English version.
German version.
The NEA invited 17 young professionals under the age of 30, representing 14 countries at the Roadmaps to New Nuclear 2024 conference.
The report builds on the Country-Specific Safety Culture Forum organised in Tokyo in December 2023.
A healthy safety culture has long been considered essential to maintaining high levels of nuclear safety. Although safety goals across countries are similar, the operational realities vary due to a r...
Country-specific Safety Culture Forum (CSSCF) Japan was initiated in late 2022, with the Nuclear Energy Agency (NEA), World Association of Nuclear Operators (WANO), the Federation of Electric Power C...
The COVID-19 pandemic was a global crisis of exceptional impact and duration that tested the ability of organisations and people to adapt to rapidly changing conditions and to learn and improve in re...
Members of the NEA Working Group on Leadership and Safety Culture (WGLSC) discussed ongoing activities at a meeting in Budapest.
One of the many lessons learnt about nuclear safety over the years has been that human aspects of nuclear safety are as important as any technical issue that may arise. The international nuclear comm...
The NEA established the Country-Specific Safety Culture Forum (CSSCF) to examine how nuclear safety culture can be influenced by the national cultural context of a country operating nuclear facilitie...