An Act to make provision in relation to the non‑proliferation of
nuclear weapons and to establish, in accordance with certain international
treaties and agreements to which Australia is a party, a system for the
imposition and maintenance of nuclear safeguards in Australia, and for related
matters
Part I—Preliminary
1
Short title [see
Note 1]
This Act may be cited as the Nuclear
Non‑Proliferation (Safeguards) Act 1987.
2
Commencement [see
Note 1]
(1) Sections 1 and 2 shall come into
operation on the day on which this Act receives the Royal Assent.
(2) The remaining provisions of this Act
shall come into operation on such day as is, or on such respective days as are,
fixed by Proclamation.
3
Objects of Act
(1) The principal object of this Act is to
give effect to certain obligations that Australia has as a party to the Non‑Proliferation
Treaty, the Agency Agreement, the Supplementary Agency Agreements and the
prescribed international agreements.
(2) A further object of this Act is to give
effect to certain obligations that Australia has as a party to the Physical
Protection Convention.
4
Interpretation
(1) In this
Act, unless the contrary intention appears:
Agency means the International Atomic Energy
Agency established by the Agency Statute.
Agency Agreement means the Agreement between
Australia and the International Atomic Energy Agency for the Application of
Safeguards in connection with the Treaty on the Non‑Proliferation of Nuclear
Weapons, being the Agreement which was signed on behalf of Australia on 10 July
1974, a copy of which is set out in Schedule 3, and:
(a) subject to subsection (3),
includes that Agreement as amended from time to time; and
(b) subject to section 4A,
includes that Agreement as modified from time to time by the Supplementary
Agency Agreements.
Agency inspector means a person declared,
pursuant to subsection 57(2), to be an Agency inspector for the purposes of
this Act.
Agency Statute means the Statute of the
International Atomic Energy Agency, being the Statute which was signed on
behalf of Australia on 14 December 1956 and, subject to subsection (3),
includes that Statute as amended from time to time.
amendment, in relation to a document, means
an amendment of the text of the document.
appoint includes re‑appoint.
approved form means a form approved by the
Minister.
article includes document, substance or
equipment.
associated equipment means equipment or plant
that:
(a) is specially designed,
manufactured or built for use, or is specially suited (whether with or without
modification or adaptation) for use, in:
(i) nuclear activities; or
(ii) the production of
nuclear weapons or other nuclear explosive devices; and
(b) is
included in a class of equipment or plant that is declared by the Minister, in
writing, to be associated equipment for the purposes of this definition;
and includes a component or part of such equipment or
plant.
associated item means:
(a) associated material;
(b) associated equipment; or
(c) associated technology.
associated material means any material (other
than nuclear material, associated equipment or associated technology) that:
(a) is of a kind specially suited for
use in nuclear activities, the construction of a nuclear reactor or the
production of nuclear weapons or other nuclear explosive devices; and
(b) is included in a class of material
that is declared by the Minister, in writing, to be associated material for the
purposes of this definition.
associated technology means any document that
contains information (other than information that is lawfully available,
whether within Australia or outside Australia and whether for a price or free
of charge, to the public or a section of the public):
(a) that is applicable primarily to
the design, production, operation, testing or use of:
(i) equipment or plant
for:
(A) the
enrichment of nuclear material;
(B) the
reprocessing of irradiated nuclear material; or
(C) the
production of heavy water; or
(ii) nuclear weapons or
other nuclear explosive devices; or
(b) to
which a prescribed international agreement applies and that is of a kind
declared by the Minister, in writing, to be information to which this
definition applies;
and includes any photograph, model or other thing from
which such information may be obtained or deduced.
Australian aircraft means:
(a) an aircraft registered or required
to be registered in accordance with the Air Navigation Regulations as an
Australian aircraft;
(b) an aircraft that is owned by, or
is in the possession or control of, the Commonwealth or an authority of the
Commonwealth; or
(c) an aircraft of any part of the
Defence Force (including an aircraft that is being commanded or piloted by a
member of that Force in the course of the member’s duties as such a member).
Australian safeguards system means the system
of accounting for and control of nuclear material and associated items that is
established by:
(a) this Act;
(b) the regulations; and
(c) orders and directions under
section 73.
Australian ship means:
(a) a ship registered in Australia; or
(b) an unregistered ship that has
Australian nationality.
authority means an authority granted under
section 18.
Commonwealth officer means:
(a) a person appointed or engaged
under the Public Service Act 1999; or
(b) an officer or employee of a
prescribed authority of the Commonwealth;
(c) the holder of an office
established by a law of the Commonwealth; or
(d) a member of the Defence Force.
containment device means a wall, container or
other physical barrier, or other device, that is being used, pursuant to a
condition of a permit or pursuant to an order or direction under section 73,
to prevent, restrict or control the movement of or access to:
(a) nuclear material or an associated
item; or
(aa) a nuclear facility; or
(b) information relating to:
(i) the location of
nuclear material or an associated item or the quantity of nuclear material or associated
material at a particular location; or
(ii) the safeguards aspects
of the design or operation of a nuclear facility, containment device or
surveillance device.
Director means the Director of Safeguards.
enrich, in relation to nuclear material, means
increase:
(a) the abundance in the material of
one isotope of an element in relation to the abundance of another isotope or
other isotopes of that element; or
(b) the ratio in the material of one
isotope of an element to the total of the isotopes of that element.
identity card means an identity card issued
under section 58.
inspector means a person appointed as an
inspector under subsection 57(1).
international agreement includes an
international treaty or convention.
international organisation means:
(a) an organisation of which 2 or more
countries, or the Governments of 2 or more countries, are members;
(b) an organisation that is
constituted by the representatives of 2 or more countries, or the Governments
of 2 or more countries; or
(c) an organisation established by, or
a group of organisations constituted by:
(i) organisations of which
2 or more countries, or the Governments of 2 or more countries, are members; or
(ii) organisations that are
constituted by the representatives of 2 or more countries, or the Governments
of 2 or more countries.
Non‑Proliferation Treaty means the Treaty on
the Non‑Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons, being the Treaty which was signed on
behalf of Australia on 27 February 1970, a copy of the English text of
which is set out in Schedule 2, and, subject to subsection (3),
includes that Treaty as amended from time to time.
nuclear activities
means:
(a) the operation of a nuclear
reactor, whether for the purposes of generating power or otherwise;
(b) the enrichment of nuclear
material;
(c) the reprocessing of irradiated
nuclear material; or
(d) any other activity (including
storage) that forms part of the nuclear fuel cycle.
nuclear facility means a facility within the
meaning of the Agency Agreement.
nuclear fuel cycle has the same meaning as it
has when used in the Agency Agreement.
nuclear material has the same meaning as in
the Agency Agreement.
offence against this Act includes:
(a) an offence against the
regulations;
(b) an offence against section 6
of the Crimes Act 1914 in relation to an offence against this Act or the
regulations; and
(c) an offence against section 11.1,
11.4 or 11.5 of the Criminal Code in relation to an offence against this
Act or the regulations.
permit means a permit under section 13,
16, 16A or 16B.
Physical Protection Convention means the
Convention on the Physical Protection of Nuclear Material, being the Convention
which was signed on behalf of Australia on 22 February 1984, a copy of the
English text of which is set out in Schedule 4, and, subject to subsection (3),
includes that Convention as amended from time to time.
prescribed authority of the Commonwealth
means an authority of the Commonwealth prescribed by the regulations for the
purposes of this definition.
prescribed international
agreement means:
(a) an agreement the title of which is
set out in Schedule 5; or
(b) an
agreement between Australia and a foreign country or foreign countries in
relation to nuclear safeguards or the peaceful use of nuclear material or
associated items, being an agreement that is prescribed by the regulations for
the purposes of this definition;
and, subject to subsection (3), includes such an
agreement as amended from time to time.
Register means the Register of Permit and
Authority Holders kept in accordance with section 69.
reprocess, in relation to irradiated nuclear
material, means separate uranium or plutonium from fission products in the
material.
Supplementary Agency Agreement has the
meaning given by section 4A.
surveillance device means a seal, camera,
closed‑circuit television system or other device that is being used, pursuant
to a condition of a permit or pursuant to an order or direction under section 73,
to detect:
(a) movements of nuclear material or
an associated item; or
(aa) movements of a person or thing
past or through a containment device; or
(ab) circumvention of a containment
device or surveillance device; or
(b) interference with a containment
device or surveillance device; or
(c) the falsification of records
relating to:
(i) the location of
nuclear material or an associated item; or
(ii) the quantity of
nuclear material or associated material at a particular location.
(2) A reference in the definition of prescribed
international agreement in subsection (1) to a foreign country
includes a reference to an international organisation.
(3) An amendment to the Agency Agreement, the
Agency Statute, the Non‑Proliferation Treaty, the Physical Protection
Convention or a prescribed international agreement:
(a) does not have effect for the
purposes of this Act unless the amendment is declared by the regulations to
have effect for the purposes of this Act; and
(b) takes effect for the purposes of
this Act from the day on which the regulations referred to in paragraph (a)
take effect or such later day as is specified in those regulations.
(4) Where the Board of Governors of the
Agency makes a determination of the kind referred to in the definition of special
fissionable material, or source material, in Article XX
of the Agency Statute (a copy of the English text of which is set out in
Schedule 1), the determination does not have effect for the purposes of
this Act unless and until the regulations declare that the determination is to
have effect for the purposes of this Act.
(5) Where regulations are made for the
purposes of subsection (4) in relation to a determination of the Board of
Governors of the Agency, the determination shall be taken, for the purposes of
the definition of nuclear material in the Agency Agreement, to be
accepted by Australia.
(6) Where a person gives another person, or
allows another person to take, possession of associated technology, the first‑mentioned
person shall, for the purposes of this Act, be taken to have communicated to
that other person the information that is contained in, or that may be obtained
or deduced from, that associated technology.
(7) Sections 48, 48A, 48B, 49, 49A and
50 of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901 apply to declarations made under
the definitions of associated equipment, associated
material and associated technology in subsection (1)
as if in those provisions references to regulations were references to
declarations, references to a regulation were references to a provision of a
declaration and references to repeal were references to revocation.
(8) Declarations made under the definitions
of associated equipment, associated material and associated
technology in subsection (1) shall not be taken to be statutory
rules within the meaning of the Statutory Rules Publication Act 1903, but
subsections 5(3) to (3C) (inclusive) of that Act apply in relation to such
declarations as they apply to statutory rules.
(9) For the purposes of the application of
subsection 5(3B) of the Statutory Rules Publication Act 1903 in
accordance with subsection (8) of this section, the reference in the first‑mentioned
subsection to the Minister of State for Sport, Recreation and Tourism shall be
read as a reference to the Minister administering this Act.
(10) A reference in this Act to an inspection
by an Agency inspector includes a reference to access by the inspector.
4A
Supplementary Agency Agreements
(1) For the purposes of this Act, Supplementary
Agency Agreement means an IAEA agreement that is additional to the
Agency Agreement, and includes such an IAEA agreement as amended from time to
time.
(2) An IAEA agreement, or an amendment of an
IAEA agreement, does not have effect for the purposes of this Act unless the
agreement or amendment, as the case may be, is declared by the regulations to
have effect for the purposes of this Act.
(3) An IAEA agreement, or an amendment of an
IAEA agreement, takes effect for the purposes of this Act from:
(a) the day on which the regulations
referred to in subsection (2) take effect; or
(b) such later day as is specified in
those regulations.
(4) In this section:
IAEA agreement means an agreement between Australia and the International Atomic Energy Agency, but does not include:
(a) the Agency Agreement; or
(b) an agreement that amends the
Agency Agreement.
5 Conduct
by directors, servants or agents
(1) Where it is necessary, for the purposes
of this Act, to establish the state of mind of a body corporate in respect of
conduct engaged in, or deemed by subsection (2) to have been engaged in,
by the body corporate, it is sufficient to show that a director, servant or
agent of the body corporate, being a director, servant or agent by whom the
conduct was engaged in within the scope of his or her actual or apparent
authority, had that state of mind.
(2) Any
conduct engaged in on behalf of a body corporate:
(a) by a director, servant or agent of
the body corporate within the scope of his or her actual or apparent authority;
or
(b) by
any other person at the direction or with the consent or agreement (whether
express or implied) of a director, servant or agent of the body corporate,
where the giving of the direction, consent or agreement is within the scope of
the actual or apparent authority of the director, servant or agent;
shall be deemed, for the purposes of this Act, to have
been engaged in by the body corporate.
(3) Where it is necessary, for the purposes
of this Act, to establish the state of mind of a person in relation to conduct
deemed by subsection (4) to have been engaged in by the person, it is
sufficient to show that a servant or agent of the person, being a servant or
agent by whom the conduct was engaged in within the scope of his or her actual
or apparent authority, had that state of mind.
(4) Conduct engaged in on behalf of a person
other than a body corporate:
(a) by a servant or agent of the
person within the scope of his or her actual or apparent authority; or
(b) by
any other person at the direction or with the consent or agreement (whether
express or implied) of a servant or agent of the first‑mentioned person, where
the giving of the direction, consent or agreement is within the scope of the
actual or apparent authority of the servant or agent;
shall be deemed, for the purposes of this Act, to have
been engaged in by the first‑mentioned person.
(5) A reference in this section to the state
of mind of a person includes a reference to the knowledge, intention, opinion,
belief or purpose of the person and the person’s reasons for the person’s
intention, opinion, belief or purpose.
(6) A reference in this section to a director
of a body corporate includes a reference to a constituent member of a body
corporate incorporated for a public purpose by a law of the Commonwealth, of a
State or of a Territory.
6 Act
to extend to external Territories
This Act extends to every external
Territory.
7 Act
to bind Crown
This Act binds the Crown in right of the
Commonwealth, of each of the States, of the Northern Territory and of Norfolk Island, but nothing in this Act renders the Crown liable to be prosecuted for an
offence.
8
Application of Act
(1) The provisions of this Act have effect in
relation to all nuclear material.
(2) The provisions of this Act have effect in
relation to all associated items.
(3) Without prejudice to their effect by
virtue of subsection (2), the provisions of this Act have effect in
relation to an associated item:
(a) control of which is appropriate to
give effect to obligations that Australia has as a party to the Non‑Proliferation
Treaty, the Agency Agreement, a Supplementary Agency Agreement or a prescribed
international agreement (including the obligation that Australia has under
Article II of the Non‑Proliferation Treaty not to manufacture or otherwise
acquire nuclear weapons or other nuclear explosive devices);
(b) that is owned by, or is in the
possession or control of, a trading corporation or foreign corporation;
(c) that is situated in a Territory or
is owned by or in the possession or control of:
(i) a resident of a
Territory; or
(ii) a corporation
established by or under a law of a Territory;
(d) that is in the course of trade or
commerce:
(i) between Australia and places outside Australia;
(ii) among the States; or
(iii) within a Territory,
between a State and a Territory or between 2 Territories;
(e) that is supplied to the
Commonwealth or an authority or instrumentality of the Commonwealth;
(f) that is owned by, or is in the
possession or control of, the Commonwealth or an authority or instrumentality
of the Commonwealth; or
(g) that is in the course of transmission
through postal, telegraphic, telephonic or a like service.
(4) Without prejudice to their effect by
virtue of subsection (3), the provisions of this Act have effect in
relation to an associated item that is owned by, or is in the possession or control
of, a trading corporation in the course of the trading activities of the
trading corporation.
(5) Without prejudice to their effect by
virtue of subsection (2), the provisions of this Act have effect in
relation to an associated item control of which is appropriate to give effect
to obligations that Australia has as a party to the Physical Protection
Convention.
(6) The provisions of this Act have effect in
relation to all information of the kinds referred to in the definition of associated
technology in subsection 4(1).
(7) Without prejudice to their effect by
virtue of subsection (6), the provisions of this Act have effect in
relation to information of the kinds referred to in the definition of associated
technology in subsection 4(1):
(a) control of which is appropriate to
give effect to obligations that Australia has as a party to the Non‑Proliferation
Treaty, the Agency Agreement or a prescribed international agreement (including
the obligation that Australia has under Article II of the Non‑Proliferation
Treaty not to manufacture or otherwise acquire nuclear weapons or other
explosive nuclear devices);
(b) communicated by a trading
corporation or foreign corporation;
(c) communicated in a Territory or
communicated by:
(i) a resident of a Territory;
or
(ii) a corporation
established by or under a law of a Territory;
(d) communicated in the course of
trade or commerce:
(i) between Australia and places outside Australia;
(ii) among the States; or
(iii) between a State and a
Territory or between 2 Territories;
(e) communicated by an authority or
instrumentality of the Commonwealth; or
(f) communicated in the course of
transmission through postal, telegraphic, telephonic or a like service.
(8) Without prejudice to their effect by
virtue of subsection (7), the provisions of this Act have effect in
relation to information of the kinds referred to in the definition of associated
technology in subsection 4(1) communicated by a trading corporation in
the course of the trading activities of the trading corporation.
(9) Without prejudice to their effect by
virtue of subsection (6), the provisions of this Act have effect in
relation to information of the kinds referred to in the definition of associated
technology in subsection 4(1) control of which is appropriate to give
effect to obligations that Australia has as a party to the Physical Protection
Convention.
(10) In this section:
foreign corporation has the same meaning as
in paragraph 51(xx) of the Constitution.
postal, telegraphic, telephonic or a like service
has the same meaning as in paragraph 51(v) of the Constitution.
trading corporation means a trading
corporation, within the meaning of paragraph 51(xx) of the Constitution, formed
within the limits of the Commonwealth.
8A
Application of the Criminal Code
Chapter 2 (other than Part 2.5)
of the Criminal Code applies to all offences against this Act.
Note: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code
sets out the general principles of criminal responsibility.
Part II—Control of nuclear material, associated items and related
facilities
9
Nuclear material to which this Part applies
This Part applies to all nuclear
material other than:
(a) nuclear material in respect of
which a declaration under subsection 11(1) is in force;
(b) nuclear material in respect of
which a declaration under subsection 11(3) is in force; and
(c) nuclear material that, in
accordance with the regulations, is nuclear material of a kind to which this
Part does not apply.
10
Associated items to which this Part applies
This Part applies to associated items
other than:
(a) items in respect of which a
declaration under subsection 11(7) is in force; and
(b) items that, in accordance with the
regulations, are associated items of a kind to which this Part does not apply.
11
Exemption and termination declarations
(1) The Minister may, subject to subsection (2),
declare, in writing, that nuclear material specified in the declaration is
nuclear material that is exempt from the application of this Part.
(2) The Minister shall not make a declaration
under subsection (1) exempting nuclear material from the application of
this Part unless:
(a) the Agency has, in accordance with
Articles 37 and 38 of the Agency Agreement, exempted the nuclear material from
safeguards; and
(b) the making of the declaration is
not inconsistent with Australia’s obligations under any prescribed
international agreement.
(3) The Minister may, subject to subsection (4),
declare, in writing, that the application of this Part to nuclear material
specified in the declaration is terminated.
(4) The
Minister shall not make a declaration under subsection (3) terminating the
application of this Part to nuclear material unless:
(a) safeguards have, in accordance
with Articles 11, 12, 13 and 36 of the Agency Agreement, terminated in respect
of the nuclear material; and
(b) the making of the declaration is
not inconsistent with Australia’s obligations under any prescribed
international agreement.
(5) The Minister may, by notice in writing
published in the Gazette, vary or revoke a declaration made under subsection (1)
or (3).
(6) The Minister shall revoke a declaration
made under subsection (1) exempting nuclear material from the application
of this Part if the nuclear material:
(a) is processed or stored together with
nuclear material to which this Part applies; or
(b) is returned to use in nuclear
activities.
(7) The Minister may, subject to subsection (8),
declare, in writing, that an associated item specified in the declaration is an
associated item that is exempt from the application of this Part.
(8) The Minister shall not make a declaration
under subsection (7) exempting an associated item from the application of
this Part unless the making of the declaration is not inconsistent with
Australia’s obligations under any prescribed international agreement.
(9) The Minister may, by notice in writing
published in the Gazette, vary or revoke a declaration made under subsection (7).
(10) Sections 48, 48A, 48B, 49, 49A and 50
of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901 apply to declarations made under
this section as if in those provisions references to regulations were
references to declarations, references to a regulation were references to a
provision of a declaration and references to repeal were references to revocation.
(11) Declarations made under this section shall
not be taken to be statutory rules within the meaning of the Statutory Rules
Publication Act 1903, but subsections 5(3) to (3C) (inclusive) of that Act
apply in relation to such declarations as they apply to statutory rules.
(12) For the purposes of the application of
subsection 5(3B) of the Statutory Rules Publication Act 1903 in
accordance with subsection (11) of this section, the reference in the
first‑mentioned subsection to the Minister of State for Sport, Recreation and
Tourism shall be read as a reference to the Minister administering this Act.
12
Application for permit
(1) A person may make application for the
grant of a permit by lodging an application, in accordance with the approved
form, with the Director.
(2) Where a person makes application pursuant
to subsection (1), the Director:
(a) may, by notice in writing to the
person, require the person to provide to the Director, within such period,
being a period of not less than 14 days, as is specified in the notice, such
information relating to the application as is specified in the notice; and
(b) shall, after having considered the
application and any information provided pursuant to paragraph (a), give a
report in writing to the Minister in relation to the application.
(3) Where a person who makes application
pursuant to subsection (1) fails to comply with a request made by the
Director pursuant to paragraph (2)(a), the Director shall include a
statement giving particulars of that failure in the report made to the Minister
in relation to the application pursuant to paragraph (2)(b).
13
Permit to possess nuclear material or associated items
(1) Subject to sections 14 and 15, the
Minister may, in writing, grant to a person a permit to possess:
(a) nuclear material; or
(b) an
associated item;
to which this Part applies.
(2) A permit under subsection (1) is
granted subject to such restrictions and conditions as the Minister specifies
in the permit.
(3) Without limiting the generality of subsection (2),
a permit under subsection (1) may be granted subject to restrictions and
conditions in respect of one or more of the following:
(a) the nuclear material, or the class
of nuclear material, or the associated item or items, or the class of associated
items, as the case requires, in relation to which the permit is to have effect;
(b) the period for which the permit is
to have effect;
(c) the locations for which the permit
is to have effect and the procedures to be followed if nuclear material or an
associated item is to be transported from one location to another (including
requirements for the giving of notice to the Minister, the Director or any
carrier engaged by the holder of the permit);
(d) the measures to be taken to ensure
the physical security of nuclear material or an associated item;
(da) the taking of measures that are
consistent with Australia’s obligations under the Physical Protection
Convention;
(e) the persons, or class of persons,
who are to be allowed access to nuclear material or an associated item and the
conditions on which access to nuclear material or an associated item is to be
allowed;
(f) the steps to be taken, and the
records to be kept, to account for nuclear material or an associated item;
(g) the uses to which nuclear material
or an associated item may be put;
(h) the enrichment of nuclear material
or the reprocessing of irradiated nuclear material;
(j) the reports to be furnished, and
the inspections to be permitted, in respect of nuclear material or an associated
item;
(k) the transfer by the holder of the
permit to another person of property in, or possession or control of, nuclear
material or an associated item;
(m) if the permit is a permit to
possess associated technology—the communication of the information contained
in, or that may be obtained or deduced from, the associated technology;
(n) the alteration, dispersal or
disposal of nuclear material or an associated item;
(o) if nuclear material or an
associated item is to be held at a nuclear facility—the provision to the
Director of information in order to allow inspectors or Agency inspectors to
comply with health and safety procedures applicable at the facility.
(4) Without limiting the generality of paragraph (3)(f),
a condition of a permit under subsection (1) in respect of the records to
be kept to account for nuclear material or an associated item may make
provision in relation to:
(a) the form and content of such
records;
(b) the period for which such records
are to be kept; and
(c) the system of measurement to be
used in the preparation of such records.
(5) Without limiting the generality of paragraph (3)(j),
a condition of a permit under subsection (1) in respect of the reports to
be furnished in respect of nuclear material or an associated item may make
provision in relation to:
(a) the form and content of such
reports;
(b) special reports to be made in
relation to unusual or anomalous incidents or circumstances and the form and
contents of such special reports;
(c) the time within which such reports
and special reports are to be made; and
(d) the persons who are to verify or
authenticate such reports and special reports.
(6) Without limiting the generality of paragraph (3)(j),
a condition of a permit under subsection (1) in respect of the inspections
to be permitted in respect of nuclear material or an associated item may make
provision in relation to inspections by Agency inspectors pursuant to the
Agency Agreement or a Supplementary Agency Agreement.
(7) Without limiting the generality of subsection (2),
a condition in respect of the doing of an act or thing may be imposed by
reference to the approval or consent of a specified person being obtained
before the act or thing may be done.
(8) A permit granted under subsection (1)
shall have endorsed on it or attached to it a statement to the effect that,
subject to the Administrative Appeals Tribunal Act 1975 and to
subsection 22(8) of this Act, application may be made to the Administrative
Appeals Tribunal, by or on behalf of a person whose interests are affected by a
decision by the Minister, pursuant to subsection (2) of this section,
imposing a condition or restriction on the grant of a permit, for review of the
decision.
(9) A failure to comply with the requirements
of subsection (8) in relation to a decision shall not be taken to affect
the validity of the decision.
(10) Subject to subsection 22(1), the Minister
may, in writing, vary a permit granted under subsection (1).
(11) A variation to a permit under subsection (10)
takes effect on the day on which notice of the variation is given to the holder
of the permit under subsection 22(1) or such later day as is specified in the
instrument of variation.
14
Permit not to be granted to owner or operator of nuclear facility unless Director
satisfied as to certain matters
The Minister shall not grant a permit
under section 13 to the owner or operator of a nuclear facility unless the
Director has included in the report made by the Director, pursuant to paragraph
12(2)(b), in relation to the application for the grant of the permit:
(a) a statement to the effect that the
Director is satisfied that the person applying for the grant of the permit has
provided the Director with all information that the Director has required the
person to provide in relation to the application pursuant to paragraph
12(2)(a); and
(b) a statement to the effect that the
Director is satisfied that:
(i) appropriate procedures
can be applied at the facility for the implementation of the Australian
safeguards system in relation to nuclear material and associated items to be
located at the facility; and
(ii) adequate physical
security can be applied to nuclear material and associated items at the
facility.
15
Permit not to be granted where nuclear material etc. to be held outside nuclear
facility unless Director satisfied as to certain matters
Where nuclear material or an associated
item is to be held otherwise than at a nuclear facility, the Minister shall not
grant a permit under section 13 in relation to the nuclear material or
associated item unless the Director has included in the report made by the
Director, pursuant to paragraph 12(2)(b), in relation to the application for
the grant of the permit a statement to the effect that the Director is
satisfied that the person applying for the grant of the permit has provided the
Director with all information that the Director has required the person to
provide in relation to the application pursuant to paragraph 12(2)(a).
16
Special transport permit
(1) The Minister may, in writing, grant to a
person a permit to possess:
(a) nuclear material; or
(b) an
associated item;
to which this Part applies, being material or an item
specified in the permit, for the purpose of transporting the material or item
from a location specified in the permit to another location specified in the
permit.
(2) A permit under subsection (1) is
granted subject to such restrictions and conditions as the Minister specifies
in the permit.
(3) Without limiting the generality of subsection (2),
a permit under subsection (1) may be granted subject to restrictions and
conditions in respect of:
(a) the period for which the permit is
to have effect;
(b) the means, and the route, by which
the nuclear material or associated item is to be transported;
(c) the measures to be taken to ensure
the physical security of the material or item;
(d) the steps to be taken, and the
records to be kept, to account for the material or item; and
(e) the reports to be furnished in
respect of the transport of the material or item.
(4) Without limiting the generality of paragraph (3)(d),
a condition of a permit under subsection (1) in respect of the records to
be kept to account for nuclear material or an associated item may make
provision in relation to:
(a) the form and content of such
records;
(b) the period for which such records
are to be kept; and
(c) the system of measurement to be
used in the preparation of such records.
(5) Without limiting the generality of paragraph (3)(e),
a condition of a permit under subsection (1) in respect of the reports to
be furnished in respect of the transport of nuclear material or an associated
item may make provision in relation to:
(a) the form and content of such
reports;
(b) special reports to be made in
relation to unusual or anomalous incidents or circumstances and the form and
contents of such special reports;
(c) the time within which such reports
and special reports are to be made; and
(d) the persons who are to verify or
authenticate such reports and special reports.
(6) Without limiting the generality of subsection (2),
a condition in respect of the doing of an act or thing may be imposed by
reference to the approval or consent of a specified person being obtained
before the act or thing may be done.
(7) A permit granted under subsection (1)
shall have endorsed on it or attached to it a statement to the effect that,
subject to the Administrative Appeals Tribunal Act 1975 and to
subsection 22(8) of this Act, application may be made to the Administrative
Appeals Tribunal, by or on behalf of a person whose interests are affected by a
decision by the Minister, pursuant to subsection (2) of this section,
imposing a condition or restriction on the grant of a permit, for review of the
decision.
(8) A failure to comply with the requirements
of subsection (7) in relation to a decision shall not be taken to affect
the validity of the decision.
(9) Subject to subsection 22(1), the Minister
may, in writing, vary a permit granted under subsection (1).
(10) A variation of a permit pursuant to subsection (9)
takes effect on the day on which notice of the variation is given to the holder
of the permit under subsection 22(1) or such later day as is specified in the
instrument of variation.
16A
Permit to establish facility
Grant of permit
(1) The Minister may grant a written permit
for work to be carried out to establish a facility described in paragraph
28A(1)(a), but only if the Director’s report under paragraph 12(2)(b) relating
to the application for the permit states that the Director is satisfied that:
(a) the applicant for the permit has
provided the Director with all information the applicant was required under
paragraph 12(2)(a) to provide in relation to the application; and
(b) appropriate procedures could be
applied at the facility for the implementation of the Australian safeguards
system in relation to nuclear material and associated items to be stored or
used at the facility; and
(c) adequate physical security could
be applied to nuclear material and associated items at the facility.
Note: Paragraph 28A(1)(a) describes the following
facilities:
(a) a nuclear facility;
(b) a facility for the carrying out of nuclear
activities;
(c) a facility for the use of associated equipment
to which this Part applies.
Restrictions and conditions
(2) The permit is granted subject to the
restrictions and conditions specified in it.
(3) The permit may specify restrictions and
conditions in respect of:
(a) design of the facility to
facilitate:
(i) the operation of the
Australian safeguards system in relation to the facility; and
(ii) the physical security
of nuclear material or an associated item that is to be stored or used in the
facility; and
(b) inspection of the work and the
facility by inspectors and Agency inspectors; and
(c) reports relating to the work and
the facility (including reports on incidents affecting the work or the
facility).
(4) A condition in respect of the doing of an
act or thing may be specified by reference to the approval or consent of a
specified person being obtained before the act or thing may be done.
(5) Subsections (3) and (4) do not limit
the restrictions and conditions that may be specified in the permit.
Variation of permit
(6) The Minister may vary in writing the
permit. The variation takes effect on the day on which notice of the variation
is given under subsection 22(1) to the holder of the permit or on a later day
specified in the variation.
16B
Permit to decommission facility
Grant of permit
(1) The Minister may grant a written permit
for work to be carried out to decommission the whole or a part of a facility
described in paragraph 28A(1)(a), but only if the Director’s report under
paragraph 12(2)(b) relating to the application for the permit states that the
Director is satisfied that:
(a) the applicant for the permit has
provided the Director with all information the applicant was required under
paragraph 12(2)(a) to provide in relation to the application; and
(b) appropriate procedures could be
applied for the implementation of the Australian safeguards system in relation
to nuclear material and associated items that, during the decommissioning, are
to be removed from the facility or otherwise dealt with; and
(c) adequate physical security could
be applied to nuclear material and associated items that, during the
decommissioning, are to be removed from the facility or otherwise dealt with.
Note: Paragraph 28A(1)(a) describes the following
facilities:
(a) a nuclear facility;
(b) a facility for the carrying out of nuclear
activities;
(c) a facility for the use of associated equipment
to which this Part applies.
Restrictions and conditions
(2) The permit is granted subject to the
restrictions and conditions specified in it.
(3) The permit may specify restrictions and
conditions in respect of:
(a) inspection of the work and the
facility by inspectors and Agency inspectors; and
(b) reports relating to the work and
the facility (including reports on incidents affecting the work or the
facility).
(4) A condition in respect of the doing of an
act or thing may be specified by reference to the approval or consent of a
specified person being obtained before the act or thing may be done.
(5) Subsections (3) and (4) do not limit
the restrictions and conditions that may be specified in the permit.
Variation of permit
(6) The Minister may vary in writing the
permit. The variation takes effect on the day on which notice of the variation
is given under subsection 22(1) to the holder of the permit or on a later day
specified in the variation.
17
Application for authority to communicate information
(1) A person may make application for the
grant of an authority under subsection 18(1) by lodging an application, in
accordance with the approved form, with the Director.
(2) Where a person makes application pursuant
to subsection (1), the Director:
(a) may, by notice in writing to the
person, require the person to provide to the Director, within such period,
being a period of not less than 14 days, as is specified in the notice, such
information relating to the application as is specified in the notice; and
(b) shall, after having considered the
application and any information provided pursuant to paragraph (a), make a
report in writing to the Minister in relation to the application.
(3) Where a person who makes application
pursuant to subsection (1) fails to comply with a request made by the
Director pursuant to paragraph (2)(a), the Director shall include a
statement giving particulars of that failure in the report made to the Minister
in relation to the application pursuant to paragraph (2)(b).
18
Authority to communicate information
(1) Subject to subsection (2), the
Minister may, in writing, authorise a person to communicate to another person
information of a kind referred to in the definition of associated
technology in subsection 4(1).
(2) The Minister shall not grant an authority
under subsection (1) unless the Director has included in the report made
by the Director, pursuant to paragraph 17(2)(b), in relation to the application
for the grant of the authority a statement to the effect that the Director is
satisfied that the person applying for the grant of the authority has provided
the Director with all information that the Director has required the person to
provide in relation to the application pursuant to paragraph 17(2)(a).
(3) An authority under subsection (1) is
granted subject to such restrictions and conditions as the Minister specifies
in the authority.
(4) Without limiting the generality of subsection (3),
an authority under subsection (1) may be granted subject to restrictions
and conditions in respect of:
(a) the information, or the class of
information, in relation to which the authority is to have effect;
(b) the persons, or class of persons,
to whom information may be communicated;
(c) the period for which the authority
is to have effect; and
(d) conditions as to the giving of
notice of, and the obtaining of consents for, the communication of information.
(5) An authority granted under subsection (1)
shall have endorsed on it or attached to it a statement to the effect that,
subject to the Administrative Appeals Tribunal Act 1975 and to
subsection 22(8) of this Act, application may be made to the Administrative
Appeals Tribunal, by or on behalf of a person whose interests are affected by a
decision by the Minister, pursuant to subsection (3) of this section,
imposing a condition or restriction on the grant of an authority, for review of
the decision.
(6) A failure to comply with the requirements
of subsection (5) in relation to a decision shall not be taken to affect
the validity of the decision.
(7) Subject to subsection 22(1), the Minister
may, in writing, vary an authority granted under subsection (1).
(8) A variation of an authority pursuant to subsection (7)
takes effect on the day on which notice of the variation is given to the holder
of the authority under subsection 22(1) or such later day as is specified in
the instrument of variation.
19
Revocation of permit or authority
(1) Subject to subsection 22(1), the Minister
may, in writing, revoke a permit or authority if the holder of the permit or
authority:
(a) contravenes a condition, or fails
to observe a restriction, subject to which the permit or authority is granted;
(b) contravenes a direction given or
an order made under section 73; or
(c) is convicted of an offence against
this Act.
(2) Subsection (1) extends to a
contravention or failure that occurs outside Australia.
(3) The Minister shall revoke a permit or
authority if the person to whom the permit or authority was granted requests
the Minister, in writing, to do so.
(4) The revocation of a permit or authority
under this section takes effect:
(a) in a case where the permit or
authority is revoked under subsection (1)—on the day on which notice of
the revocation is given to the holder of the permit or authority under
subsection 22(1) or such later day as is specified in the instrument of
revocation; or
(b) in a case where the permit or
authority is revoked under subsection (3)—on the day on which the instrument
of revocation is executed or such later day as is specified in that instrument.
20
Notification of grant, variation or revocation of permit or authority
(1) Where the Minister grants, varies or
revokes a permit or authority, the Minister shall publish notice in writing in
the Gazette of the grant, variation or revocation, as the case may be.
(2) A notice under subsection (1) in
relation to the grant, variation or revocation of a permit or authority shall
include such particulars in relation to the grant, variation or revocation, as
the case may be, as are prescribed by the regulations or, in the absence of
regulations prescribing such particulars, such particulars of the grant,
variation or revocation, as the case may be, as the Minister thinks fit.
(3) The grant, variation or revocation of a
permit or authority shall not be called in question on the ground that there
has been a failure to comply with subsection (1) or (2) of this section in
relation to the grant, variation or revocation, as the case may be.
21
Effect of grant of permit or authority
The grant to a person of a permit or
authority does not make it lawful for the person to do any act or thing that,
apart from this Act, is unlawful under another law of the Commonwealth or under
a law of a State or Territory.
22
Review of decisions
(1) Where:
(a) the Minister makes a decision
refusing to grant a permit or a decision under subsection 18(1) refusing to
grant an authority;
(b) a condition on the grant of a
permit or of an authority under section 18 requires the approval or
consent of a person specified in the permit or authority in respect of the
doing of an act or thing and the person makes a decision refusing to give such
an approval or consent;
(c) the Minister makes a decision varying
a permit or a decision under subsection 18(7) varying an authority;
(d) the Director makes a decision not
to include, in a report in relation to an application for a permit or
authority, a statement of the kind referred to in paragraph 14(a) or (b) or
section 15 or in subsection 16A(1), 16B(1) or 18(2), as the case requires;
or
(e) the
Minister makes a decision under subsection 19(1) revoking a permit or
authority;
the person making the decision shall, not later than 30
days after the day on which the decision is made, give notice in writing of the
decision and of the grounds for the decision to:
(f) in a case to which paragraph (a)
applies—the person who applied for the grant of the permit or authority;
(g) in a case to which paragraph (b)
or (c) applies—the holder of the permit or authority;
(h) in a case to which paragraph (d)
applies—the person who applied for the grant of the permit or authority; or
(j) in a case to which paragraph (e)
applies—the holder of the permit or authority.
(2) A notice referred to in subsection (1)
shall include a statement to the effect that, subject to the Administrative
Appeals Tribunal Act 1975 and to subsection (8) of this section,
application may be made to the Administrative Appeals Tribunal for review of
the decision to which the notice relates by or on behalf of a person whose
interests are affected by the decision.
(3) A failure to comply with the requirements
of subsection (2) in relation to a decision shall not be taken to affect
the validity of the decision.
(4) Subject to subsection (8), an
application may be made to the Administrative Appeals Tribunal for review of:
(a) a decision of a kind referred to
in subsection (1);
(b) a decision by the Minister
imposing a condition or restriction on the grant of a permit;
(c) a decision by the Minister,
pursuant to subsection 18(3), imposing a restriction or condition on the grant
of an authority; or
(d) a decision by the Minister,
pursuant to section 73, giving directions to be complied with by the
holder of a permit or authority.
(5) The Minister may certify, in writing,
that in his or her opinion it is in the public interest that responsibility for
a decision of a kind referred to in subsection (1) or in paragraph (4)(b),
(c) or (d) (whether a decision of the Minister or of another person) that is
specified in the certificate should reside solely with the Minister and that
the decision should not be reviewable by the Administrative Appeals Tribunal.
(6) Where the Minister issues a certificate
under subsection (5), the Minister shall include in the certificate a
statement of the grounds on which the certificate is issued.
(7) Where the Minister issues a certificate
under subsection (5) in relation to a decision, the Minister shall give
notice in writing of the issuing of the certificate to:
(a) in a case where the decision is a
decision of a kind referred to in subsection (1)—the person to whom notice
of the making of the decision is required to be given in accordance with subsection (1);
or
(b) in a case where the decision is a
decision of a kind referred to in paragraph (4)(b), (c) or (d)—the holder
of the permit or authority, as the case requires.
(8) While a certificate under subsection (5)
is in force in relation to a decision, subsection (4) does not apply in
relation to the decision.
(9) The Minister shall cause a copy of a
certificate issued under subsection (5) to be laid before each House of
the Parliament within 15 sitting days of that House after the day on which a
certificate is issued.
(10) In this section, decision
has the same meaning as it has in the Administrative Appeals Tribunal Act
1975.
Part III—Offences
Division 1—General offences
23
Possession of nuclear material or associated item without permit
(1) Subject to section 24, a person who,
without reasonable excuse:
(a) possesses nuclear material, or an
associated item, to which Part II applies; and
(b) does
not, at the time of the possession, hold a permit under section 13 or 16
that authorises the person to possess the material or item, as the case may be;
is guilty of an offence against this subsection
punishable, upon conviction, by imprisonment for not more than 10 years.
(2) Section 15.2 of the Criminal Code
(extended geographical jurisdiction—category B) applies to an offence against subsection (1)
of this section.
(3) Subsection (2) shall not be read as
derogating from the effect of the Crimes at Sea Act 2000.
(4) Subsection (1) does not apply to the
possession of associated technology by a Commonwealth officer or a prescribed
authority of the Commonwealth in the course of:
(a) the collection, maintenance or
assessment, on behalf of the Australian Government, of information relating to
nuclear activities or to disarmament; or
(b) the giving of information or
advice to the Australian Government in relation to nuclear activities or to
disarmament.
(5) Without limiting the generality of subsection (4),
subsection (1) does not apply to the possession of nuclear material or an
associated item by:
(a) the Director; or
(b) an
inspector or Agency inspector;
in the course of the performance of a function or duty, or
the exercise of a power, under this Act or the regulations.
(6) Subsection (1) does not apply to the
possession of associated technology by a Commonwealth officer in the course of:
(a) the performance of a function or
duty, or the exercise of a power, under the Patents Act 1990 or
regulations under that Act; or
(b) the performance of duties in the
Patent Office.
24
Special provisions for carriers
(1) Subsection 23(1) does not apply to the
possession by a person of nuclear material or an associated item if:
(a) the person is in possession of the
material or item solely in the capacity of a carrier for the purpose of
transporting the material or item on behalf of another person; and
(b) the material or item is of a kind
prescribed by the regulations for the purpose of this subsection.
(2) Where it appears that:
(a) a person (in this section referred
to as the carrier) was in possession of nuclear material or an
associated item solely in the capacity of a carrier for the purpose of
transporting the material or item on behalf of another person; and
(b) the
carrier did not, at the time of the possession, hold a permit under section 13
or 16 that authorised the carrier to possess the material or item, as the case
may be;
the carrier is not guilty of an offence against section 23
by reason of possessing the material or item without such a permit unless it is
proved that the carrier knew, at that time, that the material or item was
nuclear material or an associated item, as the case requires.
25
Breach of condition of permit or authority etc.
(1) A person is guilty of an offence if:
(a) the person engages in conduct; and
(b) the conduct:
(i) contravenes a condition,
or fails to observe a restriction, subject to which a permit or authority is
granted; or
(ii) contravenes a
direction given or an order made under section 73.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 2 years.
(1A) Subsection (1) does not apply if the
person has a reasonable excuse.
Note: A defendant bears an evidential burden in
relation to the matter in subsection (1A). See subsection 13.3(3) of the Criminal
Code.
(1B) In subsection (1):
engage in conduct means:
(a) do an act; or
(b) omit to perform an act.
(2) Subsection (1) extends to a
contravention or failure that occurs outside Australia.
(3) Subsection (2) shall not be read as
derogating from the effect of the Crimes at Sea Act 2000.
25A
Breach of duty to ensure security of associated technology
(1) A person commits an offence if:
(a) the person is authorised to deal
with associated technology to which Part II applies by the holder of a
permit to possess the associated technology; and
(b) the person has not been granted a
permit to possess the associated technology; and
(c) the person is required to ensure
the physical security of the associated technology; and
(d) the person engages in conduct; and
(e) the conduct contravenes the
requirement.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 2 years.
(2) In this section:
engage in conduct means:
(a) do an act; or
(b) omit to perform an act.
(3) Section 15.2 of the Criminal Code
(extended geographical jurisdiction—category B) applies to an offence against subsection (1)
of this section.
26
Unauthorised communication of information
(1) Where:
(a) a person, without reasonable
excuse, communicates to another person information of a kind referred to in the
definition of associated technology in subsection 4(1); and
(b) the communication:
(i) is not required or
authorised by this Act; and
(ii) is
not made in accordance with an authority granted under section 18;
the first‑mentioned person is guilty of an offence against
this subsection punishable, upon conviction, by imprisonment for not more than 10
years.
(2) Subsection (1) does not apply to the
communication of information by a Commonwealth officer or a prescribed
authority of the Commonwealth in the course of:
(a) the collection, maintenance or
assessment, on behalf of the Australian Government, of information relating to
nuclear activities or to disarmament; or
(b) the giving of information or
advice to the Australian Government in relation to nuclear activities or to
disarmament.
(3) Without limiting the generality of subsection (2),
subsection (1) does not apply to the communication of information by:
(a) the Director; or
(b) an
inspector or Agency inspector;
in the course of the performance of a function or duty, or
the exercise of a power, under this Act or the regulations.
(4) Subsection (1) does not apply to the
communication of information by a Commonwealth officer in the course of:
(a) the performance of a function or
duty, or the exercise of a power, under the Patents Act 1990 or
regulations under that Act; or
(b) the performance of duties in the
Patent Office.
(4A) Subsection (1) does not apply to the
communication of information that is in accordance with a prescribed
international agreement.
Note: A defendant bears an evidential burden in
relation to the matter in subsection (4A) (see subsection 13.3(3) of the Criminal
Code).
(5) Section 15.2 of the Criminal Code
(extended geographical jurisdiction—category B) applies to an offence against subsection (1)
of this section.
26A
Communication prejudicing security of nuclear material or associated item
(1) A person commits an offence if:
(a) the person communicates
information to someone else; and
(b) the person knows that the
communication could prejudice the physical security of nuclear material, or an
associated item, to which Part II applies.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 8 years.
(2) Subsection (1) does not apply if the
communication is authorised by a person who has been granted a permit to
possess the nuclear material or associated item.
Note: A defendant bears an evidential burden in
relation to the matter in subsection (2) (see subsection 13.3(3) of the Criminal
Code).
(3) Section 15.2 of the Criminal Code
(extended geographical jurisdiction—category B) applies to an offence against subsection (1)
of this section.
27
Minister to be given certain notices in respect of exempt nuclear material
(1) A person shall, before:
(a) processing or storing exempt
nuclear material together with nuclear material to which Part II applies;
or
(b) returning
exempt nuclear material to use in nuclear activities;
give notice in writing to the Minister of the proposed
processing, storage or return to use in nuclear activities, as the case may be.
(2) Where:
(a) a person:
(i) processes or stores
exempt nuclear material together with nuclear material to which Part II
applies; or
(ii) returns exempt nuclear
material to use in nuclear activities; and
(b) the
person has not given the Minister notice, in accordance with subsection (1),
of the proposed processing, storage or return to use in nuclear activities, as
the case may be;
the person is guilty of an offence against this section
punishable, upon conviction, by imprisonment for not more than 2 years.
(3) In this section, exempt nuclear
material means nuclear material that is, by virtue of a declaration
under subsection 11(1), nuclear material to which Part II does not apply.
28
Interference with containment or surveillance devices
A person who interferes with:
(a) a containment device or
surveillance device; or
(b) the
operation of a containment device or surveillance device;
with the intention of adversely affecting the operation of
the device is guilty of an offence against this section punishable, upon
conviction, by imprisonment for not more than 2 years.
28A
Establishment of facility without permit
(1) A person commits an offence if:
(a) the person causes work to be
carried out to establish a facility that is:
(i) a nuclear facility; or
(ii) a facility for the
carrying out of nuclear activities; or
(iii) a facility for the use
of associated equipment to which Part II applies; and
(b) the work consists of:
(i) construction of the
facility; or
(ii) modification of an
existing facility that is not a facility described in paragraph (a); and
(c) the person does not hold a permit
for the work to be carried out.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 5 years.
(2) To avoid doubt, intention is the fault
element for paragraph (1)(a).
29
Information in relation to design for modification of nuclear facility
(1) A person shall, before commencing to
carry out a significant modification of a nuclear facility, give notice in
writing to the Director of the proposed modification.
(2) Where a person commences to carry out a
significant modification of a nuclear facility and at the time when the
modification commences:
(a) the person:
(i) has not given the
Director notice, in accordance with subsection (1), of the proposed
modification; or
(ii) has not provided to
the Director such information in relation to the design for the proposed
modification as the Director, in writing, requests; or
(b) the
prescribed period in relation to the modification has not elapsed since the
information referred to in subparagraph (a)(ii) was provided to the
Director;
the person is guilty of an offence against this
subsection, punishable upon conviction by imprisonment for not more than 2
years.
(3) Regulations made for the purposes of paragraph (2)(b):
(a) may prescribe different periods in
relation to different classes of modification; and
(b) shall not prescribe a period
greater than 6 months.
(4) For the purposes of this section, a
modification of a nuclear facility shall be taken to be a significant
modification of the facility if and only if the modification affects the
implementation of the Australian safeguards system in relation to nuclear
material or associated items located, or to be located, at the facility.
29A
Decommissioning of facility without permit
(1) A person commits an offence if:
(a) the person causes work to be
carried out to decommission the whole or a part of a facility described in
paragraph 28A(1)(a); and
(b) the person does not hold a permit
for the work to be carried out.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 5 years.
(2) To avoid doubt, intention is the fault
element for paragraph (1)(a).
30
False or misleading statements etc.
(1) A person who:
(a) makes to the Minister, the
Director, an inspector, an Agency inspector or another person exercising a
power, or performing a function or duty, in relation to this Act a statement,
either orally or in writing, that is to the knowledge of the person false or
misleading in a material particular; or
(b) presents
to the Minister, the Director, an inspector, an Agency inspector or another
person exercising a power, or performing a function or duty, in relation to
this Act a book, document or other record that is to the knowledge of the
person false or misleading in a material particular;
is guilty of an offence against this subsection
punishable, upon conviction, by imprisonment for not more than 2 years.
(2) Without limiting the generality of subsection (1),
a reference in that subsection to the making of a statement or the presenting
of a book, document or other record shall be read as including a reference to
making a statement or presenting a book, document or other record pursuant to a
condition of a permit or authority.
(3) Section 15.2 of the Criminal Code
(extended geographical jurisdiction—category B) applies to an offence against subsection (1)
of this section.
31
Obstruction of Agency inspector
(1) A person who obstructs or hinders an
Agency inspector in the performance of a duty or function, or the exercise of a
power, under this Act or the regulations is guilty of an offence against this
subsection punishable, upon conviction, by imprisonment for not more than 2
years.
(2) Nothing in subsection (1) shall be
taken to affect the operation of section 147.1 or 149.1 of the Criminal
Code to or in relation to the Director or an inspector.
31A
Unauthorised access to areas etc. to which access is restricted under permit
(1) A person commits an offence if:
(a) the person enters an area or gets
onto or into a vehicle, aircraft or ship; and
(b) the holder of a permit is required
by a condition on the permit:
(i) to restrict access to
the area, vehicle, aircraft or ship to persons who have been authorised by the
holder; and
(ii) to mark the area,
vehicle, aircraft or ship with signs indicating that entering or getting onto
or into it without the authorisation of the holder of a permit is an offence
under this Act; and
(c) the area, vehicle, aircraft or
ship is clearly marked with signs indicating that entering or getting onto or
into it without the authorisation of the holder of a permit is an offence under
this Act.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 6 months.
(2) Strict liability applies to paragraphs (1)(b)
and (c).
(3) Subsection (1) does not apply if the
person is authorised by the holder of the permit described in paragraph (1)(b)
to enter the area or get onto or into the vehicle, aircraft or ship.
Note: A defendant bears an evidential burden in
relation to the matter in subsection (3) (see subsection 13.3(3) of the Criminal
Code).
(4) Section 15.2 of the Criminal Code
(extended geographical jurisdiction—category B) applies to an offence against subsection (1)
of this section.
Division 2—Offences relating to the Physical Protection Convention
32
Definitions
In this Division:
nuclear facility means a facility (including
associated buildings and equipment) in which nuclear material is:
(a) produced; or
(b) processed; or
(c) used; or
(d) handled; or
(e) stored; or
(f) disposed of;
but only if damage to or interference with the facility
(including associated buildings and equipment) could lead to the release of
significant amounts of radiation or radioactive material.
nuclear material has the same meaning as in
the Physical Protection Convention.
33
Stealing nuclear material
A person shall not:
(a) steal;
(b) fraudulently misappropriate;
(c) fraudulently convert to that
person’s own use; or
(d) obtain
by false pretences;
any nuclear material.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 10 years.
34
Demanding nuclear material by threats etc.
A person shall not demand that another
person give nuclear material to the first‑mentioned person or some other person
by force or threat of force or by any form of intimidation.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 10 years.
34A
Carrying, sending or moving nuclear material
(1) A person commits an offence if the person
carries, sends or moves nuclear material into or out of Australia or a foreign country.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 10 years.
(2) Subsection (1) does not apply if the
carrying, sending or moving is done with lawful authority.
Note: A defendant bears an evidential burden in
relation to the matter in subsection (2) (see subsection 13.3(3) of the Criminal
Code).
35 Use
of nuclear material causing death or injury to persons or damage to property or
the environment
A person shall not use nuclear material
to cause:
(a) the death of, or serious injury
to, any person; or
(b) substantial
damage to property or to the environment.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 20 years.
35A
Acts against nuclear facilities etc.
A person commits an offence if:
(a) the person does an act that is
directed against a nuclear facility or that interferes with the operation of a nuclear
facility; and
(b) the person does so intending that
the act will cause, or knowing that the act is likely to cause:
(i) the death of, or
serious injury to, any person; or
(ii) substantial damage to
property or to the environment;
by exposure to radiation or by
the release of radioactive substances.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 20 years.
36
Threat to use nuclear material
A person shall not:
(a) threaten;
(b) state that it is his or her
intention; or
(c) make
a statement from which it could reasonably be inferred that it is his or her
intention;
to use nuclear material:
(d) to cause the death of, or injury
to, any person; or
(e) to
cause damage to property or to the environment; or
(f) to commit an offence against
section 35A.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 10 years.
37
Threat to commit offence
A person shall not:
(a) threaten;
(b) state that it is his or her
intention; or
(c) make
a statement from which it could reasonably be inferred that it is his or her
intention;
to do any act that would be
a contravention of section 33, or section 35A, in order to compel a
person (including an international organisation or the Government of Australia or of a foreign country) to do or refrain from doing any act or thing.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 10 years.
38
Extension of application of offence provisions
(1) Subject to subsection (2), this
Division extends to an act or thing done outside Australia.
(2) Proceedings against a person for an
offence against a provision of this Division in respect of an act or thing done
outside Australia (other than an act or thing to which subsection (3)
applies) shall not be commenced unless:
(a) the person is present in Australia; and
(b) the following are satisfied:
(i) the act or thing was
done in the territory of a foreign country that was, at the time when the act
or thing was done, a State Party to the Physical Protection Convention;
(ii) the act or thing was
done after the time when the Physical Protection Convention first required the
foreign country to make the doing of the act or thing a punishable offence; and
(c) the following are satisfied:
(i) Australia was, at the time when the act or thing was done, a State Party to the Physical
Protection Convention;
(ii) the act or thing was
done after the time when the Physical Protection Convention first required Australia to make the doing of the act or thing a punishable offence; and
(d) the person has not been prosecuted
(whether in Australia or in a foreign country) in respect of the doing of the
act or thing; and
(e) Australia has not extradited the
person to a foreign country in respect of the doing of the act or thing.
(3) This subsection applies to an act or
thing done outside Australia if the act or thing is done:
(a) on an Australian ship or Australian
aircraft; or
(b) in the course of international
nuclear transport of nuclear material in a case where Australia is the State where the shipment originates or the State of ultimate destination;
or
(c) by an Australian citizen; or
(d) by an individual who is a resident
of Australia; or
(e) by a body corporate incorporated
by or under a law of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory.
(4) Subsection (1) shall not be read as
derogating from the effect of the Crimes at Sea Act 2000.
(5) In subsection (3), international
nuclear transport, State where the shipment originates
and State of ultimate destination have the same respective
meanings as they have in the Physical Protection Convention.
Division 3—Miscellaneous
39
Forfeiture
(1) Where a court:
(a) convicts a person of an offence
against this Act; or
(b) makes
an order under section 19B of the Crimes Act 1914 in respect of a
person charged with an offence against this Act;
the court may order the forfeiture to the Commonwealth of
any article used or otherwise involved in the commission of the offence.
(2) Any article ordered by a court to be
forfeited under this section becomes the property of the Commonwealth and may
be sold or otherwise dealt with in accordance with the directions of the Minister
and, pending the giving of such a direction by the Minister, the article shall
be kept in such custody as the Minister directs.
40
Hearing in camera etc.
(1) At any time before or during the hearing
of proceedings before a court in relation to an offence against this Act, the
Judge or Magistrate may, if satisfied that such a course is expedient in order
to prevent the disclosure of information of a kind referred to in the
definition of associated technology in subsection 4(1) or of
information of a kind whose disclosure could prejudice the physical security of
nuclear material or an associated item:
(a) order that some or all of the
members of the public shall be excluded during the whole or a part of the
proceedings;
(b) order that no report of the whole
or a specified part of the proceedings shall be published; or
(c) make orders, and give directions,
prohibiting or restricting access, either before, during or after the
proceedings, to any affidavit, exhibit, information or other document used in
the proceedings that is on the file in the court or in the records of the
court.
(2) A person who contravenes an order made,
or direction given, under subsection (1) is guilty of an offence against
that subsection punishable, upon conviction, by imprisonment for not more than
5 years.
(3) Upon the termination of proceedings
before a court in relation to an offence against this Act, any document
containing information of a kind described in subsection (1) that would
otherwise form part of the records of the court shall, as soon as practicable
after the termination of those proceedings, be delivered into the possession
and control of the Director.
(4) In this section a reference to
proceedings before a court shall be read as including a reference to committal
proceedings in relation to an indictable offence.
(5) For the purposes of this section,
proceedings shall not be taken to have terminated until:
(a) in the case of proceedings other
than committal proceedings in relation to an indictable offence—the time for
bringing an appeal arising from those proceedings has expired or an appeal
arising from those proceedings has been brought and has been determined; or
(b) in the case of committal
proceedings in relation to an indictable offence—the trial in relation to the
offence has been determined and the time for bringing an appeal arising from
those proceedings has expired or an appeal arising from those proceedings has
been brought and has been determined.
41
Register of Permit and Authority Holders to be evidence of certain matters
(1) In a proceeding, the production of the
Register, or of a document certified by the Director to be a true copy of the
Register, is prima facie evidence:
(a) that a person whose name has been
entered in the Register as a person to whom a relevant permit has been granted
became the holder of that permit on the day entered in the Register as the day
on which the grant of that permit took effect and:
(i) if there is entered in
the Register the day on which the revocation, expiration or cessation of that
permit took effect— continued to be the holder of that permit until the day so
entered; or
(ii) in any other case—is
the holder of that permit and has been the holder of that permit since that
first‑mentioned day;
(b) that a person is not the holder,
and has never been the holder, of a relevant permit, if his or her name has not
been entered in the Register as a person to whom a relevant permit has been
granted; and
(c) that a person whose name has been
entered in the Register as a person to whom a relevant permit of a particular
kind has been granted was not the holder of a relevant permit of that kind on
any day that is not included in:
(i) the relevant period
applicable to that permit; or
(ii) if the name of the
person has been entered in the Register as a person to whom 2 or more relevant
permits of that kind have been granted—any of the relevant periods applicable
to those permits.
(2) The production in a proceeding of a
document purporting to be a copy of the Register and to be certified by the
Director to be a true copy is prima facie evidence that it is such a
copy and that it has been so certified.
(3) In this section:
relevant permit means a permit or an
authority under section 18.
relevant period, in relation to a relevant
permit, means the period from and including the day entered in the Register as
the day on which the permit took effect to and including the day immediately
preceding the day entered in the Register as the day on which the revocation,
expiration or cessation of that permit took effect.
Part IV—Administration
Division 1—Director of Safeguards
42
Director of Safeguards
(1) There shall be a Director of Safeguards.
(2) The Director shall be appointed by the
Governor‑General.
(3) The Director shall be appointed for such
period, not exceeding 5 years, as is specified in the instrument of
appointment, but is eligible for reappointment.
(5) The Director holds office on such terms
and conditions (if any) in respect of matters not provided for by this Act as
are determined by the Governor‑General.
(6) The Director may be referred to by
another title specified by the Minister by notice in the Gazette.
43
Functions of Director
The functions of the Director are:
(a) to ensure the effective operation
of the Australian safeguards system;
(b) to carry out, on behalf of Australia, the obligations that Australia has under the Agency Agreement, the Supplementary
Agency Agreements and the prescribed international agreements to report in
relation to the operation of the Australian safeguards system;
(c) to monitor compliance with the
provisions of the prescribed international agreements by parties other than Australia;
(d) to undertake, co‑ordinate and
facilitate research and development in relation to nuclear safeguards;
(e) to advise the Minister on matters
relating to the operation of the Australian safeguards system;
(f) to carry out such duties, and to
exercise such powers, as are conferred on the Director by or under this Act or
the regulations or any other law of the Commonwealth; and
(g) to do anything incidental or
conducive to the performance of any of the functions referred to in the
preceding paragraphs.
44
Directions of Minister
The Director shall, in performing his or
her functions and exercising his or her powers, comply with any directions
given to him or her by the Minister.
45
Remuneration and allowances
(1) The Director shall be paid such
remuneration as is determined by the Remuneration Tribunal, but if no
determination of that remuneration by the Tribunal is in operation the Director
shall be paid such remuneration as is prescribed.
(2) The Director shall be paid such
allowances as are prescribed.
(3) This section has effect subject to the Remuneration
Tribunal Act 1973.
46
Leave of absence
(1) The Director has such recreation leave
entitlements as are determined by the Remuneration Tribunal.
(2) The Minister may grant the Director leave
of absence, other than recreation leave, on such terms and conditions as to
remuneration or otherwise as the Minister determines.
47
Resignation
The Director may resign from office by
writing signed by the Director and delivered to the Governor‑General.
48
Termination of appointment
(1) The Governor‑General may terminate the
appointment of the Director for misbehaviour or physical or mental incapacity.
(2) If the Director:
(a) becomes bankrupt, applies to take
the benefit of any law for the relief of bankrupt or insolvent debtors,
compounds with his or her creditors or makes an assignment of his or her
remuneration for their benefit;
(b) is absent from duty, except on
leave of absence, for 14 consecutive days or for 28 days in any 12 months;
(c) engages, except with the approval
of the Minister, in paid employment outside the duties of the office of
Director; or
(d) fails,
without reasonable excuse, to comply with his or her obligations under section 49;
the Governor‑General shall terminate the appointment of
the Director.
49
Disclosure of interests
The Director shall give written notice to
the Minister of all direct or indirect pecuniary interests that the Director
has or acquires in any business whether in Australia or elsewhere or in any
body corporate carrying on any such business.
50
Acting Director
(1) The Minister may appoint a person to act
as Director:
(a) during a vacancy in the office of
Director, whether or not an appointment has previously been made to the office;
or
(b) during any period, or during all
periods, when the Director is absent from Australia or is, for any reason,
unable to perform the duties of the office of Director.
(2) An appointment to act as Director may be
expressed to have effect only in such circumstances as are specified in the
instrument of appointment.
(3) A person appointed under subsection (1)
to act during a vacancy in the office of Director shall not continue so to act
for more than 12 months.
(4) Where a person is acting as Director
otherwise than by reason of a vacancy in the office of Director and the office
becomes vacant while the person is so acting, then, subject to subsection (2),
the person may continue so to act until the Minister otherwise directs, the
vacancy is filled or a period of 12 months from the date on which the vacancy
occurs expires, whichever first occurs.
(5) While a person is acting as Director,
that person may exercise all the powers, and shall perform all the duties, of
the Director.
(6) The Minister may:
(a) determine the terms and conditions
of appointment, including remuneration and allowances, of a person appointed to
act as Director; and
(b) terminate such an appointment at
any time.
(7) A person appointed to act as Director may
resign the appointment by writing signed by the person and delivered to the
Minister.
(8) Anything done by or in relation to a
person purporting to act under subsection (1) is not invalid on the ground
that:
(a) the occasion for the person’s
appointment had not arisen;
(b) there is a defect or irregularity
in connection with the person’s appointment;
(c) the person’s appointment had ceased
to have effect; or
(d) the occasion for the person to act
had not arisen or had ceased.
51
Annual report by Director
(1) The Director shall, as soon as
practicable after 30 June in each year, prepare and furnish to the
Minister a report in relation to the operations of the Director during that
year.
(2) A report shall include the following
information in respect of the period to which the report relates:
(a) for all nuclear material and
associated items of Australian origin transferred from Australia to any foreign jurisdiction or between foreign jurisdictions:
(i) the total quantities
in each stage of the nuclear fuel cycle; and
(ii) the
intended end‑use;
of the nuclear material and the
items transferred to each jurisdiction;
(b) the quantities, categories and
intended end‑use of all nuclear material and associated items within Australia; and
(c) any unreconciled differences in
quantities of:
(i) nuclear material of
Australian origin, wherever situated; or
(ii) nuclear
material within Australia, regardless of origin;
and an explanation of those
differences.
(3) In subsection (2), foreign
jurisdiction means a foreign country or the European Atomic Energy
Community.
(4) The Minister shall cause a copy of a
report furnished to the Minister under subsection (1) to be laid before
each House of the Parliament within 15 sitting days of that House after the day
on which the Minister receives the report.
52
Additional reports
The
Director:
(a) shall furnish to the Minister such
reports or information in relation to the operations of the Director as the
Minister requires; and
(b) may furnish to the Minister such
other reports or information in relation to the operations of the Director as
the Director considers appropriate.
53
Delegation by Director
(1) The Director may, either generally or as
otherwise provided by the instrument of delegation, by writing signed by the
Director, delegate to an inspector or a member of the staff referred to in
section 55 all or any of the Director’s powers under this Act or the
regulations, other than this power of delegation.
(2) A power so delegated, when exercised by
the delegate, shall, for the purposes of this Act or the regulations, be deemed
to have been exercised by the Director.
(3) A delegation under this section does not
prevent the exercise of a power by the Director.
Division 2—Australian Safeguards Office
54
Australian Safeguards Office
(1) There is hereby established an Office to
be known as the Australian Safeguards Office.
(2) The Australian Safeguards Office shall
consist of the Director and the staff referred to in section 55.
(3) The Office may be referred to by another
name specified by the Minister by notice in the Gazette. This subsection
has effect despite subsection (1).
55
Staff
The staff required to assist the
Director in carrying out or giving effect to the provisions of this Act shall
be persons engaged under the Public Service Act 1999.
56
Engagements of consultants etc.
(1) The Director may, on behalf of the
Commonwealth and with the approval of the Minister or a person authorised in
writing by the Minister for the purpose, engage, under agreements in writing,
persons having suitable qualifications and experience as consultants to the
Director.
(2) The terms and conditions of engagement of
a person engaged by the Director under subsection (1) are such as are
determined by the Director.
Division 3—Inspectors and Agency inspectors
57
Inspectors and Agency inspectors
(1) The Minister may, in writing, appoint a
person as an inspector for the purposes of this Act.
(2) Where the Minister is satisfied that a
person has, in accordance with the Agency Agreement or a Supplementary Agency
Agreement, been designated by the Agency as an Agency inspector to Australia,
the Minister shall, in writing, declare the person to be an Agency inspector
for the purposes of this Act.
(3) Where the Minister declares a person to
be an Agency inspector for the purposes of this Act, the Minister shall give
the person a copy of the declaration.
(4) The Minister may, in the Minister’s
discretion:
(a) determine terms and conditions of
appointment, including remuneration and allowances, of a person appointed under
subsection (1); and
(b) at any time terminate such an
appointment.
58
Identity cards
(1) The Director may issue to an inspector an
identity card in a form approved by the Director.
(2) Where a
person in possession of an identity card issued to the person under subsection (1)
ceases to be an inspector, the person shall forthwith return the identity card
to the Director or a person nominated by the Director.
Penalty: 1 penalty unit.
(3) An offence under subsection (2) is
an offence of strict liability.
Note: For strict liability, see
section 6.1 of the Criminal Code.
Division 4—Inspections, searches and seizures
59
Safeguards inspections by inspectors
(1) A reference in this section to a relevant
safeguards purpose shall be read as a reference to the purpose of:
(a) ascertaining whether the
provisions of this Act and the regulations have been or are being complied
with; or
(b) ascertaining whether the
restrictions and conditions applicable to a permit or authority have been or
are being complied with by the person to whom the permit or authority was
granted; or
(c) ascertaining whether orders made
and directions given under section 73 have been or are being complied
with; or
(d) ensuring the proper functioning of
containment devices and surveillance devices; or
(e) facilitating an inspection by an
Agency inspector in accordance with the Agency Agreement or a Supplementary
Agency Agreement; or
(f) ascertaining whether the
construction of a facility described in paragraph 28A(1)(a) has been or is
being carried out in accordance with information provided to the Director under
this Act in relation to the construction; or
(fa) ascertaining whether the
modification of a nuclear facility has been or is being carried out in
accordance with information provided to the Director under section 29 in
relation to the modification; or
(fb) ascertaining whether the
decommissioning of a facility described in paragraph 28A(1)(a) has been or is
being carried out in accordance with information provided to the Director under
this Act in relation to the decommissioning; or
(g) doing any act or thing authorised
by an authority given pursuant to paragraph 67(1)(d) or 68(1)(e).
(2) A reference in this section to a relevant
power shall be read as a reference to a power to:
(a) search land or premises or a
vessel, aircraft or vehicle;
(b) inspect or examine a matter or
thing;
(c) take samples of a matter or thing;
(d) examine a document (including a
record kept pursuant to this Act or the regulations, pursuant to a condition of
a permit or authority or pursuant to an order or direction under section 73);
(e) take extracts from, or make copies
of, a document (including a record of the kind referred to in paragraph (d));
(f) measure any quantity of nuclear
material or associated material;
(g) verify the proper functioning or
calibration of an instrument (including an instrument that forms part of a
containment device or surveillance device);
(h) install or operate a containment
device or surveillance device; or
(j) do any other act or thing
necessary or convenient to be done in order to achieve a relevant safeguards
purpose.
(3) An inspector may:
(a) with the consent of the occupier
of any land or premises;
(b) in accordance with an agreement,
whether oral or in writing, between the Director and the occupier of any land
or premises; or
(c) pursuant
to a warrant issued under subsection (6) in respect of any land or
premises;
enter upon the land, or upon or into the premises, and
exercise any relevant power for a relevant safeguards purpose.
(4) An inspector may:
(a) with the consent of the person in control
of any vessel, aircraft or vehicle; or
(b) pursuant
to a warrant issued under subsection (6) in respect of any vessel,
aircraft or vehicle;
enter the vessel, aircraft or vehicle and exercise any
relevant power for a relevant safeguards purpose.
(5) Where an inspector may enter a vessel,
aircraft or vehicle under subsection (4), the inspector may, for that
purpose and for the purpose of exercising a relevant power for a relevant
safeguards purpose, stop and detain the vessel, aircraft or vehicle.
(6) Where an information on oath is laid
before a Magistrate alleging that there are reasonable grounds for an inspector
having access to any land, premises, vessel, aircraft or vehicle, in order to
exercise relevant powers in relation to the land, premises, vessel, aircraft or
vehicle for relevant safeguards purposes, and the information sets out those
grounds, the Magistrate may issue a warrant authorising an inspector named in
the warrant, with such assistance as the inspector thinks necessary, and if necessary
by force:
(a) to enter upon the land or upon or
into the premises, vessel, aircraft or vehicle; and
(b) to exercise relevant powers in
relation to the land, premises, vessel, aircraft or vehicle, as the case
requires, for relevant safeguards purposes specified in the warrant.
(7) A Magistrate shall not issue a warrant
under subsection (6) unless:
(a) the informant or some other person
has given to the Magistrate, either orally or by affidavit, such further
information (if any) as the Magistrate requires concerning the grounds on which
the issue of the warrant is being sought; and
(b) the Magistrate is satisfied that
there are reasonable grounds for issuing the warrant.
(8) There shall be stated in a warrant issued
under subsection (6):
(a) whether entry is authorised to be
made at any time of the day or night or during specified hours of the day or
night; and
(b) a day, not being later than one
month after the day of issue of the warrant, upon which the warrant ceases to
have effect.
60
Safeguards inspections by Agency inspectors
(1) A reference in this section to a relevant
power shall be read as a reference to a power to:
(a) inspect or examine a matter or
thing;
(b) take samples of a matter or thing;
(c) examine a document (including a record
kept pursuant to this Act or the regulations, pursuant to a condition of a
permit or authority or pursuant to an order or direction under section 73);
(d) take extracts from, or make copies
of, a document (including a record of the kind referred to in paragraph (c));
(e) measure any quantity of nuclear
material;
(f) verify the proper functioning or
calibration of an instrument (including an instrument that forms part of a
containment device or surveillance device);
(g) install or operate a containment
device or surveillance device; or
(h) do any other act or thing
necessary or appropriate to be done in order to carry out an inspection that
the Agency has the right to make in accordance with the Agency Agreement or a
Supplementary Agency Agreement.
(2) For the purposes of carrying out an
inspection that the Agency has the right to make in accordance with the Agency
Agreement or a Supplementary Agency Agreement, an Agency inspector may:
(a) with the consent of the occupier
of any land or premises; or
(b) in
accordance with an agreement, whether oral or in writing between the Director
and the occupier of any land or premises;
enter upon the land, or upon or into the premises, and
exercise any relevant power.
(2A) For the purposes of carrying out an
inspection that the Agency has the right to make in accordance with the Agency
Agreement or a Supplementary Agency Agreement, an Agency inspector may, with
the consent of the person in control of any vessel, aircraft or vehicle, enter
the vessel, aircraft or vehicle and exercise any relevant power.
(3) Where:
(a) a warrant is issued to an
inspector (in this subsection referred to as the relevant inspector)
under subsection 59(6) authorising the exercise of powers in relation to land
or premises or a vessel, aircraft or vehicle for specified relevant purposes;
and
(b) those
purposes include the purpose of facilitating an inspection by an Agency
inspector in accordance with the Agency Agreement or a Supplementary Agency
Agreement;
an Agency inspector may accompany the relevant inspector
when the relevant inspector enters upon the land or upon or into the premises,
vessel, aircraft or vehicle and may, for the purposes of carrying out the
inspection referred to in paragraph (b), exercise any relevant power.
61
Offence‑related searches and seizures
(1) Where an inspector has reasonable grounds
for suspecting that there may be on any land or premises any article or thing
that may afford evidence as to the commission of an offence against this Act,
the inspector may:
(a) with the consent of the occupier
of the land or premises;
(b) pursuant to a warrant issued under
subsection (4); or
(c) pursuant
to section 63;
enter upon the land, or upon or into the premises, and:
(d) search the land or premises for
any such article or thing; and
(e) seize any such article or thing
found upon the land or upon or in the premises.
(2) Where an inspector has reasonable grounds
for suspecting that there is in any vessel, aircraft or vehicle any article or
thing that may afford evidence as to the commission of an offence against this
Act, the inspector may:
(a) with the consent of the person in
control of the vessel, aircraft or vehicle;
(b) pursuant to a warrant issued under
subsection (4); or
(c) pursuant
to section 63;
enter the vessel, aircraft or vehicle and:
(d) search the vessel, aircraft or
vehicle for any such article or thing; and
(e) seize any such article or thing
found in the vessel, aircraft or vehicle.
(3) Where an inspector may enter a vessel,
aircraft or vehicle under subsection (2), the inspector may, for that
purpose and for the purpose of exercising a power referred to in paragraph (2)(d)
or (e), stop and detain the vessel, aircraft or vehicle.
(4) Where an information on oath is laid
before a Magistrate alleging that there are reasonable grounds for suspecting
that there may be upon any land or upon or in any premises, vessel, aircraft or
vehicle, any article or thing that may afford evidence as to the commission of
an offence against this Act and the information sets out those grounds, the
Magistrate may issue a search warrant authorising an inspector named in the
warrant, with such assistance as the inspector thinks necessary, and if
necessary by force:
(a) to enter upon the land or upon or
into the premises, vessel, aircraft or vehicle;
(b) to search the land, premises,
vessel, aircraft or vehicle for any such article or thing; and
(c) to seize any article or thing that
the inspector:
(i) finds upon the land or
upon or in the premises, vessel, aircraft or vehicle; and
(ii) believes on reasonable
grounds may be an article or thing connected with that offence.
(5) A Magistrate shall not issue a warrant
under subsection (4) unless:
(a) the informant or some other person
has given to the Magistrate, either orally or by affidavit, such further
information (if any) as the Magistrate requires concerning the grounds on which
the issue of the warrant is being sought; and
(b) the Magistrate is satisfied that
there are reasonable grounds for issuing the warrant.
(6) There shall be stated in a warrant issued
under subsection (4):
(a) the purpose for which the warrant
is issued, which shall include a reference to the nature of the offence in
relation to which the entry and search are authorised;
(b) whether entry is authorised to be
made at any time of the day or night or during specified hours of the day or
night;
(c) a description of the kind of
documents, substances, equipment or things to be seized; and
(d) a day, not being later than one
month after the day of issue of the warrant, upon which the warrant ceases to
have effect.
(7) Where an inspector seizes any article or
thing pursuant to subsection (1) or (2), the inspector may retain the
article or thing until the expiration of a period of 60 days after the seizure
or, if proceedings for an offence against this Act in respect of which the
article or thing may afford evidence are instituted within that period, until
the proceedings (including any appeal to a court in relation to those
proceedings) are terminated.
(8) The Director may authorise any article or
thing seized under subsection (1) or (2) to be released to the owner, or
to the person from whom the article or thing was seized, either unconditionally
or on such conditions as the Director thinks fit, including conditions as to
the giving of security for payment of the value of the article or thing if it
is forfeited under section 39.
62
Warrants may be granted by telephone
(1) Where, by reason of circumstances of
urgency, an inspector considers it necessary to do so, the inspector may make
an application for a warrant under subsection 61(4), by telephone, in
accordance with this section.
(2) Before so making application, an
inspector shall prepare an information of a kind referred to in subsection
61(4) that sets out the grounds on which the issue of the warrant is being
sought, but may, if it is necessary to do so, make the application before the
information has been sworn.
(3) Where a Magistrate to whom an application
under subsection (1) is made is satisfied:
(a) after having considered the terms
of the information prepared in accordance with subsection (2); and
(b) after
having received such further information (if any) as the Magistrate requires
concerning the grounds on which the issue of the warrant is being sought;
that there are reasonable grounds for issuing the warrant,
the Magistrate shall complete and sign such a search warrant as the Magistrate
would issue under section 61 if the application has been made in
accordance with that section.
(4) Where a
Magistrate signs a warrant under subsection (3):
(a) the Magistrate shall inform the
inspector of the terms of the warrant and the date on which and the time at
which it was signed, and record on the warrant the reasons for the granting of
the warrant; and
(b) the inspector shall complete a
form of warrant in the terms furnished to the inspector by the Magistrate and
write on it the name of the Magistrate and the date on which and the time at
which the warrant was signed.
(5) Where an inspector completes a form of
warrant in accordance with subsection (4), the inspector shall, not later
than the day next following the date of expiry of the warrant, forward to the
Magistrate who signed the warrant the form of warrant completed by the
inspector and the information duly sworn in connection with the warrant.
(6) Upon receipt of the documents referred to
in subsection (5), the Magistrate shall attach to them the warrant signed
by the Magistrate and deal with the documents in the manner in which the
Magistrate would have dealt with the information if the application for the
warrant had been made in accordance with section 61.
(7) A form of warrant duly completed by an
inspector in accordance with subsection (4) is, if it is in accordance
with the terms of the warrant signed by the Magistrate, authority for any
entry, search, seizure or other exercise of a power that the warrant so signed
authorises.
(8) Where it is material, in any proceedings,
for a court to be satisfied that an entry, search, seizure or other exercise of
power was authorised in accordance with this section, and the warrant signed by
a Magistrate in accordance with this section authorising the entry, search,
seizure or other exercise of power is not produced in evidence, the court shall
assume, unless the contrary is proved, that the entry, search, seizure or other
exercise of power was not authorised by such a warrant.
63
Emergency searches and seizures
(1) Subject to subsection (3), where an
inspector believes on reasonable grounds that:
(a) there is situated upon any land,
or upon or in any premises, vessel, aircraft or vehicle any article or thing
that the inspector believes on reasonable grounds will afford evidence of the
commission of an offence against this Act; and
(b) the
exercise of powers under this section is necessary to prevent the concealment,
loss or destruction of the article or thing;
the inspector may, with such assistance as the inspector
thinks fit, and if necessary by force:
(c) enter upon the land or upon or
into the premises, vessel, aircraft or vehicle;
(d) search for the article or thing;
and
(e) seize the article or thing.
(2) Where an inspector may enter a vessel,
aircraft or vehicle under subsection (1), the inspector may, for that
purpose and for the purpose of exercising a power referred to in paragraph (1)(d)
or (e), stop and detain the vessel, aircraft or vehicle.
(3) An inspector shall not exercise powers
under subsection (1) unless the power is exercised in circumstances of
such seriousness and urgency as to require and justify the immediate exercise
of those powers without the authority of a warrant issued under section 61.
(4) The reference in subsection (3) to a
warrant issued under section 61 includes a reference to such a warrant
issued in accordance with section 62.
(5) Where an inspector seizes any article or
thing pursuant to subsection (1), the inspector may retain the article or
thing until the expiration of a period of 60 days after the seizure or, if
proceedings for an offence against this Act in respect of which the article or
thing may afford evidence are instituted within that period, until the
proceedings (including any appeal to a court in relation to those proceedings)
are terminated.
(6) The Director may authorise any article or
thing, seized under subsection (1) to be released to the owner, or to the
person from whom the article or thing was seized, either unconditionally or on
such conditions as the Director thinks fit, including conditions as to the
giving of security for payment of the value of the article or thing if it is
forfeited under section 39.
64
Inspectors and Agency inspectors to produce evidence of identity
(1) Where an inspector exercises a power
under section 59, 61 or 63 (otherwise than pursuant to a warrant) in
relation to:
(a) land or premises;
(b) a vessel, aircraft or vehicle; or
(c) an
article or thing;
the inspector shall forthwith produce the inspector’s
identity card for inspection by the person (if any) who is in charge of the
land, premises, vessel, aircraft or vehicle or in possession of the article or
thing and, if the inspector fails to do so, the inspector ceases to be
authorised to exercise that power.
(2) Where an Agency inspector exercises a
power under section 60 in relation to land or premises, the Agency
inspector shall forthwith produce for inspection by the person (if any) who is
in charge of the land or premises, a copy of the declaration made, pursuant to
subsection 57(2), in respect of the Agency inspector and, if the Agency
inspector fails to do so, the Agency inspector ceases to be authorised to
exercise that power.
65
Persons to assist inspectors
(1) Subject to subsection (2), where an
inspector has entered upon any land or upon or into any premises, vessel,
aircraft or vehicle under section 59, 61 or 63, the occupier of the land
or premises or the person in control of the vessel, aircraft or vehicle, as the
case requires, shall, if requested by the inspector to do so, provide
reasonable assistance to the inspector for the purposes of the exercise of the
inspector’s powers under that section in respect of the land, premises, vessel,
aircraft or vehicle, as the case requires.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 6 months.
(2) Where an inspector makes a request of a
person under subsection (1), the inspector shall produce the inspector’s
identity card for inspection by the person and, if the inspector fails to do
so, the person is not obliged to comply with the request.
66
Inspector may require information etc.
(1) An inspector may request a person whom
the inspector finds committing, or whom the inspector suspects on reasonable
grounds of having committed, an offence against this Act to state that person’s
full name and usual place of residence.
(2) An inspector may request a person whom
the inspector finds doing, or suspects on reasonable grounds of having done, an
act of a kind in respect of which a person is required to hold a permit or
authority under this Act to produce such a permit or authority or evidence of
the existence and contents of such a permit or authority.
(3) Where an inspector makes a request of a
person under subsection (1) or (2), the inspector shall produce the
inspector’s identity card for inspection by the person and, if the inspector
fails to do so, the person is not obliged to comply with the request.
(4) Subject to subsection (3), a person
who, without reasonable excuse, fails to comply with a request made of the
person by an inspector under subsection (1) or (2) is guilty of an offence
against this section punishable, on conviction, by a fine not exceeding 10
penalty units.
(5) An offence under subsection (4) is
an offence of strict liability.
Note: For strict liability, see
section 6.1 of the Criminal Code.
67
Seizure of nuclear material etc. where required by prescribed international
agreement
(1) Where:
(a) a person (in this section referred
to as the relevant person) has possession of nuclear material or
an associated item; and
(b) Australia is, pursuant to a prescribed international agreement with another country (in
this section referred to as the relevant country), under an
obligation to return or transfer the material or item to the relevant country;
the Director may:
(c) seize the material or item on
behalf of the Commonwealth and arrange for the material or item to be dealt
with in accordance with the prescribed agreement; or
(d) authorise an inspector, in
writing, to seize the material or item on behalf of the Commonwealth and to
arrange for the material or item to be dealt with in accordance with the
prescribed agreement.
(2) Where the Director gives an authority to
an inspector under subsection (1), the inspector may, subject to subsection (3),
exercise the powers conferred by the authority.
(3) Where an inspector exercises a power pursuant
to an authority under subsection (1), the inspector shall forthwith
produce the inspector’s identity card for inspection by the relevant person
and, if the inspector fails to do so, the inspector ceases to be authorised to
exercise that power.
(4) Where the Director or an inspector seizes
nuclear material or an associated item under subsection (1) or (2), the
Director shall, within 7 days after the seizure of the material or item, give
notice in writing to the relevant person that the Director proposes to return
or transfer the material or item to the relevant country.
(5) A notice
under subsection (4) shall include:
(a) a statement of the grounds on
which the material or item has been seized (including, without limiting the
generality of the foregoing, a reference to the prescribed international
agreement in reliance on which the material or item has been seized);
(b) a statement that the relevant
person may, within 14 days after receiving the notice, apply to the Minister,
in writing, for the return to the relevant person of the material or item; and
(c) a summary of the procedures
applicable under subsections (7) and (8).
(6) Where nuclear material or an associated
item is seized under subsection (1) or (2) and notice is not given to the
relevant person in accordance with subsections (4) and (5), the Director
shall, if so requested by the relevant person, return the material or item to
the relevant person.
(7) Where:
(a) the period of 14 days referred to
in paragraph (5)(b) expires without the relevant person having applied to
the Minister, in writing, for return of the material or item; or
(b) the
relevant person applies to the Minister, in writing, within that period of 14
days for return of the material or item and the Minister rejects the application;
the Minister may, in writing, authorise the return or
transfer of the material or item to the relevant country in accordance with the
prescribed agreement and, where the Minister does so, property in the material
or item thereupon vests in the Commonwealth.
(8) Where, but for this subsection, the
operation of this section would result in the acquisition of property from a
person otherwise than on just terms, there is payable to the person by the
Commonwealth such reasonable amount of compensation as is agreed upon between
the person and the Commonwealth or, failing agreement, as is determined by the
Federal Court of Australia.
(9) In subsection (8), acquisition
of property and just terms have the same respective
meanings as in paragraph 51(xxxi) of the Constitution.
Division 5—Miscellaneous
68
Compliance with conditions etc.
(1) Where a person (in this section referred
to as the relevant person) does not comply with:
(a) a restriction or condition to
which a permit or authority granted to the relevant person is subject;
(b) an order made under section 73;
or
(c) a
direction given to the relevant person under section 73;
the Director may:
(d) do all or any of the things
required to be done for compliance with the restriction, condition, order or
direction, as the case may be; or
(e) authorise an inspector, in
writing, to do all or any of the things required for compliance with the
restriction, condition, order or direction, as the case may be.
(2) Where the Director gives an authority to
an inspector under subsection (1), the inspector may, subject to subsection (3),
exercise a power conferred by the authority.
(3) Where it is necessary for an inspector,
in order to exercise a power conferred by an authority under subsection (1),
to:
(a) enter upon land, or upon or into
premises; or
(b) enter
a vessel, aircraft or vehicle;
and to exercise relevant powers (within the meaning of
section 59), the entry and the exercise of those powers shall be effected
in accordance with section 59.
(4) Costs and expenses incurred by the
Director or an inspector under subsection (1) are a debt due by the
relevant person to the Commonwealth and are recoverable in a court of competent
jurisdiction.
69
Register of Permit and Authority Holders to be kept
(1) The Director shall cause to be kept for
the purposes of this Act a register to be known as the Register of Permit and
Authority Holders and shall cause to be entered in the Register:
(b) the names of persons to whom
permits are granted; and
(c) the names of persons to whom
authorities under section 18 are granted.
(2) Where a person is granted a permit or
authority, the Director shall forthwith cause particulars of the grant
(including particulars of the day on which the grant takes effect) to be entered
in the Register.
(3) Where a permit granted to a person or an
authority granted to a person under section 18 is revoked, expires or
otherwise ceases to have effect, the Director shall forthwith cause particulars
of the revocation, expiration or cessation (including particulars of the day on
which the revocation, expiration or cessation takes effect) to be entered in
the Register.
(4) The Register shall be kept in such form
as the Minister directs.
(5) The Director may correct clerical errors
in the Register.
Part IVA—Charges
69A
Charge—producers of uranium ore concentrates
(1) The charge imposed by section 3 of
the Nuclear Safeguards (Producers of Uranium Ore Concentrates) Charge Act
1993 on a person who on 1 November in a financial year holds a permit
granted under paragraph 13(1)(a) is payable by the person on 1 December in
the financial year.
(2) The amount of charge payable is:
(a) $500,000; or
(b) if the regulations provide for the
payment of a lesser amount prescribed by, or ascertained under, the
regulations—that lesser amount.
69B
Extension of time to pay
(1) If a charge is payable by a person under
section 69A, the Director may, if he or she thinks it reasonable in the
circumstances, determine in writing that the charge may be paid on a day later
than 1 December.
(2) If the Director makes a determination
under subsection (1), the charge is payable on that later day.
69C
Payment by instalments
(1) If a charge is payable by a person under
section 69A, the Director may, if he or she thinks it reasonable in the
circumstances, determine in writing that the charge may be paid by instalments.
(2) Instalments are payable on the days, and
in the amounts, specified in, or ascertained under, the determination.
(3) If an instalment has not been paid on the
day on which it is payable, the amount of charge outstanding becomes payable
immediately.
Part V—Miscellaneous
70
Powers to be exercised in accordance with international agreements
(1) Where this Act confers a power,
discretion, duty or function on a person, the exercise of the power or
discretion or the performance of the duty or function is authorised by this Act
only to the extent that the exercise or performance is not inconsistent with Australia’s obligations under the relevant international agreements.
(2) Where this Act confers a power or
discretion on a person, the person shall have regard to Australia’s obligations under the relevant international agreements in exercising that
power or discretion.
(3) A reference in this section to a relevant
international agreement is a reference to an agreement that is, by virtue of subsection (4)
or (5), a relevant international agreement for the purposes of this section.
(4) The Non‑Proliferation Treaty, the Agency
Agreement, the Supplementary Agency Agreements and the prescribed international
agreements are relevant international agreements for the purposes of this
section.
(5) The Physical Protection Convention is a
relevant international agreement for the purposes of this section.
71 Reports
etc. to be confidential
(1) This section applies to a person who is
or has been:
(a) the Director;
(b) an inspector;
(c) a member of staff referred to in
section 55;
(d) a person engaged under section 56;
or
(e) an employee of a person engaged
under section 56.
(2) A person to whom this section applies
shall not, either directly or indirectly, except for the purposes of this Act
or for the purposes of an international agreement:
(a) produce to any person a document:
(i) given to the Director
or to an inspector pursuant to a condition of a permit or authority or pursuant
to an order or direction under section 73;
(ii) given to the
Australian Government, the Director or an inspector pursuant to an
international agreement under which the document is to be treated as
confidential; or
(iii) given to the
Australian Government, the Director or an inspector by or on behalf of the
government of a foreign country with the stipulation that the document is to be
treated as confidential;
(b) make a record of, or divulge or
communicate to any person, the contents of a document referred to in paragraph (a);
or
(c) make a record of, or divulge or
communicate to any person, any information:
(i) given to the Director
or an inspector pursuant to a condition of a permit or authority or pursuant to
an order or direction under section 73; or
(ii) given
to the Australian Government, the Director or an inspector pursuant to an
international agreement under which the information is to be treated as
confidential.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 2 years.
72
Delegation by Minister
(1) The Minister may, either generally or as
otherwise provided by the instrument of delegation, by writing signed by the
Minister, delegate to the Director or an officer of the Department all or any
of the Minister’s powers under this Act or the regulations, other than:
(a) this power of delegation; and
(b) the Minister’s power under
subsection 22(5).
(2) A power so delegated, when exercised by
the delegate, shall, for the purposes of this Act and the regulations, be
deemed to have been exercised by the Minister.
(3) A delegation under this section does not
prevent the exercise of a power by the Minister.
(4) Without limiting the generality of subsection (1),
the Minister may delegate to the Director the Minister’s power to grant permits
or to grant authorities under section 18.
(5) If the
Minister delegates to the Director the Minister’s power to grant permits, the
following provisions have effect:
(a) section 12 applies in
relation to any application for a permit that is dealt with by the Director
pursuant to the delegation as if paragraph 12(2)(b) and subsection 12(3) were
omitted;
(b) sections 14 and 15 do not
apply in relation to any application for a permit that is dealt with by the Director
pursuant to the delegation but the Director:
(i) shall not grant a
permit under section 13 to the owner or operator of a nuclear facility
unless the Director is satisfied that:
(A) the
person applying for the grant of the permit has provided the Director with all
information that the Director has required the person to provide in relation to
the application pursuant to paragraph 12(2)(a);
(B) appropriate
procedures can be applied at the facility for the implementation of the
Australian safeguards system in relation to nuclear material and associated
items to be located at the facility; and
(C) adequate
physical security can be applied to nuclear material and associated items at
the facility;
(ii) shall not grant a
permit under section 13 in relation to nuclear material or an associated
item that is to be held otherwise than at a nuclear facility unless the
Director is satisfied that the person applying for the grant of the permit has
provided the Director with all information that the Director has required the
person to provide in relation to the application pursuant to paragraph
12(2)(a);
(c) subsection 16A(1) applies in
relation to the grant of a permit by the Director acting under the delegation
as if that subsection permitted the grant only if the Director is satisfied of
the matters described in paragraphs 16A(1)(a), (b) and (c);
(d) subsection 16B(1) applies in
relation to the grant of a permit by the Director acting under the delegation
as if that subsection permitted the grant only if the Director is satisfied of
the matters described in paragraphs 16B(1)(a), (b) and (c).
(6) If the Minister delegates to the Director
the Minister’s power to grant authorities under section 18, the following
provisions have effect:
(a) section 17 applies in
relation to any application for an authority that is dealt with by the Director
pursuant to the delegation as if paragraph 17(2)(b) and subsection 17(3) were
omitted;
(b) subsection 18(2) does not apply in
relation to an application for an authority that is dealt with by the Director
pursuant to the delegation but the Director shall not grant an authority unless
the Director is satisfied that the person applying for the grant of the
authority has provided the Director with all information that the Director has
required the person to provide in relation to the application pursuant to
paragraph 17(2)(a).
73
Orders and directions
(1) The Minister:
(a) may make orders, not inconsistent
with this Act or the regulations, to be complied with by the holders of permits
or authorities; and
(b) may, in writing, give directions,
not inconsistent with this Act or the regulations, to be complied with by the
holder of a permit or authority.
(2) Without limiting the generality of subsection (1),
orders made under this section, and directions given under this section, may
make provision with respect to:
(a) in the case of a permit granted
under section 13—any matter referred to in paragraph 13(3)(a) or (c) to
(o) (inclusive); and
(b) in the case of a permit granted
under section 16—any matter referred to in paragraph 16(3)(b) to (e)
(inclusive); and
(ba) in the case of a permit granted
under section 16A—any matter referred to in paragraph 16A(3)(a), (b) or
(c); and
(bb) in the case of a permit granted
under section 16B—any matter referred to in paragraph 16B(3)(a) or (b);
and
(c) in the case of an authority
granted under section 18—any matter referred to in paragraph 18(4)(a), (b)
or (d).
(3) Where a direction given under this
section is inconsistent with an order made under this section, the direction
shall prevail and the order shall, to the extent of the inconsistency, be of no
effect.
(4) Sections 48, 48A, 48B, 49, 49A and
50 of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901 apply to orders made under this
section as if in those provisions references to regulations were references to
orders, references to a regulation were references to a provision of an order
and references to repeal were references to revocation.
(5) Orders made under this section shall not
be taken to be statutory rules within the meaning of the Statutory Rules
Publication Act 1903, but subsections 5(3) to (3C) (inclusive) of that Act
apply in relation to such orders as they apply to statutory rules.
(6) For the purposes of the application of
subsection 5(3B) of the Statutory Rules Publication Act 1903 in
accordance with subsection (5) of this section, the reference in the first‑mentioned
subsection to the Minister of State for Sport, Recreation and Tourism shall be
read as a reference to the Minister administering this Act.
(7) A direction given under subsection (1)
to the holder of a permit or authority shall have endorsed on it or attached to
it a statement to the effect that, subject to the Administrative Appeals
Tribunal Act 1975 and to subsection 22(8) of this Act, application may be
made to the Administrative Appeals Tribunal, by or on behalf of a person whose
interests are affected by a decision of the Minister, pursuant to subsection (1)
of this section, giving a direction to be complied with by the holder of the
permit or authority, for review of the decision.
(8) A failure to comply with the requirements
of subsection (7) in relation to a decision shall not be taken to affect
the validity of the decision.
(9) Where a notice setting out the terms of
directions given under this section to the holder of a permit or authority is
served, personally or by post, telegram or telex, on the holder of the permit
or authority, the directions shall, for the purposes of subsection (1), be
deemed to have been given to the holder of the permit or authority.
74
Regulations
The Governor‑General may make
regulations, not inconsistent with this Act, prescribing matters:
(a) required or permitted by this Act
to be prescribed; or
(b) necessary
or convenient to be prescribed for carrying out or giving effect to this Act;
and, in particular, making provision for, or with respect
to:
(c) the imposition of penalties, not
exceeding a fine of 10 penalty units, for offences against the regulations;
(d) the making of reports by persons
to whom permits are granted;
(e) the form of reports to be made or
information to be given under this Act or pursuant to conditions subject to
which permits or authorities are granted;
(f) standards for the physical
security to be applied with respect to nuclear material and associated items to
which Part II applies;
(g) the keeping of accounting and
operating records in relation to nuclear material and associated items by
persons to whom permits are granted and the period for which such records are
to be retained; or
(h) systems of measurement.
Schedule 3—Agreement between Australia and the International Atomic Energy Agency for the
application of safeguards in connection with the Treaty on the Non‑Proliferation
of Nuclear Weapons
Section 4
WHEREAS
Australia is a Party to the Treaty on the Non‑Proliferation of Nuclear
Weapons (hereinafter referred to as “the Treaty”) opened for signature at London, Moscow and Washington on 1 July 1968 and which entered into force on 5 March 1970;
WHEREAS
paragraph 1 of Article III of the Treaty reads as follows:
“Each non‑nuclear‑weapon
State Party to the Treaty undertakes to accept safeguards, as set forth in an
agreement to be negotiated and concluded with the International Atomic Energy
Agency in accordance with the Statute of the International Atomic Energy Agency
and the Agency’s safeguards system, for the exclusive purpose of verification
of the fulfilment of its obligations assumed under this Treaty with a view to
preventing diversion of nuclear energy from peaceful uses to nuclear weapons or
other nuclear explosive devices. Procedures for the safeguards required by this
Article shall be followed with respect to source or special fissionable
material whether it is being produced, processed or used in any principal nuclear
facility or is outside any such facility. The safeguards required by this
Article shall be applied on all source or special fissionable material in all
peaceful nuclear activities within the territory of such State, under its
jurisdiction, or carried out under its control anywhere”;
RECALLING
that pursuant to paragraph 1 of Article IV of the Treaty nothing in the Treaty
shall be interpreted as affecting the inalienable right of all the Parties to
the Treaty to develop research, production and the use of nuclear energy for
peaceful purposes without discrimination and in conformity with Articles I and
II of the Treaty;
RECALLING
that according to paragraph 2 of Article IV of the Treaty all the Parties to
the Treaty undertake to facilitate, and have the right to participate in, the
fullest possible exchange of equipment, materials and scientific and
technological information for the peaceful uses of nuclear energy;
WHEREAS
it is the desire of Australia and the International Atomic Energy Agency
(hereinafter referred to as “the Agency”) to avoid unnecessary duplication with
regard to Australia’s accounting and control activities;
WHEREAS
the Board of Governors of the Agency (hereinafter referred to as “the Board”)
has approved a comprehensive set of model provisions for the structure and
contents of agreements between the Agency and States required in connection
with the Treaty to be used as the basis for negotiating safeguards agreements
between the Agency and non‑nuclear‑weapon States Party to the Treaty;
WHEREAS
the Agency is authorized, pursuant to Article III of its Statute, to conclude
such agreements;
NOW
THEREFORE Australia and the Agency have agreed as follows:
PART I
BASIC UNDERTAKING
Article 1
Australia undertakes, pursuant to paragraph 1 of Article
III of the Treaty, to accept safeguards, in accordance with the terms of this
Agreement, on all source or special fissionable material in all peaceful
nuclear activities within its territory, under its jurisdiction or carried out
under its control anywhere, for the exclusive purpose of verifying that such
material is not diverted to nuclear weapons or other nuclear explosive devices.
APPLICATION OF SAFEGUARDS
Article 2
The
Agency shall have the right and the obligation to ensure that safeguards will
be applied, in accordance with the terms of this Agreement, on all source or
special fissionable material in all peaceful nuclear activities within the
territory of Australia, under its jurisdiction or carried out under its control
anywhere, for the exclusive purpose of verifying that such material is not
diverted to nuclear weapons or other nuclear explosive devices.
CO‑OPERATION BETWEEN AUSTRALIA AND THE AGENCY
Article 3
Australia and the Agency shall co‑operate to facilitate the implementation of the safeguards
provided for in this Agreement.
IMPLEMENTATION OF SAFEGUARDS
Article 4
The safeguards provided for in this Agreement shall be
implemented in a manner designed:
(a) To
avoid hampering the economic and technological development of Australia or international co‑operation in the field of peaceful nuclear activities,
including international exchange of nuclear material;
(b) To
avoid undue interference in Australia’s peaceful nuclear activities, and in
particular in the operation of facilities; and
(c) To
be consistent with prudent management practices required for the economic and
safe conduct of nuclear activities.
Article 5
(a) The
Agency shall take every precaution to protect commercial and industrial secrets
and other confidential information coming to its knowledge in the
implementation of this Agreement.
(b) (i) The
Agency shall not publish or communicate to any State, organization or person
any information obtained by it in connection with the implementation of this
Agreement, except that specific information relating to the implementation
thereof may be given to the Board and to such Agency staff members as require
such knowledge by reason of their official duties in connection with
safeguards, but only to the extent necessary for the Agency to fulfil its
responsibilities in implementing this Agreement.
(ii) Summarized
information on nuclear material subject to safeguards under this Agreement may
be published upon decision of the Board if Australia agrees thereto.
Article 6
(a) The
Agency shall, in implementing safeguards pursuant to this Agreement, take full
account of technological developments in the field of safeguards, and shall
make every effort to ensure optimum cost‑effectiveness and the application of
the principle of safeguarding effectively the flow of nuclear material subject
to safeguard under this Agreement by use of instruments and other techniques at
certain strategic points to the extent that present or future technology
permits.
(b) In
order to ensure optimum cost‑effectiveness, use shall be made, for example, of
such means as:
(i) Containment
as a means of defining material balance areas for accounting purposes;
(ii) Statistical
techniques and random sampling in evaluating the flow of nuclear material; and
(iii) Concentration
of verification procedures on those stages in the nuclear fuel cycle involving
the production, processing, use or storage of nuclear material from which
nuclear weapons or other nuclear explosive devices could readily be made, and
minimization of verfication procedures in respect of other nuclear material, on
condition that this does not hamper the implementation of this Agreement.
NATIONAL SYSTEM OF MATERIALS
CONTROL
Article 7
(a) Australia shall establish and maintain a national system (hereinafter referred to as Australia’s system) of accounting for and control of all nuclear material subject to
safeguards under this Agreement.
(b) The
Agency shall apply safeguards in such a manner as to enable it to verify, in
ascertaining that there has been no diversion of nuclear material from peaceful
uses to nuclear weapons or other nuclear explosive devices, findings of Australia’s system. The Agency’s verification shall include, inter alia, independent
measurements and observations conducted by the Agency in accordance with the
procedures specified in Part II of this Agreement. The Agency, in its
verification, shall take due account of the technical effectiveness of Australia’s system.
PROVISION OF INFORMATION TO THE AGENCY
Article 8
(a) In
order to ensure the effective implementation of safeguards under this
Agreement, Australia shall, in accordance with the provisions set out in Part II
of this Agreement, provide the Agency with information concerning nuclear
material subject to safeguards under this Agreement and the features of
facilities relevant to safeguarding such material.
(b) (i) The
Agency shall require only the minimum amount of information and data consistent
with carrying out its responsibilities under this Agreement.
(ii) Information
pertaining to facilities shall be the minimum necessary for safeguarding
nuclear material subject to safeguards under this Agreement.
(c) If
Australia so requests, the Agency shall be prepared to examine on premises of
Australia design information which Australia regards as being of particular
sensitivity. Such information need not be physically transmitted to the Agency
provided that it remains readily available for further examination by the
Agency on premises of Australia.
AGENCY INSPECTORS
Article 9
(a) (i) The
Agency shall secure the consent of Australia to the designation of Agency
inspectors to Australia.
(ii) If
Australia, either upon proposal of a designation or at any other time after a
designation has been made, objects to the designation, the Agency shall propose
to Australia an alternative designation or designations.
(iii) If,
as a result of the repeated refusal of Australia to accept the designation of
Agency inspectors, inspections to be conducted under this Agreement would be
impeded, such refusal shall be considered by the Board, upon referral by the
Director General of the Agency (hereinafter referred to as “the Director
General”), with a view to its taking appropriate action.
(b) Australia shall take the necessary steps to ensure that Agency inspectors can effectively
discharge their functions under this Agreement.
(c) The
visits and activities of Agency inspectors shall be so arranged as:
(i) To
reduce to a minimum the possible inconvenience and disturbance to the
Australian authorities concerned and to the peaceful nuclear activities
inspected; and
(ii) To
ensure protection of industrial secrets or any other confidential information
coming to the inspectors’ knowledge.
PRIVILEGES AND IMMUNITIES
Article 10
Australia shall apply the relevant provisions as accepted of the Agreement on the
Privileges and Immunities of the Agency to the Agency (including its property,
funds and assets), and to its inspectors and other officials performing
functions under this Agreement.
TERMINATION OF SAFEGUARDS
Article 11
Consumption
or dilution of nuclear material
Safeguards shall terminate on nuclear material upon
determination by the Agency that the material has been consumed, or has been
diluted in such a way that it is no longer usable for any nuclear activity
relevant from the point of view of safeguards, or has become practically
irrecoverable.
Article 12
Transfer
of nuclear material out of Australia
Australia shall give the Agency notification of intended transfers of nuclear material
subject to safeguards under this Agreement out of Australia, in accordance with
the provisions set out in Part II of this Agreement. The Agency shall
terminate safeguards on nuclear material under this Agreement when the
recipient State has assumed responsibility therefor, as provided for in Part II
of this Agreement. The Agency shall maintain records indicating each transfer
and, where applicable, the re‑application of safeguards to the transferred
nuclear material.
Article 13
Provisions relating to nuclear material to be used
in non‑nuclear activities
If
Australia wishes to use nuclear material subject to safeguards under this
Agreement in non‑nuclear activities, such as the production of alloys or
ceramics, it shall agree with the Agency on the circumstances under which the
safeguards on such nuclear material may be terminated.
NON‑APPLICATION OF SAFEGUARDS TO
NUCLEAR MATERIAL TO BE USED IN NON‑PEACEFUL ACTIVITIES
Article 14
If
Australia intends to exercise its discretion to use nuclear material which is
required to be safeguarded under this Agreement in a nuclear activity which
does not require the application of safeguards under this Agreement, the
following procedures shall apply:
(a) Australia shall inform the Agency of the activity, making it clear:
(i) That
the use of the nuclear material in a non‑proscribed military activity will not
be in conflict with an undertaking Australia may have given and in respect of
which Agency safeguards apply, that the nuclear material will be used only in a
peaceful nuclear activity; and
(ii) That
during the period of non‑application of safeguards the nuclear material will
not be used for the production of nuclear weapons or other nuclear explosive
devices;
(b) Australia and the Agency shall make an arrangement so that, only while the nuclear material
is in such an activity, the safeguards provided for in this Agreement will not
be applied. The arrangement shall identify, to the extent possible, the period
or circumstances during which safeguards will not be applied. In any event, the
safeguards provided for in this Agreement shall apply again as soon as the
nuclear material is reintroduced into a peaceful nuclear activity. The Agency
shall be kept informed of the total quantity and composition of such
unsafeguarded nuclear material in Australia and of any export of such nuclear
material; and
(c) Each
arrangement shall be made in agreement with the Agency. Such agreement shall be
given as promptly as possible and shall relate only to such matters as, inter
alia, temporal and procedural provisions and reporting arrangements, and shall
not involve any approval or classified knowledge of the military activity or
relate to the use of the nuclear material therein.
FINANCE
Article 15
Australia and the Agency shall bear the expenses incurred by them in implementing their
respective responsibilities under this Agreement. However, if Australia or persons under its jurisdiction incur extraordinary expenses as a result of a
specific request by the Agency, the Agency shall reimburse such expenses
provided that it has agreed in advance to do so. In any case the Agency shall
bear the cost of any additional measuring or sampling which inspectors may
request.
THIRD PARTY LIABILITY FOR NUCLEAR
DAMAGE
Article 16
Australia shall ensure that any protection against third party liability in respect of
nuclear damage, including any insurance or other financial security, which may
be available under its laws or regulations shall apply to the Agency and its
officials for the purpose of the implementation of this Agreement, in the same
way as that protection applies to nationals of Australia.
INTERNATIONAL RESPONSIBILITY
Article 17
Any
claim by Australia against the Agency or by the Agency against Australia in respect of any damage resulting from the implementation of safeguards under
this Agreement, other than damage arising out of a nuclear incident, shall be
settled in accordance with international law.
MEASURES IN RELATION TO VERIFICATION
OF NON‑DIVERSION
Article 18
If
the Board, upon report of the Director General, decides that an action by
Australia is essential and urgent in order to ensure verification that nuclear
material subject to safeguards under this Agreement is not diverted to nuclear
weapons or other nuclear explosive devices, the Board may call upon Australia
to take the required action without delay, irrespective of whether procedures
have been invoked pursuant to Article 22 of this Agreement for the settlement
of a dispute.
Article 19
If
the Board, upon examination of relevant information reported to it by the
Director General, finds that the Agency is not able to verify that there has
been no diversion of nuclear material required to be safeguarded under this
Agreement, to nuclear weapons or other nuclear explosive devices, it may make
the reports provided for in paragraph C of Article XII of the Statute of the
Agency (hereinafter referred to as “the Statute”) and may also take, where
applicable, the other measures provided for in that paragraph. In taking such
action the Board shall take account of the degree of assurance provided by the
safeguards measures that have been applied and shall afford Australia every reasonable opportunity to furnish the Board with any necessary reassurance.
INTERPRETATION AND APPLICATION OF
THE AGREEMENT AND SETTLEMENT OF DISPUTES
Article 20
Australia and the Agency shall, at the request of either, consult about any question
arising out of the interpretation or application of this Agreement.
Article 21
Australia shall have the right to request that any question arising out of the
interpretation or application of this Agreement be considered by the Board. The
Board shall invite Australia to participate in the discussion of any such
question by the Board.
Article 22
Any
dispute arising out of the interpretation or application of this Agreement,
except a dispute with regard to a finding by the Board under Article 19 or an
action taken by the Board pursuant to such a finding, which is not settled by
negotiation or another procedure agreed to by Australia and the Agency shall,
at the request of either, be submitted to an arbitral tribunal composed as
follows: Australia and the Agency shall each designate one arbitrator, and the
two arbitrators so designated shall elect a third, who shall be the Chairman.
If, within thirty days of the request for arbitration, either Australia or the Agency has not designated an arbitrator, either Australia or the Agency
may request the President of the International Court of Justice to appoint an
arbitrator. The same procedure shall apply if, within thirty days of the
designation or appointment of the second arbitrator, the third arbitrator has
not been elected. A majority of the members of the arbitral tribunal shall
constitute a quorum, and all decisions shall require the concurrence of two
arbitrators. The arbitral procedure shall be fixed by the tribunal. The
decisions of the tribunal shall be binding on Australia and the Agency.
SUSPENSION OF APPLICATION OF AGENCY
SAFEGUARDS UNDER OTHER AGREEMENTS
Article 23
The
application of Agency safeguards in Australia under other safeguards agreements
with the Agency shall be suspended while this Agreement is in force.
REVIEW OF THE OPERATION OF THE AGREEMENT
Article 24
Australia and the Agency shall, at the request of either, review jointly the operation of
this Agreement. In any event such a review shall take place five years after
the entry into force of this Agreement.
AMENDMENT OF THE AGREEMENT
Article 25
(a) Australia and the Agency shall, at the request of either, consult each other on amendments
to this Agreement.
(b) All
amendments shall require the agreement of Australia and the Agency.
(c) Amendments
to this Agreement shall enter into force on the same conditions as entry into
force of the Agreement itself.
(d) The
Director General shall promptly inform all Member States of the Agency of any
amendment to this Agreement.
ENTRY INTO FORCE AND DURATION
Article 26
This
Agreement shall enter into force upon signature by or for the Director General
and by the authorized representative of Australia. The Director General shall
promptly inform all Member States of the Agency of the entry into force of this
Agreement.
Article 27
This
Agreement shall remain in force as long as Australia is party to the Treaty.
PART II
INTRODUCTION
Article 28
The
purpose of this part of the Agreement is to specify the procedures to be
applied in the implementation of the safeguards provisions of Part I.
OBJECTIVE OF SAFEGUARDS
Article 29
The
objective of the safeguards procedures set forth in this part of the Agreement
is the timely detection of diversion of significant quantities of nuclear
material from peaceful nuclear activities to the manufacture of nuclear weapons
or of other nuclear explosive devices or for purposes unknown, and deterrence
of such diversion by the risk of early detection.
Article 30
For
this purpose material accountancy shall be used as a safeguards measure of
fundamental importance, with containment and surveillance as important
complementary measures.
Article 31
The
technical conclusion of the Agency’s verification activities shall be a
statement, in respect of each material balance area, of the amount of material
unaccounted for over a specific period, and giving the limits of accuracy of
the amounts stated.
NATIONAL SYSTEM OF ACCOUNTING FOR
AND CONTROL OF NUCLEAR MATERIAL
Article 32
Pursuant
to Article 7, the Agency, in carrying out its verification activities, shall
make full use of Australia’s system of accounting for and control of all
nuclear material subject to safeguards under this Agreement and shall avoid
unnecessary duplication of Australia’s accounting and control activities.
Article 33
Australia’s
system of accounting for and control of all nuclear material subject to
safeguards under this Agreement shall be based on a structure of material
balance areas, and shall make provision, as appropriate and specified in the
Subsidiary Arrangements, for the establishment of such measures as:
(a) A
measurement system for the determination of the quantities of nuclear material
received, produced, shipped, lost or otherwise removed from inventory, and the
quantities on inventory;
(b) The
evaluation of precision and accuracy of measurements and the estimation of
measurement uncertainty;
(c) Procedures
for identifying, reviewing and evaluating differences in shipper/receiver
measurements;
(d) Procedures
for taking a physical inventory;
(e) Procedures
for the evaluation of accumulations of unmeasured inventory and unmeasured
losses;
(f) A
system of records and reports showing, for each material balance area, the
inventory of nuclear material and the changes in that inventory including
receipts into and transfers out of the material balance area;
(g) Provisions
to ensure that the accounting procedures and arrangements are being operated
correctly; and
(h) Procedures
for the submission of reports to the Agency in accordance with Articles 60 to
70.
STARTING POINT OF SAFEGUARDS
Article 34
Safeguards
under this Agreement shall not apply to material in mining or ore processing
activities.
Article 35
(a) When
any material containing uranium or thorium which has not reached the stage of
the nuclear fuel cycle described in paragraph (c) is directly or
indirectly exported to a non‑nuclear‑weapon State, Australia shall inform the
Agency of its quantity, composition and destination, unless the material is
exported for specifically non‑nuclear purposes;
(b) When
any material containing uranium or thorium which has not reached the stage of
the nuclear fuel cycle described in paragraph (c) is imported, Australia
shall inform the Agency of its quantity and composition, unless the material is
imported for specifically non‑nuclear purposes; and
(c) When
any nuclear material of a composition and purity suitable for fuel fabrication
or for isotopic enrichment leaves the plant or the process stage in which it
has been produced, or when such nuclear material, or any other nuclear material
produced at a later stage in the nuclear fuel cycle, is imported into
Australia, the nuclear material shall become subject to the other safeguards
procedures specified in this Agreement.
TERMINATION OF SAFEGUARDS
Article 36
(a) Safeguards
shall terminate on nuclear material subject to safeguards under this Agreement,
under the conditions set forth in Article 11. Where the conditions of that
Article are not met, but Australia considers that the recovery of safeguarded
nuclear material from residues is not for the time being practicable or
desirable, Australia and the Agency shall consult on the appropriate safeguards
measures to be applied.
(b) Safeguards
shall terminate on nuclear material subject to safeguards under this Agreement,
under the conditions set forth in Article 13, provided that Australia and the Agency agree that such nuclear material is practicably irrecoverable.
EXEMPTIONS FROM SAFEGUARDS
Article 37
At
the request of Australia, the Agency shall exempt nuclear material from
safeguards, as follows:
(a) Special
fissionable material, when it is used in gram quantities or less as a sensing
component in instruments;
(b) Nuclear
material, when it is used in non‑nuclear activities in accordance with Article
13, if such nuclear material is recoverable; and
(c) Plutonium
with an isotopic concentration of plutonium‑238 exceeding 80%.
Article 38
At
the request of Australia the Agency shall exempt from safeguards nuclear
material that would otherwise be subject to safeguards, provided that the total
quantity of nuclear material which has been exempted in Australia in accordance with this Article may not at anytime exceed:
(a) One
kilogram in total of special fissionable material, which may consist of one or
more of the following:
(i) Plutonium;
(ii) Uranium
with an enrichment of 0.2 (20%) and above, taken account of by multiplying its
weight by its enrichment; and
(iii) Uranium
with an enrichment below 0.2 (20%) and above that of natural uranium, taken
account of by multiplying its weight by five times the square of its
enrichment;
(b) Ten
metric tons in total of natural uranium and depleted uranium with an enrichment
above 0.005 (0.5%);
(c) Twenty
metric tons of depleted uranium with an enrichment of 0.005 (0.5%) or below;
and
(d) Twenty
metric tons of thorium;
or such greater
amounts as may be specified by the Board for uniform application.
Article 39
If
exempted nuclear material is to be processed or stored together with nuclear
material subject to safeguards under this Agreement, Australia and the Agency
shall make arrangements for the reapplication of safeguards thereto.
SUBSIDIARY ARRANGEMENTS
Article 40
Australia and the Agency shall make Subsidiary Arrangements which shall specify in detail,
to the extent necessary to permit the Agency to fulfil its responsibilities
under this Agreement in an effective and efficient manner, how the procedures
laid down in this Agreement are to be applied. The Subsidiary Arrangements may
be extended or changed by agreement between Australia and the Agency without
amendment of this Agreement.
Article 41
The
Subsidiary Arrangements shall enter into force at the same time as, or as soon
as possible after, the entry into force of this Agreement. Australia and the Agency shall make every effort to achieve their entry into force within
ninety days of the entry into force of this Agreement; an extension of that
period shall require agreement between Australia and the Agency. Australia shall provide the Agency promptly with the information required for completing
the Subsidiary Arrangements. Upon the entry into force of this Agreement, the
Agency shall have the right to apply the procedures laid down therein in
respect of the nuclear material listed in the inventory provided for in Article
42.
INVENTORY
Article 42
On
the basis of the initial report referred to in Article 63, the Agency shall
establish a unified inventory of all nuclear material in Australia subject to
safeguards under this Agreement, irrespective of its origin, and shall maintain
this inventory on the basis of subsequent reports and of the results of its
verification activities. Copies of the inventory shall be made available to Australia at intervals to be agreed.
DESIGN INFORMATION
General
provisions
Article 43
Pursuant
to Article 8, design information in respect of existing facilities shall be
provided to the Agency during the discussion of the Subsidiary Arrangements.
The time limits for the provision of design information in respect of the new
facilities shall be specified in the Subsidiary Arrangements and such
information shall be provided as early as possible before nuclear material is
introduced into a new facility.
Article 44
The
design information to be provided to the Agency shall include, in respect of
each facility, when applicable:
(a) The
identification of the facility, stating its general character, purpose, nominal
capacity and geographic location, and the name and address to be used for
routine business purposes;
(b) A
description of the general arrangement of the facility with reference, to the
extent feasible, to the form, location and flow of nuclear material and to the
general layout of important items of equipment which use, produce or process
nuclear material;
(c) A
description of features of the facility relating to material accountancy,
containment and surveillance; and
(d) A
description of the existing and proposed procedures at the facility for nuclear
material accountancy and control, with special reference to material balance
areas established by the operator, measurements of flow and procedures for
physical inventory taking.
Article 45
Other
information relevant to the application of safeguards shall also be provided to
the Agency in respect of each facility, in particular on organizational
responsibility for material accountancy and control, and shall be specified in
the Subsidiary Arrangements, as required. Australia shall provide the Agency
with supplementary information on the health and safety procedures which the
Agency shall observe and with which the inspectors shall comply at the
facility.
Article 46
The
Agency shall be provided with design information in respect of a modification
relevant for safeguards purposes, for examination, and shall be informed of any
change in the information provided to it under Article 45, sufficiently in
advance for the safeguards procedures to be adjusted when necessary.
Article 47
Purposes of examination of design information
The
design information provided to the Agency shall be used for the following
purposes:
(a) To
identify the features of facilities and nuclear material relevant to the
application of safeguards to nuclear material in sufficient detail to facilitate
verification;
(b) To
determine material balance areas to be used for Agency accounting purposes and
to select those strategic points which are key measurement points and which
will be used to determine flow and inventory of nuclear material; in determining
such material balance areas the Agency shall, inter alia, use the following
criteria:
(i) The
size of the material balance area shall be related to the accuracy with which
the material balance can be established;
(ii) In
determining the material balance area advantage shall be taken of any
opportunity to use containment and surveillance to help ensure the completeness
of flow measurements and thereby to simplify the application of safeguards and
to concentrate measurement efforts at key measurement points;
(iii) A
number of material balance areas in use at a facility or at distinct sites may
be combined in one material balance area to be used for Agency accounting
purposes when the Agency determines that this is consistent with its
verification requirements; and
(iv) A
special material balance area may be established at the request of Australia around a process step involving commercially sensitive information;
(c) To
establish the nominal timing and procedures for taking of physical inventory of
nuclear material for Agency accounting purposes;
(d) To
establish the records and reports requirements and records evaluation
procedures;
(e) To
establish requirements and procedures for verification of the quantity and
location of nuclear material; and
(f) To
select appropriate combinations of containment and surveillance methods and
techniques and the strategic points at which they are to be applied.
The results of
the examination of the design information shall be included in the Subsidiary
Arrangements.
Article 48
Re‑examination of design
information
Design
information shall be re‑examined in the light of changes in operating
conditions, of developments in safeguards technology or of experience in the
application of verification procedures, with a view to modifying the action the
Agency has taken pursuant to Article 47.
Article 49
Verification of design
information
The
Agency, in co‑operation with Australia, may send inspectors to facilities to
verify the design information provided to the Agency pursuant to Articles 43 to
46, for the purposes stated in Article 47.
INFORMATION IN RESPECT OF NUCLEAR MATERIAL OUTSIDE
FACILITIES
Article 50
The
Agency shall be provided with the following information when nuclear material
is to be customarily used outside facilities, as applicable:
(a) A
general description of the use of the nuclear material, its geographic
location, and the user’s name and address for routine business purposes; and
(b) A
general description of the existing and proposed procedures for nuclear
material accountancy and control, including organizational responsibility for
material accountancy and control.
The Agency shall
be informed, on a timely basis, of any change in the information provided to it
under this Article.
Article 51
The
information provided to the Agency pursuant to Article 50 may be used, to
the extent relevant, for the purposes set out in Article 47(b) to (f).
RECORDS SYSTEM
General provisions
Article 52
In
establishing its national system of materials control as referred to in Article
7, Australia shall arrange that records are kept in respect of each material
balance area. The records to be kept shall be described in the Subsidiary
Arrangements.
Article 53
Australia shall make arrangements to facilitate the examination of records by inspectors.
Article 54
Records
shall be retained for at least five years.
Article 55
Records
shall consist, as appropriate, of:
(a) Accounting
records of all nuclear material subject to safeguards under this Agreement; and
(b) Operating
records for facilities containing such nuclear material.
Article 56
The
system of measurements on which the records used for the preparation of reports
are based shall either conform to the latest international standards or be
equivalent in quality to such standards.
Accounting records
Article 57
The
accounting records shall set forth the following in respect of each material
balance area:
(a) All
inventory changes, so as to permit a determination of the book inventory at any
time;
(b) All
measurement results that are used for determination of the physical inventory;
and
(c) All
adjustments and corrections that have been made in respect of inventory
changes, book inventories and physical inventories.
Article 58
For
all inventory changes and physical inventories the records shall show, in
respect of each batch of nuclear material: material identification, batch data
and source data. The records shall account for uranium, thorium and plutonium
separately in each batch of nuclear material. For each inventory change, the date
of the inventory change and, when appropriate, the originating material balance
area and the receiving material balance area or the recipient, shall be
indicated.
Article 59
Operating records
The
operating records shall set forth, as appropriate, in respect of each material
balance area:
(a) Those
operating data which are used to establish changes in the quantities and
composition of nuclear material;
(b) The
data obtained from the calibration of tanks and instruments and from sampling
and analyses, the procedures to control the quality of measurements and the
derived estimates of random and systematic error;
(c) A
description of the sequence of the actions taken in preparing for, and in
taking, a physical inventory, in order to ensure that it is correct and
complete; and
(d) A
description of the actions taken in order to ascertain the cause and magnitude
of any accidental or unmeasured loss that might occur.
REPORTS SYSTEM
General provisions
Article 60
Australia shall provide the Agency with reports as detailed in Articles 61 to 70 in respect
of nuclear material subject to safeguards under this Agreement.
Article 61
Reports
shall be made in English.
Article 62
Reports
shall be based on the records kept in accordance with Articles 52 to 59 and
shall consist, as appropriate, of accounting reports and special reports.
Accounting reports
Article 63
The
Agency shall be provided with an initial report on all nuclear material subject
to safeguards under this Agreement. The initial report shall be dispatched by Australia to the Agency within thirty days of the last day of the calendar month in which
this Agreement enters into force, and shall reflect the situation as of the
last day of that month.
Article 64
Australia shall provide the Agency with the following
accounting reports for each material balance area:
(a) Inventory
change reports showing all changes in the inventory of nuclear material. The
reports shall be dispatched as soon as possible and in any event within thirty
days after the end of the month in which the inventory changes occurred or were
established; and
(b) Material
balance reports showing the material balance based on a physical inventory of
nuclear material actually present in the material balance area. The reports
shall be dispatched as soon as possible and in any event within thirty days
after the physical inventory has been taken.
The reports
shall be based on data available as of the date of reporting and may be
corrected at a later date, as required.
Article 65
Inventory
change reports shall specify identification and batch data for each batch of
nuclear material, the date of the inventory change and, as appropriate, the
originating material balance area and the receiving material balance area or
the recipient. These reports shall be accompanied by concise notes:
(a) Explaining
the inventory changes, on the basis of the operating data contained in the
operating records provided for under Article 59 (a); and
(b) Describing,
as specified in the Subsidiary Arrangements, the anticipated operational
programme, particularly the taking of a physical inventory.
Article 66
Australia shall report each inventory change, adjustment and correction, either
periodically in a consolidated list or individually. Inventory changes shall be
reported in terms of batches. As specified in the Subsidiary Arrangements,
small changes in inventory of nuclear material, such as transfers of analytical
samples, may be combined in one batch and reported as one inventory change.
Article 67
The
Agency shall provide Australia with semi‑annual statements of book inventory of
nuclear material subject to safeguards under this Agreement, for each material
balance area, as based on the inventory change reports for the period covered
by each such statement.
Article 68
Material
balance reports shall include the following entries, unless otherwise agreed by
Australia and the Agency:
(a) Beginning
physical inventory;
(b) Inventory
changes (first increases, then decreases);
(c) Ending
book inventory;
(d) Shipper/receiver
differences;
(e) Adjusted
ending book inventory;
(f) Ending
physical inventory; and
(g) Material
unaccounted for.
A statement of
the physical inventory, listing all batches separately and specifying material
indentification and batch data for each batch, shall be attached to each
material balance report.
Article 69
Special reports
Australia shall make special reports without delay:
(a) If
any unusual incident or circumstances lead Australia to believe that there is
or may have been loss of nuclear material that exceeds the limits specified for
this purpose in the Subsidiary Arrangements; or
(b) If
the containment has unexpectedly changed from that specified in the Subsidiary
Arrangements to the extent that unauthorized removal of nuclear material has
become possible.
Article 70
Amplification
and clarification of reports
If
the Agency so requests, Australia shall provide it with amplifications or
clarifications of any report, in so far as relevant for the purpose of
safeguards.
INSPECTIONS
Article 71
General
provisions
The
Agency shall have the right to make inspections as provided for in Articles 72
to 83.
Purposes of inspections
Article 72
The
Agency may make ad hoc inspections in order to:
(a) Verify
the information contained in the initial report on the nuclear material subject
to safeguards under this Agreement;
(b) Identify
and verify changes in the situation which have occurred since the date of the
initial report; and
(c) Identify,
and if possible verify the quantity and composition of, nuclear material in
accordance with Articles 94 and 97 before its transfer out of or upon its
transfer into Australia.
Article 73
The
Agency may make routine inspections in order to:
(a) Verify
that reports are consistent with records;
(b) Verify
the location, identity, quantity and composition of all nuclear material
subject to safeguards under this Agreement; and
(c) Verify
information on the possible causes of material unaccounted for,
shipper/receiver differences and uncertainties in the book inventory.
Article 74
Subject
to the procedures laid down in Article 78, the Agency may make special
inspections:
(a) In
order to verify the information contained in special reports; or
(b) If
the Agency considers that information made available by Australia, including explanations from Australia and information obtained from routine
inspections, is not adequate for the Agency to fulfil its responsibilities
under this Agreement.
An inspection
shall be deemed to be special when it is either additional to the routine
inspection effort provided for in Articles 79 to 83 or involves access to
information or locations in addition to the access specified in Article 77 for
ad hoc and routine inspections, or both.
Scope
of inspections
Article 75
For
the purposes specified in Articles 72 to 74, the Agency may:
(a) Examine
the records kept pursuant to Articles 52 to 59;
(b) Make
independent measurements of all nuclear material subject to safeguards under
this Agreement;
(c) Verify
the functioning and calibration of instruments and other measuring and control
equipment;
(d) Apply
and make use of surveillance and containment measures; and
(e) Use
other objective methods which have been demonstrated to be technically
feasible.
Article 76
Within
the scope of Article 75, the Agency shall be enabled:
(a) To
observe that samples at key measurement points for material balance accountancy
are taken in accordance with procedures which produce representative samples,
to observe the treatment and analysis of the samples and to obtain duplicates
of such samples;
(b) To
observe that the measurement of nuclear material at key measurement points for
material balance accountancy are representative, and to observe the calibration
of the instruments and equipment involved;
(c) To make arrangements with Australia that, if necessary:
(i) Additional
measurements are made and additional samples taken for the Agency’s use;
(ii) The
Agency’s standard analytical samples are analysed;
(iii) Appropriate
absolute standards are used in calibrating instruments and other equipment; and
(iv) Other
calibrations are carried out;
(d) To
arrange to use its own equipment for independent measurement and surveillance,
and if so agreed and specified in the Subsidiary Arrangements to arrange to
install such equipment;
(e) To
apply its seals and other identifying and tamper‑indicating devices to
containments, if so agreed and specified in the Subsidiary Arrangements; and
(f) To
make arrangements with Australia for the shipping of samples taken for the
Agency’s use.
Access
for inspections
Article 77
(a) For
the purposes specified in Article 72 (a) and (b) and until such time as the
strategic points have been specified in the Subsidiary Arrangements, the Agency
inspectors shall have access to any location where the initial report or any inspections
carried out in connection with it indicate that nuclear material is present;
(b) For
the purposes specified in Article 72 (c) the inspectors shall have access to
any location of which the Agency has been notified pursuant to Articles 93 (d)
(iii) or 96 (d) (iii);
(c) For
the purposes specified in Article 73 the inspectors shall have access only to
the strategic points specified in the Subsidiary Arrangements and to the
records maintained pursuant to Articles 52 to 59; and
(d) In
the event of Australia concluding that any unusual circumstances require
extended limitations on access by the Agency, Australia and the Agency shall
promptly make arrangements with a view to enabling the Agency to discharge its
safeguards responsibilities in the light of these limitations. The Director
General shall report each such arrangement to the Board.
Article 78
In
circumstances which may lead to special inspections for the purposes specified
in Article 74, Australia and the Agency shall consult forthwith. As a result of
such consultations the Agency may:
(a) Make
inspections in addition to the routine inspection effort provided for in
Articles 79 to 83; and
(b) Obtain
access, in agreement with Australia, to information or locations in addition to
those specified in Article 77. Any disagreement concerning the need for
additional access shall be resolved in accordance with Articles 21 and 22; in
case action by Australia is essential and urgent, Article 18 shall apply.
Frequency
and intensity of routine inspections
Article 79
The
Agency shall keep the number, intensity and duration of routine inspections,
applying optimum timing, to the minimum consistent with the effective
implementation of the safeguards procedures set forth in this Agreement, and
shall make the optimum and most economical use of inspection resources
available to it.
Article 80
The
Agency may carry out one routine inspection per year in respect of facilities
and material balance areas outside facilities with a content or annual
throughput, whichever is greater, of nuclear material not exceeding five
effective kilograms.
Article 81
The
number, intensity, duration, timing and mode of routine inspections in respect
of facilities with a content or annual throughput of nuclear material exceeding
five effective kilograms shall be determined on the basis that in the maximum
or limiting case the inspection regime shall be no more intensive than is
necessary and sufficient to maintain continuity of knowledge of the flow and
inventory of nuclear material, and the maximum routine inspection effort in
respect of such facilities shall be determined as follows:
(a) For
reactors and sealed storage installations the maximum total of routine
inspection per year shall be determined by allowing one sixth of a man‑year of
inspection for each such facility;
(b) For
facilities, other than reactors or sealed storage installations, involving
plutonium or uranium enriched to more than 5%, the maximum total of routine
inspection per year shall be determined by allowing for each such facility 305ÖE man‑days of inspection per year, where E is the
inventory or annual throughput of nuclear material, whichever is greater,
expressed in effective kilograms. The maximum established for any such facility
shall not, however, be less than 1.5 man‑years of inspection; and
(c) For
facilities not covered by paragraphs (a) or (b), the maximum total of
routine inspection per year shall be determined by allowing for each such
facility one third of a man‑year of inspection plus 0.4
E man‑days
of inspection per year, where E is the inventory or annual throughput of
nuclear material, whichever is greater, expressed in effective kilograms.
Australia and the Agency may agree to amend the figures for the maximum inspection effort
specified in this Article, upon determination by the Board that such amendment
is reasonable.
Article 82
Subject
to Articles 79 to 81 the criteria to be used for determining the actual number,
intensity, duration, timing and mode of routine inspections in respect of any
facility shall include:
(a) The
form of the nuclear material, in particular, whether the nuclear material
is in bulk form or contained in a number of separate items; its chemical
composition and, in the case of uranium, whether it is of low or high
enrichment; and its accessibility;
(b) The
effectiveness of Australia’s national accounting and control system,
including the extent to which the operators of facilities are functionally
independent of the national accounting and control system; the extent to which
the measures specified in Article 33 have been implemented by Australia; the
promptness of reports provided to the Agency; their consistency with the
Agency’s independent verification; and the amount and accuracy of the material
unaccounted for, as verified by the Agency;
(c) Characteristics
of Australia’s nuclear fuel cycle, in particular, the number and types of
facilities containing nuclear material subject to safeguards, the
characteristics of such facilities relevant to safeguards, notably the degree
of containment; the extent to which the design of such facilities facilitates
verification of the flow and inventory of nuclear material; and the extent to
which information from different material balance areas can be correlated;
(d) International
interdependence, in particular, the extent to which nuclear material is
received from or sent to other States for use or processing; any verification
activities by the Agency in connection therewith; and the extent to which
Australia’s peaceful nuclear activities are interrelated with those of other
States; and
(e) Technical
developments in the field of safeguards, including the use of statistical
techniques and random sampling in evaluating the flow of nuclear material.
Article 83
Australia and the Agency shall consult if Australia considers that the inspection effort is
being deployed with undue concentration on particular facilities.
Notice of inspections
Article 84
The
Agency shall give advance notice to Australia before arrival of inspectors at
facilities or material balance areas outside facilities, as follows:
(a) For
ad hoc inspections pursuant to Article 72 (c), at least 24 hours; for those
pursuant to Article 72 (a) and (b) as well as the activities provided for in
Article 49, at least one week;
(b) For
special inspections pursuant to Article 74, as promptly as possible after the
Agency and Australia have consulted as provided for in Article 78, it being
understood that notification of arrival normally will constitute part of the
consultations; and
(c) For
routine inspections pursuant to Article 73, at least 24 hours in respect of the
facilities referred to in Article 81 (b) and sealed storage installations
containing plutonium or uranium enriched to more than 5%, and one week in all
other cases.
Such notice of
inspections shall include the names of the inspectors and shall indicate the
facilities and the material balance areas outside facilities to be visited and
the periods during which they will be visited. If the inspectors are to arrive
from outside Australia the Agency shall also give advance notice of the place
and time of their arrival in Australia.
Article 85
Notwithstanding
the provisions of Article 84, the Agency may, as a supplementary measure, carry
out without advance notification a portion of the routine inspections pursuant
to Article 81 in accordance with the principle of random sampling. In
performing any unannounced inspections, the Agency shall fully take into
account any operational programme provided by Australia pursuant to Article 65
(b). Moreover, whenever practicable, and on the basis of the operational
programme, it shall advise Australia periodically of its general programme of
announced and unannounced inspections, specifying the general periods when
inspections are foreseen. In carrying out any unannounced inspections, the
Agency shall make every effort to minimize any practical difficulties for Australia and for facility operators, bearing in mind the relevant provisions of Articles
45 and 90. Similarly Australia shall make every effort to facilitate the task
of the inspectors.
Designation of inspectors
Article 86
The
following procedures shall apply to the designation of inspectors:
(a) The
Director General shall inform Australia in writing of the name, qualifications,
nationality, grade and such other particulars as may be relevant, of each
Agency official he proposes for designation as an inspector for Australia;
(b) Australia shall inform the Director General within thirty days of the receipt of such a
proposal whether it accepts the proposal;
(c) The
Director General may designate each official who has been accepted by Australia as one of the inspectors for Australia, and shall inform Australia of such designations; and
(d) The
Director General, acting in response to a request by Australia or on his own
initiative, shall immediately inform Australia of the withdrawal of the
designation of any official as an inspector for Australia.
However, in
respect of inspectors needed for the activities provided for in Article 49 and
to carry out ad hoc inspections pursuant to Article 72(a) and (b) the
designation procedures shall be completed if possible within thirty days after
the entry into force of this Agreement. If such designation appears impossible
within this time limit, inspectors for such purposes shall be designated on a
temporary basis.
Article 87
Australia shall grant or renew as quickly as possible appropriate visas, where required,
for each inspector designated for Australia.
Conduct and visits of inspectors
Article 88
Inspectors,
in exercising their functions under Articles 49 and 72 to 76, shall carry out
their activities in a manner designed to avoid hampering or delaying the
construction, commissioning or operation of facilities, or affecting their
safety. In particular, inspectors shall not operate any facility themselves or
direct the staff of a facility to carry out any operation. If inspectors
consider that in pursuance of Articles 75 and 76, particular operations in a
facility should be carried out by the operator, they shall make a request
therefor.
Article 89
When
inspectors require services available in Australia, including the use of
equipment, in connection with the performance of inspections, Australia shall facilitate the procurement of such services and the use of such equipment
by inspectors.
Article 90
Australia shall have the right to have inspectors accompanied during their inspections by
representatives of Australia, provided that inspectors shall not thereby be
delayed or otherwise impeded in the exercise of their functions.
STATEMENTS ON THE AGENCY’S
VERIFICATION ACTIVITIES
Article 91
The
Agency shall inform Australia of:
(a) The
results of inspections, at intervals to be specified in the Subsidiary
Arrangements; and
(b) The
conclusions it has drawn from its verification activities in Australia, in particular by means of statements in respect of each material balance area,
which shall be made as soon as possible after a physical inventory has been
taken and verified by the Agency and a material balance has been struck.
INTERNATIONAL TRANSFERS
Article 92
General provisions
Nuclear
material subject or required to be subject to safeguards under this Agreement
which is transferred internationally shall, for purposes of this Agreement, be
regarded as being the responsibility of Australia:
(a) In
the case of import into Australia, from the time that such responsibility
ceases to lie with the exporting State, and no later than the time at which the
material reaches its destination; and
(b) In
the case of export out of Australia, up to the time at which the recipient
State assumes such responsibility, and no later than the time at which the
nuclear material reaches its destination.
The point at
which the transfer of responsibility will take place shall be determined in accordance
with suitable arrangements to be made by the States concerned. Neither Australia nor any other State shall be deemed to have such responsibility for nuclear
material merely by reason of the fact that the nuclear material is in transit
on or over its territory or its territorial waters, or that it is being
transported on a ship under its flag or in its aircraft.
Transfers out of Australia
Article 93
(a) Australia
shall notify the Agency of any intended transfer out of Australia of nuclear
material subject to safeguards under this Agreement if the shipment exceeds one
effective kilogram, or if, within a period of three months, several separate
shipments are to be made to the same State, each of less than one effective
kilogram but the total of which exceeds one effective kilogram.
(b) Such
notification shall be given to the Agency after the conclusion of the
contractual arrangements leading to the transfer and normally at least two
weeks before the nuclear material is to be prepared for shipping.
(c) Australia and the Agency may agree on different procedures for advance notification.
(d) The
notification shall specify:
(i) The
identification and, if possible, the expected quantity and composition of the
nuclear material to be transferred, and the material balance area from which it
will come;
(ii) The
State for which the nuclear material is destined;
(iii) The
dates on and locations at which the nuclear material is to be prepared for
shipping;
(iv) The
approximate dates of dispatch and arrival of the nuclear material; and
(v) At
what point of the transfer the recipient State will assume responsibility for
the nuclear material for the purpose of this Agreement, and the probable date
on which that point will be reached.
Article 94
The
notification referred to in Article 93 shall be such as to enable the Agency to
make, if necessary, an ad hoc inspection to identify, and if possible verify
the quantity and composition of the nuclear material before it is transferred
out of Australia and, if the Agency so wishes or Australia so requests, to
affix seals to the nuclear material when it has been prepared for shipping.
However, the transfer of the nuclear material shall not be delayed in any way
by any action taken or contemplated by the Agency pursuant to such a
notification.
Article 95
If
the nuclear material will not be subject to Agency safeguards in the recipient State, Australia shall make arrangements for the Agency to receive, within three months of
the time when the recipient State assumes responsibility for the nuclear
material from Australia, confirmation by the recipient State of the transfer.
Transfers into Australia
Article 96
(a) Australia
shall notify the Agency of any expected transfer into Australia of nuclear
material required to be subject to safeguards under this Agreement if the
shipment exceeds one effective kilogram, or if within a period of three months,
several separate shipments are to be received from the same State, each of less
than one effective kilogram but the total of which exceeds one effective
kilogram.
(b) The
Agency shall be notified as much in advance as possible of the expected arrival
of the nuclear material, and in any case not later than the date on which Australia assumes responsibility for the nuclear material.
(c) Australia and the Agency may agree on different procedures for advance notification.
(d) The
notification shall specify:
(i) The
identification and, if possible, the expected quantity and composition of the
nuclear material;
(ii) At
what point of the transfer Australia will assume responsibility for the nuclear
material for the purpose of this Agreement, and the probable date on which that
point will be reached; and
(iii) The
expected date of arrival, the location where, and the date on which, the nuclear
material is intended to be unpacked.
Article 97
The
notification referred to in Article 96 shall be such as to enable the Agency to
make, if necessary, an ad hoc inspection to identify, and if possible verify
the quantity and composition of, the nuclear material at the time the
consignment is unpacked. However, unpacking shall not be delayed by any action
taken or contemplated by the Agency pursuant to such a notification.
Article 98
Special reports
Australia shall make a special report as envisaged in Article 69 if any unusual incident or
circumstances, including the occurrence of significant delay, lead Australia to believe that there is or may have been loss of nuclear material during an
international transfer.
DEFINITIONS
Article 99
For
the purposes of this Agreement:
A. Adjustment
means an entry into an accounting record or a report showing a shipper/receiver
difference or material unaccounted for.
B. Annual
throughput means, for the purposes of Articles 80 and 81, the amount of
nuclear material transferred annually out of a facility working at nominal
capacity.
C. Batch
means a portion of nuclear material handled as a unit for accounting purposes
at a key measurement point and for which the composition and quantity are
defined by a single set of specifications or measurements. The nuclear material
may be in bulk form or contained in a number of separate items.
D. Batch
data means the total weight of each element of nuclear material and, in the
case of plutonium and uranium, the isotopic composition when appropriate. The
units of account shall be as follows:
(a) Grams
of contained plutonium;
(b) Grams
of total uranium and grams of contained uranium‑235 plus uranium‑233 for
uranium enriched in these isotopes; and
(c) Kilograms
of contained thorium, natural uranium or depleted uranium.
For reporting
purposes the weights of individual items in the batch shall be added together
before rounding to the nearest unit.
E. Book
inventory of a material balance area means the algebraic sum of the most
recent physical inventory of that material balance area and of all inventory
changes that have occurred since that physical inventory was taken.
F. Correction
means an entry into an accounting record or a report to rectify an identified
mistake or to reflect an improved measurement of a quantity previously entered
into the record or report. Each correction must identify the entry to which it
pertains.
G. Effective
kilogram means a special unit used in safeguarding nuclear material. The
quantity in effective kilograms is obtained by taking:
(a) For
plutonium, its weight in kilograms;
(b) For
uranium with an enrichment of 0.01 (1%) and above, its weight in kilograms
multiplied by the square of its enrichment;
(c) For
uranium with an enrichment below 0.01 (1%) and above 0.005 (0.5%), its weight
in kilograms multiplied by 0.0001; and
(d) For
depleted uranium with an enrichment of 0.005 (0.5%) or below, and for thorium,
its weight in kilograms multiplied by 0.00005.
H. Enrichment
means the ratio of the combined weight of the isotopes uranium‑233 and uranium‑235
to that of the total uranium in question.
I. Facility
means:
(a) A
reactor, a critical facility, a conversion plant, a fabrication plant, a
reprocessing plant, an isotope separation plant or a separate storage installation;
or
(b) Any
location where nuclear material in amounts greater than one effective kilogram
is customarily used.
J. Inventory change means an increase or decrease, in terms
of batches, of nuclear material in a material balance area; such a change shall
involve one of the following:
(a) Increases:
(i) Import;
(ii) Domestic
receipt: receipts from other material balance areas, receipts from a non‑safeguarded
(non‑peaceful) activity or receipts at the starting point of safeguards;
(iii) Nuclear
production: production of special fissionable material in a reactor; and
(iv) De‑exemption:
re‑application of safeguards on nuclear material previously exempted therefrom
on account of its use or quantity.
(b) Decreases:
(i) Export;
(ii) Domestic
shipment: shipments to other material balance areas or shipments for a non‑safeguarded
(non‑peaceful) activity;
(iii) Nuclear
loss: loss of nuclear material due to its transformation into other element(s)
or isotope(s) as a result of nuclear reactions;
(iv) Measured
discard: nuclear material which has been measured, or estimated on the basis of
measurements, and disposed of in such a way that it is not suitable for further
nuclear use;
(v) Retained
waste: nuclear material generated from processing or from an operational
accident, which is deemed to be unrecoverable for the time being but which is
stored;
(vi) Exemption:
exemption of nuclear material from safeguards on account of its use or
quantity; and
(vii) Other
loss: for example, accidental loss (that is, irretrievable and inadvertent loss
of nuclear material as the result of an operational accident) or theft.
K. Key
measurement point means a location where nuclear material appears in such a
form that it may be measured to determine material flow or inventory. Key
measurement points thus include, but are not limited to, the inputs and outputs
(including measured discards) and storages in material balance areas.
L. Man‑year
of inspection means, for the purposes of Article 81, 300 man‑days of
inspection, a man‑day being a day during which a single inspector has access to
a facility at any time for a total of not more than eight hours.
M. Material
balance area means an area in or outside of a facility such that:
(a) The
quantity of nuclear material in each transfer into or out of each material
balance area can be determined; and
(b) The
physical inventory of nuclear material in each material balance area can be
determined when necessary, in accordance with specified procedures,
in order that
the material balance for Agency safeguards purposes can be established.
N. Material
unaccounted for means the difference between book inventory and physical
inventory.
O. Nuclear
material means any source or any special fissionable material as defined in
Article XX of the Statute. The term source material shall not be interpreted as
applying to ore or ore residue. Any determination by the Board under Article XX
of the Statute after the entry into force of this Agreement which adds to the
materials considered to be source material or special fissionable material
shall have effect under this Agreement only upon acceptance by Australia.
P. Physical
inventory means the sum of all the measured or derived estimates of batch
quantities of nuclear material on hand at a given time within a material
balance area, obtained in accordance with specified procedures.
Q. Shipper/receiver
difference means the difference between the quantity of nuclear material in
a batch as stated by the shipping material balance area and as measured at the
receiving material balance area.
R. Source
data means those data, recorded during measurement or calibration or used
to derive empirical relationships, which identify nuclear material and provide
batch data. Source data may include, for example, weight of compounds,
conversion factors to determine weight of element, specific gravity, element
concentration, isotopic ratios, relationship between volume and manometer
readings and relationship between plutonium produced and power generated.
S. Strategic
point means a location selected during examination of design information
where, under normal conditions and when combined with the information from all
strategic points taken together, the information necessary and sufficient for
the implementation of safeguards measures is obtained and verified; a strategic
point may include any location where key measurements related to material
balance accountancy are made and where containment and surveillance measures
are executed.
DONE
in Vienna on the 10th day of July 1974 in duplicate in the English language.
For AUSTRALIA: J. R. ROWLAND (signed).
For the
INTERNATIONAL ATOMIC ENERGY AGENCY: JOHN A. HALL
(signed).