Vienna/London - Next Sunday, 11 March 2012, marks the first  anniversary of the devastating earthquake and tsunami that struck the  east coast of Japan. One year on, the International Atomic Energy Agency  (IAEA) and the World Association of Nuclear Operators (WANO) are  increasing their mutual cooperation to maximise nuclear safety efforts  around the globe.
The two organisations are revising their Memorandum of Understanding  in light of the lessons learned from the Fukushima accident, and will  be stepping up their efforts to share expertise and knowledge between  operators and governments. There will be greater coordination between  WANO peer reviews and IAEA OSART missions, in which international  experts assess the safety of individual nuclear power plants, and  discussions are under way to examine further areas to improve  information sharing. This is in addition to the other work each  organisation is doing to reinforce nuclear safety worldwide.
IAEA Director General, Yukiya Amano said:
"The IAEA is delighted to strengthen its coordination and  cooperation with WANO. One of the lessons of Fukushima is the need for  strong and effective communication between governments, regulators and  nuclear operators. The IAEA's Action Plan on Nuclear Safety underlines  the need for all stakeholders to work together to put these lessons into  practice as tangibly and swiftly as possible, to deliver concrete  results. By working more closely together, we can help to ensure that  practical experience is properly shared to reinforce nuclear safety  everywhere."
Laurent Stricker, Chairman of WANO, commented:
"While the terrible events of last year had a major lasting impact  on the industry, they have also served as the catalyst for huge change.  WANO has shifted from primarily focusing on accident prevention, to an  emphasis on both prevention and mitigation, and has redoubled its  efforts to promote excellence in nuclear safety in each and every plant  across the world. All nuclear plants have carefully analysed their  ability to withstand and respond to both design basis and beyond design  basis events since Fukushima, and improvements have already been made to  severe accident management and emergency preparedness. This work will  continue over the coming months and years."
Amano and Stricker agreed that further lessons would continue to be  learned from the Fukushima accident, as they were from earlier accidents  such as Chernobyl and Three Mile Island, and that strong cooperation  between the IAEA and WANO would be a vital element in this process.
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