Fifty years later, we stand on the foundations that Eisenhower
laid.
Born of Eisenhower's initiative, the International Atomic
Energy Agency has established itself within the UN system
as a widely valued custodian - and practitioner - of his
vision. And today we inaugurate a partner institution to
give new vigour to the Eisenhower vision in the century
just begun.
This evening, those directly involved in the organisation
of the World Nuclear University will join at the Reform
Club for a celebratory dinner.
Some of you will recall the Reform Club's role in Jules
Verne's novel Around the World in 80 Days. It was
there that Phileas Fogg placed his wager and began his great
global adventure to win the bet.
This is an appealing analogy for our new adventure. But
the Reform Club also offers us a more serious metaphor.
In the early 19th century, the men who founded the Reform
Club recognised the paradox that society could remain stable
only through change.
To avoid the evils of revolution and of repression, leaders
must chart a course in between, using political reform to
reconcile the need for order with the need for change.
In today's world, we face a similar challenge of navigation.
We too see twin evils. One is massive, unmet human need
- profound and widespread need - that afflicts half the
world's population and could become still more severe as
humanity expands from 6 billion to 9 billion over the next
50 years.
The other is steady environmental degradation. Already,
the waste emanating from the world's economies is straining
the limits of a fragile biosphere. Indeed, serious analysts
see the accumulation of greenhouse gases - at a global rate
of 800 tonnes a second - as a crisis unprecedented in human
affairs.
Looming before us is radical climate change, and consequences
of famine, disease and social dislocation on a global scale
we cannot predict. To mitigate this risk, our best scientists
warn that we must reduce carbon emmissions by more than
half over the next fifty years. And we must accomplish this
Herculean task even as developing nations continue to expand
energy consumption as they strive to rise from poverty.
As we face this dilemma, we have one possible means of
reconciling human need and environmental preservation. To
navigate between the evils of massive human misery and environmental
destruction, we must achieve a worldwide transformation
to clean energy.
This transformation is a matter of economics and of technology
- and of politics. We will not achieve a global clean-energy
transformation - and thus the reconciliation of man and
environment of this planet - without the political will
to do so.
As nations struggle to find that will, our role in the
nuclear industry must be two-fold:
- First, we must prepare substantively - with skilled
people and advanced technology.
- Second, through our performance - and strong efforts
in public persuasion - we must do all possible to build
the political will needed for a clean-energy transformation.
The World Nuclear University can help on both counts:
- First, as its primary role, it can strengthen our industry
technically and with the trained professionals it will
need.
- But the World Nuclear University can also, by its very
nature and purpose, send a powerful message of political
consequence:
- If we can build a cooperative global institution
dedicated to preparing young people for professions
of nuclear science and engineering,
- If the world's wealthiest and the world's most populous
nations can join - and be seen to join - in an educational
partnership premised on the world's urgent need for
nuclear technology,
- And if, through this partnership, we can begin to
inspire a young generation of nuclear students in
countries around the world,
- Then we will send a message that will resonate among
citizens and policymakers everywhere.
With a modest investment, we can build the World Nuclear
University into an institution to which the entire nuclear
industry can look - and point - with confidence and pride.
This new institution will speak powerfully - and in many
languages - that nuclear technology has a large, promising
future as an essential tool of sustainable development for
all humankind.
To send this message is the opportunity we offer ourselves
with the institution we inaugurate today.
When Eisenhower spoke, the dominant issue of the atomic
age was whether we could contain this force and guide it
to constructive use.
Fifty years later, having built strong institutions and
an advanced atomic technology, we are confronted by urgent
human and environmental need that challenges us to use these
tools to full effect.
The institution we create today will help us to meet that
challenge.
I am delighted now to introduce Susan Eisenhower,
granddaughter of President Eisenhower, and head of the Eisenhower
Institute. Susan is both an author and an effective activist
in international affairs. But, most importantly, she has
demonstrated her utter and absolute dedication to "Atoms
for Peace" by marrying a Russian physicist.
[Click
here to read remarks by Susan Eisenhower]
I am honoured now to welcome to the podium James Lovelock.
Professor Lovelock requires no introduction from me. He
is esteemed around the world.
[Click
here to read remarks by James Lovelock]
I now welcome my friend Hans Blix, an international
public servant of enormous intelligence, vision and achievement.
I don't know if he would be proud of it, but I claim Hans
as my tutor in understanding the value of nuclear energy.
[Click
here to read remarks by Hans Blix]
I am now pleased to introduce my friend Mohamed Elbaradei,
who heads one of the world's great institutions of international
cooperation. Mohamed combines the wisdom and experience
to do so brilliantly, and the world community is fortunate
indeed to have the benefits of his leadership.
[Click
here to read remarks by Mohamed Elbaradei]
I am particularly happy this morning to welcome Sir
David King, the Chief Science Adviser of Her Majesty's
Government. Sir David is not a nuclear expert but he is
an eminently clear thinker. He has provided sound advice
to his government on energy and the environment, and Britain's
interests will be well served when his government listens.
[Click
here to read remarks by Sir David King]
I welcome now to the podium my colleague Luis Echavarri,
head of the OECD's Nuclear Energy Agency. Luis has been
a good partner as a Founding Supporter of the WNU, and the
NEA stands to be a major contributor to WNU activities in
the realms of both nuclear law and advanced nuclear technology.
[Click
here to read remarks by Luis Echavarri]
I am pleased to welcome my friend Zack Pate, Co-Chairman
of the WNA Council of Advisors, Chairman-emeritus of WANO,
and now Chairman of the Board of the new World Nuclear University.
It takes a big man to carry all those titles.
[Click
here to read remarks by Zack Pate]
I now happily welcome my colleague Sig Berg, who
manages an organisation of fundamental importance not just
to the nuclear industry but to the world. All factors now
point to nuclear as the energy of the future, and Sid's
job is to keep it that way.
[Click
here to read remarks by Sig Berg]
I am now delighted to introduce Nick Timbers, head
of the U.S. Enrichment Corporation. USEC is the world's
leading uranium enricher and a key participant in America's
nuclear resurgence.
[Click
here to read remarks by William Timbers]
I now invite to the podium my London colleague Hugh
Collum. BNFL has an active programme of support for
Britain's institutions of nuclear learning, and we hope
that the WNU can draw on this experience as we build a transnational
partnership.
[Click
here to read remarks by Hugh Collum]
I now call upon Jerry Grandey, who addressed us
earlier as WNA Chairman and who will speak now in his capacity
as CEO of the world's largest uranium company.
[Click
here to read remarks by Gerald Grandey]
We have saved until late in our programme a terrific man
of vision and entrepreneurship. Geoff Ballard has
made wonderful contributions to the development of the hydrogen
fuel cell. But his great unsung contribution is his effort
to educate the world about where this hydrogen is going
to come from.
[Click
here to read remarks by Geoffrey Ballard]
I am pleased now to show you an encouraging, highly positive
video message from Anne Lauvergeon, CEO of Areva
Group, who could not be here for reasons of giving birth
to a new creation of her own. Areva Group is the world's
largest nuclear company, and Anne's enthusiastic support
for the World Nuclear University is a tremendous asset as
we begin this journey.
[Click
here to read remarks by Anne Lauvergeon]
Ladies and gentlemen, we now turn to the inaugural formalities.
Our main participants are representatives of the institutions
of nuclear learning that comprise the WNU network.
These representatives will form the WNU's Academic Council,
which will oversee an array of Working Groups focused on
a wide variety of tasks and challenges.
The WNU is an ongoing search for constructive cooperation,
and these Working Groups will be the explorers. Their work
will comprise the WNU agenda.
After this ceremony, the Academic Council will convene
to consider that agenda, which will include:
- Sharing faculty and facilities;
- Preserving and managing nuclear knowledge;
- Exchanging students;
- Strengthening course content;
- Harmonising standards and credentials; and
- Eventually, establishing a recognized WNU diploma or
degree.
A
central goal will be to incorporate links between participating
insitutions of nuclear learning and the four organisations
that are the network's Founding Supporters.
We expect the WNU network to be coordinated from a London
headquarters that will be staffed by a small cadre of experienced
nuclear professionals. This "Core Faculty" will
be the hub - providing both secretariat services and substantive
leadership in promoting cooperation within the network and
working to strengthen course content.
At the outset, the WNU will be little more than a framework.
Because no organised opportunity has previously existed
for global cooperation among such institutions, assembling
the WNU partnership represents an important step. But it
is only a first step.
Realising the WNU's potential will depend on investments
of resources - and personal and institutional commitment
- by the participants, by the Founding Supporters and by
the companies and governments they represent.
The WNU project will rise or fall on the basis of those
investments.
In this inauguration, it is fitting that we lay a conceptual
foundation-stone for the new institution. The Board of Management
of the World Nuclear Association has achieved this by its
selection of recipient for a special WNA Award for "Distinguished
Contribution to the Peaceful Worldwide Use of Nuclear Energy".
Normally the WNA Award is given to a person, and sometimes
to an institution. This year, our honouree is an idea: President
Eisenhower's "Atoms for Peace" vision.
We present the Award today, in the form of three plaques,
to institutions that are custodians of that vision: the
Eisenhower Institute, the IAEA, and the new World Nuclear
University.
I ask the leaders of those institutions to join me and
Jerry Grandey on stage to accept the WNA Award.

As the plaque reads, the Award is made to President Eisenhower's
vision:
- To commemorate the vision's 50th anniversary as an
inspiration to those men and women in many nations who
have dedicated themselves in science and public policy
to achieving its fulfilment.
- To recognize the vision's living legacy within the
United Nations System in the work of the International
Atomic Energy Agency in building an ever stronger foundation
for the beneficial use of nuclear technology.
- And to celebrate the expansion of this legacy by the
founding on this date of the World Nuclear University,
dedicated to fulfilling the "Atoms for Peace"
vision in the 21st century and to meeting the global imperatives
of sustainable development and environmental preservation.
Susan, if you have any powers of communication with your
grandfather, I hope you will convey our appreciation to
the author of this vision. But I believe we can also offer
thanks more generally.
Ladies and gentlemen, please join in reaffirming our common
commitment to the Eisenhower vision and our appreciation
to those many men and women - a number of them here today
- who have done so much to bring this vision to reality.
Let us now bring forward those who will help to carry this
torch in the 21st century.
To record our unity of purpose, the participants will sign
a "Declaration of Commitment", which reads as
follows:
- Upon this inauguration of the World Nuclear University
as a worldwide network of distinguished educational and
research institutions engaged in the peaceful uses of
nuclear energy,
- We, as representatives of the academic and research
institutions that are the initial participants in this
undertaking and of the international institutions that
are its founding supporters, pledge our best efforts,
consistent with the statutes of our respective organisations:
- To assist this new endeavour in pursuing its essential
aim of fostering international cooperation to advance
the safe and expanded application of all aspects of nuclear
technology in support of the goal of global sustainable
development.
I ask our Country Representatives to proceed to the stage,
in sequence, to sign the Declaration:
 From
Argentina, representing the Balseiro Institute and
the Argentinean Atomic Energy Commission, we are honoured
to have the head of both organisations: Professor José
Abriata. We are impressed that Argentina has chosen
to be represented at the ministerial level.
From
Australia, representing the Australian Nuclear Science
and Technology Organisation is its Counsellor, Dr. Wayne
Garrett.
From
Austria, representing the Atomic Institute of the
Austrian Universities, we welcome its Director, Helmuth
Boeck.
I note the presence in our audience of a long-time champion
of nuclear energy in Austria - an ageing nuclear veteran
who has by no means conceded defeat: the former head of
the Atomic Institute and current head of the Austrian Nuclear
Society, Dr Walter Binner.
From Belgium, representing the Belgian Nuclear Higher
Education Network, is William D'haeseleer. In a few
moments, William will sign the Declaration a second time,
in his capacity as representative of the European Nuclear
Engineering Network.
Brazil,
like Argentina, has identified as its Country Representative
the head of the national atomic energy commission, Odair
Dias Goncalves. Unfortunately, one liability of ministerial
rank is that he was unable to be here today. Brazil has
expressed a strong commitment to the WNU. We look forward
to working with Mr. Goncalves, who is represented here today
by a key science adviser of the Brazilian government, Dr.
Paulo Wrobel.
From
Bulgaria, we are pleased to have, representing the University
of Sofia and the Technical University of Sofia, Slavtcho
Neykov, secretary general of Bulgaria's ministry of
energy.
From
Canada, we welcome Dr. Mohan Mathur, who heads
Canada's University Network of Excellence in Nuclear Engineering.
We anticipate that UNENE will offer both lessons and leadership
as the WNU begins shaping its global network of cooperation.
From
China, we are delighted to welcome Dr. Zuoyi Zhang,
who heads the Institute of Nuclear Energy Technology at
Tsinghua University. Tsinghua stands at the centre of nuclear
learning in China, and Dr. Zhang's participation will be
immensely valuable as we develop educational linkages on
nuclear technology with a nation representing 20% of humankind.
From
the Czech Republic, we have two excellent representatiaves.
Karel Matejka represents the Czech Technical University
in Prague, and Zdenek Kriz represents the Nuclear
Research Institute REZ. We welcome both to the WNU network.
From
Finland, land of enlightened nuclear policy, we welcome
Professor Rainer Salomaa. Rainer represents the participation
both of his own Helsinki University of Technology and also
of the Lappeenranta University of Technology
From
France, we have two representatives from the National
Institute of Nuclear Science and Technology, France's leading
institution of nuclear learning. Representing a nation with
the world's most pervasive nuclear programme, and arguably
the world's most enlightened energy policy, INSTN will be
centrally important to the workings of the WNU network.
We welcome Dominique Gentile's strong commitment
as INSTN's Director.
We look forward also to working with Christine Feltin,
INSTN's head of international relations.
In connection with Frances participation, we have
also valued the constructive role of Bertrand Barre,
the Areva Groups Vice-President for Scientific Communication,
who has provided strong support for the WNU vision.
Germany
is represented today by Professor Reinhard Odoj.
Reinhard's Institute of Safety Research and Reactor Technology
is an active participant in Germany's Network of Competence
in Nuclear Technology.
From
India, we welcome our friend Ravi Grover,
a senior official in the Department of Atomic Energy and
in the Bhaba Atomic Research Centre. BARC's Training School
is the Indian participant in the WNU network. India's impressive
programme of independent research means that BARC will have
much to offer the WNU network.
India brings still more value to the WNU because of its
strong and explicit national commitment to nuclear energy
as a central instrument of sustainable development. This
commitment represents a model that is an asset to nuclear
enlightenment everywhere.
When the Indian government affirms this principle in international
forums - as it did at the World Summit on Sustainable Development
- that affirmation simply cannot be rebutted by a small
political party or country, or an EU official, purporting
to speak on behalf of the developing world.
From
Italy, we have two fine representatives. Professor
Antonio Faucitano represents the European School of
Advanced Nuclear Studies at Pavia University. Professor
Giuseppe Forasassi, based at the University of Pisa,
represents the network called the CIRTEN Consortium.
Someday
we will reach the landmark when Italy ceases to be the world's
largest importer of electricity and returns to the sensible
practice of producing its own nuclear power. On that day
we will celebrate in Pavia or Pisa or both.
From
Japan, we have two distinguished institutional participants
and two distinguished representatives: Professor Yoshiaki
Oka of Tokyo University is Japan's Country Representative.
In
addition, representing Japan's other participating institution,
we welcome Professor Masaki Saito of the Tokyo Institute
of Technology.
We look forward, in addition, to the participation of Japan's
Atomic Industrial Forum (JAIF) and the Japanese Atomic Energy
Research Institute (JAERI).
Another key player will be the Forum for Nuclear Cooperation
in Asia, headed by an old friend from Vienna, former IAEA
official Sueo Machi.
I should emphasise that Japan's active participation will
be crucial to the success of the WNU enterprise.
From
Korea, we are delighted to have the participation
of both KAERI and KAIST. We are very pleased that Korea's
Country Representative is Dr. Hung Won Han of KAERI.
It was Korea, some years ago, that began the push to create
a World Nuclear University, and Korea's role in it will
be of central importance now that it has been created.
We hope and expect that KAERI and its Korean partners will
be prominent in the leadership of WNU activities.
From
Mexico, our Country Representative is Dr. Carlos
Chavez Mercado of the National Autonomous University
of Mexico. We look forward to working with Carlos to strengthen
the role of nuclear technology in a country that desperately
needs its clean-energy benefits.
From
Russia, our participants are two highly regarded
institutions: the Kurchatov Institute and the Moscow Engineering
Physics Institute. Russia's participation will be critical
to WNU success, and we are pleased that MEPhI is represented
today by its Vice-Rector, Professor Vladimir Kharitonov.
From
South Africa, our Country Representative is the just-retired
Dean of the Faculty of Engineering at the University of
Potchefstroom, Professor Gideon Greyvenstein. Gideon
and his colleagues have been deeply involved with South
Africa's Pebble-Bed Modular Reactor project and will have
much to offer the WNU network.
From
Spain, our participating institution is the Polytechnical
University of Madrid, and we are pleased to have here Professor
Oscar Cabellos, a young leader in the Department
of Nuclear Engineering.
From
Sweden, Tomas Lefvert directs the Swedish
Centre for Nuclear Technology. The Centre melds the participation
of Sweden's Royal Institute of Technology and Chalmers and
Uppsala Universities. Sweden has an active program of educating
foreign students in nuclear technology, and can bring great
experience and leadership to the WNU enterprise.
From
the United Kingdom, we welcome Professor Philip
Tomas, chairman of the broad-based Nuclear Academics
Industry Liasion Seminar - NAILS - which is the broad umbrella
group for British universities.
In
addition, the newly integrated University of Manchester
- and University of Manchester Institute of Science and
Technology - will participate in its own right under the
leadership of Professor Paul O'Brien. Manchester
has a close working relationship with BNFL.
In this connection, I note the important coordinating
and leadership role we anticipate from Professor Richard
Clegg, Director of Science at BNFL.
I want also to applaud the valuable role played by John
Haddon of the UK's Nuclear Industry Association. John
acts as the de facto secretariat and coordinator for the
NAILS group of universities.
We welcome also Professor Russell Hand of Sheffield
University, which has expressed enthusiastic interest in
WNU participation.
From
the United States, we are delighted to welcome Bill
Burchill, head of Nuclear Engineering at the University
of Texas A&M. Bill leads a department that today has
America's most robust programme of nuclear engineering,
and Texas A&M is leader of a group of universities called
the Southwest Consortium, which includes the University
of Texas and the University of New Mexico.
As U.S. Country Representative, Bill also represents the
WNU interest of the Western Nuclear Science Alliance, which
is led by Oregon State and includes four other universities,
among them Cal-Davis and Cal-Berkeley.
American participation in the WNU has also attracted the
strong interest of Argonne National Laboratory, which will
work to coordinate the involvement of several U.S. national
labs. Representing Argonne here today is Dr Leo LeSage,
whom we hope will be play an extensive role in WNU affairs.
A U.S. umbrella group of great importance is the Nuclear
Energy Department Heads Organisation, which has a keen interest
in the WNU but has not yet established a formal role. We
are delighted that NEDHO is represented here today by its
Vice-Chairman, Professor Gil Brown of the University
of Massachusetts-Lowell. We look forward to developing the
NEDHO-WNU relationship.
With us too is Carl Stoiber, a former top NRC official
known to many in Vienna. We anticipate that Carl can assist
WNU activity in the areas of both safety and nuclear law,
as he is a world-class expert in both.
Finally,
representing the European Nuclear Engineering Network,
I ask William D'haeseleer to step forward wearing
his second hat to sign for ENEN.
Of ENEN's 17 countries, 10 are represented directly in
the WNU network. ENEN's involvement will provide a linkage
to the other seven and will also provide a valuable connection
to the work ENEN already has under way to pioneer the inter-university
networking process.
I now ask the leaders of the four organisations that the
WNU's Founding Supporters - IAEA, NEA, WANO, and WNA - to
sign the Declaration of Commitment.
As
this occurs, I want to express our appreciation for the
key role played all year by an IAEA team that focused on
this project under the leadership of Holger Rogner.
Holger, who is here along with Yanko Yanev and Piero
Danesi, has the honour of signing the Declaration on
behalf of the IAEA.
Other IAEA officials who deserve explicit thanks include
Peter Gowin, Ramachandran Swaminathan, Massoud
Samiei, Poong Eil Juhn and Abel Gonzalez.
Poong Eil Juhn from Korea and Abel Gonzalez
from Argentina will soon complete their service at the Agency,
and we hope to shape active roles for them in the WNU system.
Signing
for the Nuclear Energy Agency is its Director General,
Luis Echavarri.
Managing
Director Sig Berg will sign for WANO.
WNA
Board Chairman Jerry Grandey will sign for the World
Nuclear Association.
Finally,
I would ask Hans and Zack - as Chancellor and Chairman -
to sign for the WNU, acknowledging and welcoming receipt
of this Declaration of Commitment. The first signature will
come from Hans Blix as WNU Chancellor.
The
signature of Zack Pate, as WNU Board Chairman,
completes the WNU Declaration of Commitment.
I now ask those who have signed to gather in centre-stage.
Ladies and gentlemen, please join me in expressing an enthusiastic
welcome for the inauguration of the World Nuclear University.

[Click
here to view the signed Declaration of Commitment]
Closing Comments by Chancellor Hans
Blix
It now falls upon me, as my first official act as Chancellor,
to declare this ceremony concluded.
I hereby exercise my new powers by instructing our loyal
Country Representatives to report for duty on the fifth
floor, in the Elizabeth Windsor Room, where they can begin
to shape the WNU agenda.
I wish us all great success in this endeavour.
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