ministry, the state enterprise Belarusian Nuclear Power Plant, the United Energy and Nuclear Research Institute Sosny, the National Science and Practice Center for Radiation Medicine and Human Ecology, and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Members of the delegation are expected to attend events of the IAEA General Conference and meet with foreign colleagues.
An exposition of the Belarusian nuclear power plant will be arranged in the IAEA headquarters in the Vienna International Center on the sidelines of the conference. The exposition will highlight progress in building the Belarusian nuclear power plant, the current state of affairs at the construction site, personnel training for the nuclear power plant, and the operation of nuclear energy information centers in Minsk and Ostrovets.
The session of the IAEA General Conference will herald the beginning of a number of events meant to celebrate the 60th anniversary of the establishment of the International Atomic Energy Agency in 2016-2017. A scientific forum will be arranged on the sidelines of the conference on 28-29 September to discuss the use of nuclear technologies for reaching sustainable development goals.
Belarus is a founding member of the International Atomic Energy Agency and takes an active part in the implementation of projects, which are carried out under the IAEA aegis. Since its inception the IAEA has been working to help its member states use nuclear science and technologies peacefully, safely, and reliably in addition to counteracting the spread of nuclear weapons. The IAEA’s work is constantly improved to match needs of the member states and the Atoms for Peace and Development mandate.