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Global Best Practices

Untitled Document

Global Best Practices for
Nuclear Materials Management

For many years the Institute of Nuclear Materials Management (INMM) has conducted professional development workshops in the six principal areas of nuclear materials management: international safeguards, material control and accounting, nonproliferation and arms control, packaging and transportation, physical protection, and waste management. In many cases the substance of these workshops has been the identification, development, and sharing of global best practices in nuclear materials management.

However, we have not always systematically disseminated and promoted these best practices to the majority of novices and subject matter experts who did not attend the workshops. The purpose of this INMM webpage is to communicate with our members, other nuclear professionals, students, the media, the public, and all others who browse this space, both the long evident and the newly evolving global best practices in nuclear materials management.

What are Best Practices?
The concept of "best practices" began in the business world to encourage reflection on lessons learned and increase effectiveness and efficiency. When applied to nuclear materials management, best practices should be consistent with fundamental principles and objectives for nuclear material protection, control, and accountability. To be of most value, these principles and objectives should:

Best Practices in Nuclear Security Risk Management
Some degree of risk is associated with all human endeavors and this certainly includes nuclear material activities. Responsible stewardship of nuclear materials requires risk management. Risk management should be considered as the highest level of nuclear materials management.

Best practices were identified, discussed, and documented at a workshop on international best practices in nuclear security risk management held in Washington, DC, in May 2007. This workshop was conducted in partnership by three INMM entities: the Government-Industry Liaison Committee, the Physical Protection Technical Division, and the Materials Control and Accountability Technical Division. Participants came from four States with large nuclear programs and represented government agencies and regulators, licensees and operators, commercial industry, national laboratories, and academia.

Nuclear security risk management international best practices are presented as a standalone set. They are consistent with the other best practices published on the INMM Web page but they have not been collated or combined. This may be considered for future versions.

Global Best Practices in Nuclear Security Risk Management

Best Practices for Nuclear Material Security
The collection of these best practices was documented at two sequential one-week workshops on material control and accountancy and on physical protection. These workshops were conducted by INMM in Prague in June 2005 and they were sponsored by the Nuclear Threat Initiative (NTI).

Several dozen international experts participated in each of these workshops and reached a high degree of consensus in their recognition of best practices in MC&A and physical protection. In future versions of the best practices webpage INMM will expand the breadth and the depth of this information by reporting the results of additional workshops and other sources.

The breadth will be expanded beyond the State's systems for physical protection and accounting and control of nuclear material to address the other four areas of nuclear materials management cited above. The depth will consist of more detail on how to implement the higher level best practices stated in this version of the Web page.