UK Ambassador to the IAEA Corinne Kitsell's statement on
behalf of Australia, the UK and the US to the International
Atomic Energy Agency Board of Governors on IAEA safeguards and
AUKUS
Chair,
I take the floor on behalf of the United Kingdom, Australia, and
the United States to respond to comments made regarding
Australia's acquisition of a naval nuclear propulsion capability
through the AUKUS partnership. We are again compelled to invoke
our Right of Reply to address remarks that purposefully
mischaracterise AUKUS partners' intentions and attempt to
undermine the independence, integrity, and authority of the IAEA.
Under this item, the Board has repeatedly heard unsubstantiated
claims that ignore or misrepresent the information we have
provided in good faith, and assertions that disregard the
statements made by the Director General.
I reiterate that this matter has not been adopted as a standing
agenda item by this Board and has never enjoyed consensus
support. It is regrettable that this unnecessary item has been
added to the agenda for nearly three years, at the insistence of
one member state, when there are pressing non-proliferation
concerns requiring the Board's attention.
Director General Grossi has expressed his satisfaction with AUKUS
partners' engagement and transparency and reiterated that he will
continue to update the Board on naval nuclear propulsion as
appropriate. The AUKUS partners have continued to engage
consistently, openly, and transparently with Member States and
the Secretariat on genuine questions, including at the 2023 and
2024 NPT Preparatory Committees. Australia, the United Kingdom,
and the United States have provided updates on relevant progress
at all Board meetings since the initial AUKUS announcement in
September 2021. We will do so again at this meeting under Any
Other Business, where it remains most appropriate.
Chair,
The Director General has already provided clear answers to
questions raised today and in previous meetings, including in his
reports on Australia's naval nuclear propulsion program to the
Board:
Naval nuclear propulsion was foreseen by the drafters of the
Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT). Article
14 of the IAEA's draft Comprehensive Safeguards Agreement (CSA)
is the specific provision to support the right of states to use
nuclear material in a non-proscribed military activity, including
for naval nuclear propulsion, within the safeguards framework.
The IAEA has the clear authority, under the IAEA Statute, as
agreed by 178 Member States, to negotiate directly with Member
States on the establishment, and application, of safeguards and
verification arrangements – including those pertaining to naval
nuclear propulsion. The NPT, IAEA Statute, Australia's CSA, and
Additional Protocol provide a firm legal basis for Australia to
engage with the IAEA on the safeguards and verification approach
for this program.
The Director General has clearly stated that the Agency has “the
necessary experience to develop the arrangements related to the
use of nuclear material for naval nuclear propulsion in
accordance with the Statute and relevant safeguards agreements.”
Despite these statements, it is concerning that some states
persistently question the Director General's ability to perform
the functions vested in him by the Statute, by the relevant
safeguards agreements, and by decisions of the Board.
It is untrue that the transfer of high enriched uranium from a
nuclear-weapon State to a non-nuclear-weapon State runs counter
to the spirit of the NPT. The transfer of nuclear material at any
enrichment level to a non-nuclear-weapon State, is not prohibited
by the NPT and indeed such transfers have regularly taken place
with IAEA oversight.
Under the Article 14 arrangement, the IAEA will maintain
oversight of nuclear material. Australia's Article 14 arrangement
will include a package of robust verification measures that will
enable the IAEA to continue to meet its technical safeguards
objectives throughout the submarines' lifecycle. Once the Article
14 arrangement is developed, the Director General will transmit
it to the Board for ‘appropriate action' - as we have said many
times before. To suggest that the Board will somehow be bypassed
is categorically false.
We would also like to draw the Board's attention to the recent
signing and publication of the AUKUS Agreement for Cooperation
Related to Naval Nuclear Provision. Upon entry into force, this
Agreement will reaffirm Australia's obligations under the NPT and
make Australia's other key non-proliferation commitments legally
binding conditions for AUKUS partners' ongoing cooperation.
Importantly, under the Agreement, Australia cannot receive any
nuclear material from the UK or the US for use in naval nuclear
propulsion prior to having an Article 14 Agreement in place.
Chair,
Our three countries – along with the majority of this Board –
continue to oppose any proposal for this item to be a standing
agenda item or to establish any efforts that undermine and
politicise the independent technical mandate of the IAEA. We
encourage colleagues to continue to reject deliberate efforts to
undermine the Agency's independence and integrity.
We will continue to engage in good faith with Member States on
genuine questions, consistent with our approach to maintaining
open and transparent engagement, and welcome the Director
General's continued commitment to provide updates on naval
nuclear propulsion, as he deems appropriate.