Nuclear security is defined in the Environment Code as comprising “nuclear safety, radiation protection, prevention and combating of malicious acts and civil protection actions in the event of an accident”. Nuclear safety is “the set of technical provisions and organisational measures – related to the design, con‑ struction, operation, shutdown and decommissioning of Basic Nuclear Installations (BNIs), as well as the transport of radioactive substances – which are adopted with a view to pre‑ venting accidents or limiting their effects”. Radiation protection is defined as “protection against ionising radiation, that is the set of rules, procedures and means of prevention and surveillance aimed at preventing or mitigating the direct or indirect harmful effects of ionising radiation on individuals, including in situations of environmental contamination”. Nuclear safety and radiation protection obey principles and approaches that have been put in place progressively and continually enhanced by a process of Operating Experience Feedback (OEF). The basic guiding principles are advocated internationally by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). In France, they are included in the Constitution or enacted in law, as well as now figuring in European Directives. In France, the regulation and oversight of the nuclear safety and radiation protection of civil nuclear activities is – until 31 December 2024 – the responsibility of the French Nuclear Safety Authority (ASN), an independent administrative Authority, together with Parliament and the other State players, within the Government and the offices of the Prefects. This regulation, which covers related areas such as chronic pollution of all types emitted by certain nuclear activities, is based on expert technical analysis and assessment. Act 2024-450 of 21 May 2024, relative to the organisation of nuclear safety and radiation protection governance, in order to address the challenges of the nuclear industry’s renewal, created an independent civil nuclear safety and radiation protection Authority: the Authority for Nuclear Safety and Radiation Protection (ASNR), combining the activities of the Nuclear Safety Authority (ASN) and a large part of those of the Institute for Radiation Protection and Nuclear Safety (IRSN). At State level, the prevention of and fight against malicious acts which could affect nuclear materials, their installations and their transportation are the responsibility of the Ministry for Ecology, Biodiversity, Forests, the Sea and Fisheries, which can draw on the services on the High Official for Defence and Security (HFDS). Although clearly separate, the two fields of nuclear safety and the prevention of malicious acts are inextricably linked and the authorities responsible cooperate closely. 1 The principles of nuclear safety and radiation protection 1.1 Fundamental principles Nuclear activities must be carried out in compliance with the fundamental principles contained in the legislative texts or international standards. This primarily concerns: ∙at the national level, the principles enshrined in the Environment Charter, which is part of the Constitution, and in the various codes (Environment Code, Labour Code, Public Health Code); ∙at the European level, rules defined by Directives establishing a community framework for the safety of nuclear facilities and for the responsible and safe management of spent fuel and radioactive waste; ∙at the international level, the ten fundamental safety principles defined by the IAEA (see box next page and chapter 6, point 3.1) implemented by the Convention on Nuclear Safety (see chapter 6, point 4.1), which establishes the international framework for the oversight of nuclear safety and radiation protection. These various measures of differing origins extensively overlap. They can be grouped into the eight main principles presented below. 1.1.1 The principle of licensee responsibility This principle, defined in Article 9 of the Convention on Nuclear Safety, is the first of IAEA’s fundamental safety principles. It stipulates that responsibility for the safety of nuclear activities entailing risks lies with those who undertake or perform them. It applies directly to all nuclear activities. ASN Report on the state of nuclear safety and radiation protection in France in 2024 123 The principles of nuclear safety and radiation protection and the regulation and oversight stakeholders 02 01 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 AP
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