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entitled 'Nuclear Nonproliferation: U.S. and International Assistance 
Efforts to Control Sealed Radioactive Sources Need Strengthening' which 
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Report to the Ranking Minority Member, Subcommittee on Financial 
Management, the Budget, and International Security, Committee on 
Governmental Affairs, U.S. Senate:

May 2003:

Nuclear Nonproliferation:

U.S. and International Assistance Efforts to Control Sealed Radioactive 
Sources Need Strengthening:

GAO-03-638:

GAO Highlights:

Highlights of GAO-03-638, a report to the Ranking Minority Member, 
Subcommittee on Financial Management, the Budget, and International 
Security, Committee on Governmental Affairs, U.S. Senate 

Why GAO Did This Study:

Sealed radioactive sources, radioactive material encapsulated in 
stainless steel or other metal, are used worldwide in medicine, 
industry, and research. These sealed sources pose a threat to 
national security because terrorists could use them to make “dirty 
bombs.” GAO was asked to determine (1) the number of sealed sources 
worldwide and how many have been reported lost, stolen, or abandoned; 
(2) the controls, both legislative and regulatory, used by countries 
that possess sealed sources; and (3) the assistance provided by the 
Department of Energy (DOE) and other U.S. federal agencies to 
strengthen other countries’ control over sealed sources and the extent 
to which these efforts are believed to be effectively implemented. 

What GAO Found:

The precise number of sealed sources in use is unknown because many 
countries do not systematically account for them. However, nearly 
10 million sealed sources exist in the United States and the 49 
countries responding to a GAO survey. There is also limited 
information about the number of sealed sources that have been lost, 
stolen, or abandoned, but it is estimated to be in the thousands 
worldwide. Many of the most vulnerable sealed sources that could pose 
a security risk are located in the countries of the former Soviet 
Union. 

All of the 49 countries that responded to GAO’s survey reported that 
they have established legislative or regulatory controls over sealed 
sources. However, nuclear safety and security experts from DOE, the 
Departments of State and Defense, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission 
(NRC), the International Atomic Energy Agency, and the European 
Commission told GAO that countries’ controls over sealed sources vary 
greatly and are weakest among less developed countries. 

In fiscal year 2002, DOE established a program focusing on improving 
the security of sealed sources in the former Soviet Union and has 
started to fund security upgrades in Russia and other former Soviet 
countries. The Departments of Defense and State and NRC also have 
programs to help countries strengthen controls over sealed sources. 
DOE plans to expand its program to other countries and regions in 2003 
and is developing a plan to guide its efforts. However, the 
department has not fully coordinated its efforts with NRC and the 
Department of State to ensure that a governmentwide strategy is 
established. In addition, as of January 2003, the majority of DOE’s 
program expenditures totaling $8.9 million were spent by DOE’s 
national laboratories in the United States. 

What GAO Recommends:

GAO recommends that the Secretary of Energy (1) develop a 
comprehensive plan for DOE to guide its future efforts, (2) take the 
lead in developing a governmentwide plan to strengthen controls over 
other countries’ sealed sources; and (3) strengthen efforts to 
increase program expenditures in the countries requiring assistance.

DOE agreed with our recommendations to strengthen the program but 
believes it has fully coordinated with other federal agencies. DOE’s 
contention is contrary to other agencies’ views.

[End of section]

Letter:

Results in Brief:

Background:

The Number of Sealed Sources in Use and Lost, Stolen, or Abandoned 
Worldwide Is Unknown:

Countries Have Established Legislative and Regulatory Controls over 
Sealed Sources, but Adequacy of Controls Varies:

DOE Has a Program to Help Other Countries Secure Sealed Sources, but 
Strengthened Coordination and Planning Are Needed:

Conclusions:

Recommendations for Executive Action:

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation:

Appendixes:

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology:

Appendix II: Results of Survey of IAEA Member Countries:

Appendix III: List of Countries Surveyed by GAO and Responses:

Appendix IV: Information on Trafficking Incidents Involving Sealed
Sources:

Appendix V: Information About Accidents Involving Sealed Sources:

Appendix VI: Information on Producers and Distributors of Radioactive
Material:

Appendix VII: The Nuclear Regulatory Commission’s Policy on Exports of
Sealed Sources:

Appendix VIII: Results of the International Conference on the Security of
Radioactive Sources:

Appendix IX: Information on IAEA’s Revised Categorization of Radioactive
Sources:

Appendix X: Countries Participating in IAEA’s Model Project Program:

Appendix XI: France’s System for Controlling Sealed Sources:

Appendix XII: Comments from the Department of Energy:

Appendix XIII: Comments from the Department of State:

Appendix XIV: Comments from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission:

Appendix XV: GAO Contacts and Staff Acknowledgments:

Tables:

Table 1: Regional Distribution of Sealed Sources in Countries Responding 
to GAO's Survey on the Security of Radioactive Sealed Sources:

Table 2: Reported Lost or Stolen and Recovered Sealed Sources:

Table 3: Estimated Number of Radioisotope Thermoelectric Generators in 
the Former Soviet Union:

Table 4: Assistance to Improve Controls over Radioactive Sources through 
January 31, 2003:

Table 5: Radiological Threat Reduction Program Expenditures by DOE's 
National Laboratories as of January 31, 2003:

Table 6: Countries Surveyed and Surveys Received:

Table 7: Significant Seizures of Illicitly Trafficked Sealed Sources 
Since 1993:

Table 8: Selected Accidents Involving Sealed Sources Since 1983:

Table 9: Estimated Costs Related to the Accident in Mexico:

Table 10: Major Producers and Distributors of Radioactive Material Used 
to Manufacture Sealed Sources:

Table 11: Countries Participating in IAEA's Model Project Program:

Figures:

Figure 1: Radioisotope Thermoelectric Generators Manufactured in the 
Former Soviet Union:

Figure 2: Abandoned Radioisotope Thermoelectric Generator in Russia:

Figure 3: Seed Irradiators Used in the Former Soviet Union:

Figure 4: Moscow Radon Building Scheduled for DOE-Funded Security 
Upgrades:

Figure 5: DOE-Funded Physical Security Upgrades in the Former Soviet 
Union:

Figure 6: Reported International Trafficking Incidents Involving 
Radioactive Sources, 1993-2002:

Figure 7: Illicit Trafficking Incidents by Type of Radioactive Source, 
1993-2002:

Figure 8: Contaminated Radioactive Debris from Demolished Residences in 
Goiania:

Figure 9: Location Where Sealed Sources Were Found, Lilo, Georgia:

Abbreviations:

DOD: Department of Defense:

DOE: Department of Energy:

GAO: General Accounting Office:

IAEA: International Atomic Energy Agency:

MINATOM: Russian Ministry of Atomic Energy:

NRC: Nuclear Regulatory Commission:

USAID: U.S. Agency for International Development:

Letter May 16, 2003:

The Honorable Daniel K. Akaka 
Ranking Minority Member 
Subcommittee on Financial Management, the Budget, and International 
Security 
Committee on Governmental Affairs 
United States Senate:

Dear Senator Akaka:

Since September 11, 2001, U.S. and international nuclear safety and 
security experts have raised concerns that terrorists could obtain 
radioactive material used in medicine, research, agriculture, and 
industry to construct a radiological dispersion device, or "dirty 
bomb." This radioactive material is encapsulated, or sealed, in metal, 
such as stainless steel, titanium, or platinum, to prevent its 
dispersal and is commonly called a sealed radioactive source. These 
sealed sources are used throughout the United States and other 
countries in equipment designed to, among other things, diagnose and 
treat illnesses, preserve food, detect flaws and other failures in 
pipeline welds, and determine the moisture content of soil. Depending 
on their use, sealed sources contain different types of radioactive 
material, such as strontium-90, cobalt-60, cesium-137, plutonium-238, 
and plutonium-239. If these sealed sources fell into the hands of 
terrorists, they could use them to produce a simple and crude, but 
potentially dangerous, weapon by packaging explosives, such as 
dynamite, with the radioactive material, which would be dispersed when 
the bomb went off. Depending on the type, amount, and form (powder or 
solid), the dispersed radioactive material could cause radiation 
sickness for people nearby and produce serious economic costs and 
psychological and social disruption associated with the evacuation and 
subsequent cleanup of the contaminated area.

Given the concerns about the security of sealed sources worldwide, you 
asked us to determine, to the extent possible (1) the number of sealed 
sources worldwide and how many are reported lost, stolen, or abandoned; 
(2) the controls, both legislative and regulatory, used by countries 
that possess sealed sources; and (3) the assistance provided by the 
Department of Energy (DOE) and other U.S. federal agencies to 
strengthen other countries' control over sealed sources and the extent 
to which these efforts are believed to be effectively implemented. To 
address these objectives, we distributed a survey to 127 International 
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)[Footnote 1] member states to determine, 
among other things, how countries control sealed sources. Appendix I 
presents our scope and methodology, appendix II presents the results of 
the survey, and appendix III contains a list of the countries we sent 
the survey to, including those that responded to it. We also met with 
or had discussions with officials from several countries to learn more 
about how they regulate and control sealed sources and met with 
officials from international organizations, such as IAEA and the 
European Commission,[Footnote 2] to obtain their views on the problem 
of uncontrolled sealed sources. A forthcoming report will address 
controls over sealed sources in the United States. We conducted our 
review from May 2002 through May 2003 in accordance with generally 
accepted government auditing standards.

Results in Brief:

The precise number of sealed sources that is in use today or that has 
been lost, stolen, or abandoned is unknown because many countries do 
not systematically account for them. Some estimates are available, 
however. For example, about 2 million licensed sealed sources are 
currently being used in the United States, according to the Nuclear 
Regulatory Commission (NRC), and the 49 countries that responded to our 
survey reported that 7.8 million sealed sources are in use. Limited 
information exists about the number of sealed sources that has been 
lost, stolen, or abandoned--commonly referred to as "orphan sources"--
but it is estimated to be in the thousands worldwide. In the United 
States, about 250 sealed sources or devices containing sealed sources 
are reported lost or stolen annually, but the majority of these sources 
are recovered. The countries that responded to our survey said that a 
total of 612 sealed sources had been reported lost or stolen since 
1995, 254 of which had not been recovered. U.S. and international 
nuclear safety and security experts told us that the largest number of 
lost, stolen, or abandoned sealed sources is located in the former 
Soviet Union. Of particular concern are as many as 12 electrical 
generators that were abandoned in the Republic of Georgia. These 
generators are powered by high activity levels (ranging from 40,000 to 
150,000 curies) of strontium-90--a destructive radioactive material. 
Recently, the United States and other countries--and IAEA--located and 
secured most of these generators believed to exist in Georgia. However, 
more than 1,000 additional generators that are not adequately protected 
and pose a significant security risk are spread throughout the former 
Soviet Union.

All of the countries that responded to our survey reported that they 
have established legislative or regulatory controls over sealed 
sources. However, nuclear safety and security experts from DOE, the 
Department of State, the Department of Defense (DOD), NRC, IAEA, and 
the European Commission told us that controls on radioactive sources 
vary greatly between countries and focus primarily on protecting public 
health and safety rather than on securing sealed sources from theft or 
destructive use. These experts also told us that controls over sealed 
sources are weakest among less developed countries. For example, 
representatives from several countries of the former Soviet Union told 
us that their national systems of control need improvement, 
particularly regarding inventorying, consolidating and securing, and 
transporting sealed sources. Because of concerns about many countries' 
inability to control radioactive materials--IAEA has estimated that as 
many as 110 countries worldwide do not have adequate controls over 
sealed sources--IAEA established a program to help 88 countries enhance 
their regulatory infrastructures. Although the program has helped 
countries improve their regulatory controls, many participating 
countries continue to have numerous regulatory deficiencies. In the 
absence of regulatory controls, radioactive sources have been 
inadequately protected or secured; little or no attention has been paid 
to the export or import controls of sources; and basic record keeping 
has been lacking. Finally, officials from the Department of State, the 
European Commission, and IAEA told us that France has implemented a 
system for controlling sealed sources that could serve as a model for 
other countries. France's system requires distributors of sealed 
sources to assume financial responsibility for recovering and disposing 
of them.

DOE and other U.S. agencies have funded programs to strengthen controls 
over sealed sources in other countries. DOE, which has the largest 
program, received about $37 million since fiscal year 2002 to initiate 
a program to assist other countries in controlling their sealed 
sources. According to DOE officials, the program is expected to receive 
an additional $22 million in supplemental appropriations in fiscal year 
2003, including $5 million for securing nuclear material in Iraq. DOE 
established a program focusing on improving the security of sites 
containing sealed sources in the former Soviet Union because that is 
where DOE believed the greatest threat exists. DOE has begun funding 
site assessments and security upgrades at several locations in Russia, 
Uzbekistan, the Republic of Georgia, Moldova, and Tajikistan. In 
Russia, for example, DOE has focused on securing sources at several 
large nuclear waste repositories scattered around the country. 
Furthermore, the Secretary of Energy recently announced that the 
program will expand to other regions of the world. Other U.S. federal 
agencies have begun efforts to help countries strengthen controls over 
sealed sources as well. Since fiscal year 2001, DOD has obligated about 
$1.7 million to inventory, secure, and dispose of sealed sources in 
Kazakhstan. In fiscal year 2002, the State Department received 
appropriations totaling about $1.2 million primarily to support IAEA 
projects on the safety and security of sealed sources. Finally, the NRC 
received about $250,000 from the U.S. Agency for International 
Development (USAID) to help Armenia develop a registry of sealed 
sources and improve Armenia's legislative and regulatory framework for 
controlling sources.

DOE's initial efforts to secure sealed sources have lacked adequate 
planning and coordination, and the majority of the program funds were 
spent in the United States rather than in the countries of the former 
Soviet Union. DOE is in the process of developing a plan to guide its 
efforts. However, DOE officials told us that more detailed planning and 
analysis will be needed to, among other things, (1) determine which 
countries outside the former Soviet Union present the greatest security 
risk and most urgently require assistance, (2) identify future funding 
requirements, and (3) develop performance measures to gauge program 
success. In addition, Department of State and NRC officials told us 
that DOE has not fully coordinated its efforts with their agencies. In 
their view, DOE needs their input to ensure that a comprehensive 
governmentwide strategy is taken to, among other things, leverage 
program resources, maximize available expertise, avoid possible 
duplication of effort, and help ensure future program success. DOE has 
not systematically undertaken the kind of comprehensive planning that 
would foster better coordination with the other agencies and could also 
lead to better coordination with other countries' nuclear 
organizations. For example, officials from Russia's nuclear regulatory 
organization, Gosatomnadzor, told us that DOE did not adequately 
consult them when it initially selected sites in Russia for security 
improvements. Regarding DOE's effort to secure sealed sources in the 
former Soviet Union, as of January 31, 2003, DOE had spent about $8.9 
million, including $3 million transferred to IAEA. Of the remaining 
$5.9 million in expenditures, 93 percent was spent in the United States 
by DOE's national laboratories. DOE officials told us that the program 
is still in its early stages and that the objective of the program is 
to place a significant percentage of funds in the recipient countries 
to improve security.

This report makes recommendations designed to improve the management of 
DOE's efforts to help improve controls over sealed sources. 
Specifically, it recommends that DOE (1) develop a comprehensive plan 
that identifies those countries that most urgently require assistance, 
establish realistic time frames and resources necessary to accomplish 
program goals, and establish meaningful performance measures; (2) take 
the lead in developing a governmentwide plan designed to, among other 
things, improve interagency coordination; and (3) strengthen its 
efforts to increase program expenditures in the countries requiring 
assistance.

Background:

Sealed sources are used throughout the world for a variety of peaceful 
purposes. Until the 1950s, only naturally occurring radioactive 
materials, such as radium-226, were available to be used in sealed 
sources. Since then, sealed sources containing radioactive material 
produced artificially in nuclear reactors and accelerators have become 
widely available, including cobalt-60, strontium-90, cesium-137, and 
iridium-192. Radioactive material can be found in various forms. For 
example, cobalt-60 is a metal, while the cesium-137 in many sealed 
sources is in a powdery form closely resembling talc. Radioactive 
materials are measured by their level of activity. The greater the 
activity level--measured in units called curies[Footnote 3]--the more 
radiation emitted, which increases the potential risk to public health 
and safety if improperly used or controlled. The intensity of 
radioactive materials decays over time at various rates. The term 
"half-life" is used to indicate the period during which the 
radioactivity decreases by half as a result of decay.

Usually, radioactive material with high radioactivity is placed in a 
sealed container to prevent leakage of the material itself. Because of 
the varied characteristics of the radioactive material--physical 
structure (metal, ceramic, or powder), activity level, half-life, and 
type of radiation emitted,[Footnote 4] some materials pose a greater 
risk to people, property, and the environment than others. According to 
IAEA, the level of protection provided to users of the radioactive 
material should be commensurate with the safety and security risks that 
it presents if improperly used. For example, radioactive materials used 
for certain diagnostic purposes have low levels of activity and do not 
present a significant safety or security risk. However, powerful sealed 
sources, such as those used in radiotherapy (cancer treatment) that use 
cobalt-60, cesium-137, or iridium-192, could pose a greater threat to 
the public and the environment and would also pose a potentially more 
significant security risk, particularly if acquired to produce a dirty 
bomb.

The small size, portability, and potential value of sealed sources make 
them vulnerable to misuse, improper disposal, and theft. According to 
IAEA, illicit trafficking in or smuggling of nuclear material, 
including sealed sources, has increased worldwide in recent years: IAEA 
reported 272 cases of illicit trafficking in these sources from 1993 to 
the end of 2002. (See app. IV for more information about illicit 
trafficking incidents.) While no dirty bombs have been detonated, in 
the mid-1990s Chechen separatists placed a canister containing cesium-
137 in a Moscow park. Although the device was not detonated and no 
radioactive material was dispersed, the incident demonstrated that 
terrorists have the capability and willingness to use sealed sources as 
weapons of terror.

U.S. and international experts have noted that some accidents involving 
sealed sources can provide a measure of understanding of what the 
possible impacts of a dirty bomb might be. In 1987, an accident 
involving a cesium-137 sealed source in Brazil killed four people, 
injured many more, and caused about $36 million in damages to the local 
economy. This accident had such an enormous psychological impact on the 
local population that the atomic symbol was added to the region's flag 
as a lasting reminder of the accident's consequences. Appendix V 
contains more information about worldwide accidents involving sealed 
sources.

The Number of Sealed Sources in Use and Lost, Stolen, or Abandoned 
Worldwide Is Unknown:

The precise number of sealed sources that is in use worldwide is 
unknown because many countries do not systematically account for them. 
The lack of a full accounting of sealed sources makes it equally 
difficult to determine the number that has been lost, stolen, or 
abandoned--referred to as "orphan sources." Orphan sources, which are 
estimated to number in the thousands worldwide, are considered by U.S. 
and international officials to pose significant health, safety, and 
security risks because they are outside of regulatory control. 
According to U.S. and international safety and security experts, one of 
the most urgent problems is locating and securing orphan sources in the 
former Soviet Union because they pose a significant security risk.

The Number of Sealed Sources in Use Worldwide Is Unknown Because 
Countries Do Not Systematically Account for Them:

The number of sealed sources in use worldwide is unknown, but some 
estimates are available. According to IAEA, millions of sealed 
radioactive sources have been distributed worldwide over the past 50 
years. Approximately 2 million licensed sealed sources are in use in 
the United States, according to the NRC. In addition, according to the 
European Commission, approximately 500,000 sealed sources have been 
supplied to operators in the 15 member states of the European Union, of 
which about 110,000 are currently in use. The European Commission also 
estimated in 1999 that approximately 840,000 sealed sources exist in 
Russia, although Russian officials believe the total number is 
significantly higher.

The 49 countries that responded to our survey reported a total of about 
7.8 million sealed sources that are in use within their countries. 
These sealed sources are used in various applications, such as 
industrial radiography and therapeutic medicine. Table 1 summarizes the 
responses received from the countries surveyed regarding the number of 
sealed sources in use and their major applications.

Table 1: Regional Distribution of Sealed Sources in Countries 
Responding to GAO's Survey on the Security of Radioactive Sealed 
Sources:

Region: Africa; Number of sealed sources in use: 834; Major 
applications: Smoke detectors, academic/research, and fixed gauges.

Region: Asia; Number of sealed sources in use: 18,420; Major 
applications: Fixed gauges, analytical instruments, and academic/
research.

Region: Europe; Number of sealed sources in use: 4,866,024; 
Major applications: Smoke detectors, fixed gauges, and academic/
research.

Region: Former Soviet Union; Number of sealed sources in use: 20,344; 
 Major applications: Smoke detectors, irradiation, and 
academic/research.

Region: Middle East; Number of sealed sources in use: 6,545; 
Major applications: Medical-diagnostic, academic/research, and 
portable gauges.

Region: North America[A] and Central America; Number of sealed sources 
in use: 2,887,025; Major applications: Smoke detectors, fixed 
gauges, and academic/research.

Region: South America; Number of sealed sources in use: 2,836; 
Major applications: Smoke detectors, fixed gauges, and medical-
diagnostic.

Region: South Pacific; Number of sealed sources in use: 1,854; 
Major applications: Industrial radiography, smoke detectors, and 
irradiation.

Region: Total; Number of sealed sources in use: 7,803,882.

Source: GAO.

[A] The United States was not surveyed for this report.

[End of table]

Several factors contribute to the lack of comprehensive information 
about the number of sealed sources worldwide. According to IAEA, many 
countries do not maintain accurate or complete inventories of sealed 
sources in use or registries of users of sources. In response to our 
survey, 28 of the 49 countries said they had an inventory of sealed 
sources. In addition, 17 countries said they were in the process of 
developing an inventory. However, several countries that reported they 
had inventories indicated that the number of sources was estimated 
rather than actual. A few countries, including a European nation, 
indicated that they did not have the resources necessary to develop a 
national registry of sources and users.

An additional factor contributing to countries' limited or incomplete 
inventories is that sealed sources have been imported and exported by 
distributors and governments without consistent monitoring or tracking 
by the suppliers, the recipients of the sources, or the appropriate 
regulatory authority. Appendix VI provides information on the major 
producers of sealed sources worldwide.

The Chairman of NRC noted in March 2003 that international commerce in 
these sources is extensive and that existing controls on imports and 
exports are minimal. For example, most U.S.-origin sealed sources are 
exported under a general license.[Footnote 5] This means that in most 
instances, sealed sources are exported without NRC knowing the type, 
amount, or activity level of the sources, or their destination. (See 
app. VII for more information about NRC's export regulations.):

Sealed sources have also been distributed worldwide by a variety of 
means other than commercial trade without adequate monitoring and 
oversight. As a result, the sealed sources have not always been 
properly accounted for and accurately inventoried. For example, sealed 
sources have been (1) distributed by corporations working in developing 
countries without formal clearance from or approval by the recipient 
country's regulatory authority, (2) donated by medical practitioners 
and nonprofit organizations, and (3) provided through international 
technical cooperation programs. IAEA has reported that international 
corporations--such as oil companies--have brought sealed sources used 
in oil exploration into developing countries. In some cases, there was 
no competent authority in the country to register or license the sealed 
sources, and existing national rules were regarded as too complicated 
or difficult for the corporations to follow. One African country 
reported in response to our survey that its inventory of sealed sources 
was incomplete because foreign construction companies had not notified 
the country's regulatory authority when it imported sealed sources.

According to IAEA, medical practitioners have brought sealed sources 
into developing countries for the purpose of establishing health 
clinics and hospitals and a number of sources were not properly 
accounted for. IAEA reported that hospitals in many developed countries 
donated large amounts of surplus radium-226 to hospitals in developing 
countries in the 1960s. One African country responding to our survey 
noted that according to old records, radium had been imported into the 
country but could not be located. Nonprofit organizations have also 
provided medical equipment using sealed sources to foreign countries. 
For example, the American International Health Alliance, operating 
under a series of cooperative agreements with USAID and DOE, has 
donated medical supplies, pharmaceuticals, and equipment, including 
those containing sealed sources, to countries in the former Soviet 
Union and Central and Eastern Europe since 1992.[Footnote 6] According 
to an official from the American International Health Alliance, DOD 
also donated medical equipment containing sealed sources from field 
facilities to several countries in the former Soviet Union under the 
auspices of Operation Provide Hope. Since 1992, over 500 airlift 
deliveries by DOD to Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Kazakhstan, 
Ukraine, and Uzbekistan occurred, but the exact number of sealed source 
devices donated is unknown.

IAEA has supplied sealed sources to many countries through its 
technical cooperation program.[Footnote 7] In 1991, IAEA estimated that 
it had provided many developing countries with 565 sources since 1957. 
IAEA officials told us that IAEA had provided developing member states 
with over 1,000 devices containing sealed sources since 1996. Most of 
these sealed sources are not considered a security risk by IAEA because 
of their low radioactivity. However, officials did note that about 125 
of the 1,000 devices contained sources that could pose security risks 
if acquired by terrorists. These include (1) teletherapy machines with 
cobalt-60 sources of activity between 5,000 and 7,000 curies, (2) 
brachytherapy machines with cesium-137 sources of activity between 0.5 
and 1 curie and iridium-192 sources of 10 curies, (3) irradiators with 
cobalt-60 sources with activity in the range of 12,000 to 200,000 
curies, and (4) calibrators with activity around 4,000 curies. IAEA 
officials said that they were uncertain, however, the extent to which 
the sealed sources have been included in countries' inventories.

While it is the responsibility of each country--and not IAEA--to 
maintain accurate inventories of the sources, IAEA has encouraged many 
of its member states to establish and/or strengthen their radiation and 
waste safety infrastructures via the model project program. In 
addition, IAEA policy does not allow for the approval of any technical 
cooperation projects involving the use of significant sealed sources 
unless the member state in question has, among other things, an 
effective regulatory framework that includes a system of notification, 
authorization, and control of sealed sources together with an inventory 
of sources. IAEA's model project program is discussed on pages 22 and 
23 of this report.

DOE has provided countries with sealed sources under the Atoms for 
Peace Program. According to a March 2002 DOE Inspector General report, 
Accounting for Sealed Sources of Nuclear Material Provided to Foreign 
Countries, DOE could not fully account for sealed sources loaned to 
foreign countries and no longer maintained an accounting and tracking 
system for sealed sources. The report noted that DOE and its 
predecessor agencies provided 33 countries, including Iran, Pakistan, 
India, Malaysia, and Vietnam, with 536 sealed sources, which contained 
plutonium, from the 1950s through the 1970s. Initially, these materials 
were loaned to foreign facilities, and the U.S. government maintained 
ownership. However, in the 1960s, the U.S. government began 
transferring ownership through direct sale or donation, but it still 
retained title to much of the sealed sources provided to foreign 
entities. The report concluded that (1) the oversight of sealed sources 
was inadequate and that inaccurate inventory records limit DOE's 
ability to protect nuclear materials from loss, theft, or other 
diversion, and (2) DOE should work with IAEA to establish adequate 
regulatory oversight of sealed sources in foreign countries. In its 
response to the report, DOE stated that it is not the current policy of 
the U.S. government to track sealed sources once they are in the 
control of foreign entities and that to track loaned sealed sources 
would require a change in policy and international agreements.

Limited Information Exists about the Number of Lost, Stolen, or 
Abandoned Sealed Sources:

Because many countries cannot account for their sealed sources, there 
is limited information on the number of sealed sources that are lost, 
stolen, or abandoned--referred to as "orphan sources." According to the 
Director General of IAEA, orphan sources are a widespread phenomenon, 
and 34 of the 49 countries responding to our survey indicated that 
orphan sources pose problems in their country. In the European Union, 
up to 70 sealed sources are lost among its member states annually. 
According to NRC, about 250 sealed sources or devices are lost or 
stolen in the United States annually, but the majority of the sources 
have been recovered. NRC said that the European Union does not report 
sources as being lost unless they are at a certain activity level that 
exceeds the NRC threshold for tracking purposes. As a result, NRC 
typically reports a greater number of lost sealed sources than the 
European Union does.

The problem of orphan sources is most significant in the countries of 
the former Soviet Union, where the collapse of the centralized Soviet 
government structure over a decade ago led to a loss of records and 
regulatory oversight over sealed sources. According to Russia's nuclear 
regulatory agency, Gosatomnadzor, 51 sealed sources were reported lost 
in 2002 and 245 were lost in 2000. No information was made available to 
us for 2001. In the Republic of Georgia, over 280 orphan sources have 
been recovered since the mid-1990s. Survey respondents reported that 
612 sources had been lost or stolen since 1995. Of the 612 reported 
orphan sources, 254 had not yet been recovered. Table 2 summarizes the 
number of lost, stolen, and recovered sources reported.

Table 2: Reported Lost or Stolen and Recovered Sealed Sources:

Region: Africa; Reported lost or stolen sealed sources: 8; Recovered 
sealed sources: 0.

Region: Asia; Reported lost or stolen sealed sources: 93; Recovered 
sealed sources: 11.

Region: Europe; Reported lost or stolen sealed sources: 298; Recovered 
sealed sources: 213.

Region: Former Soviet Union; Reported lost or stolen sealed sources: 
35; Recovered sealed sources: 14.

Region: Middle East; Reported lost or stolen sealed sources: 41; 
Recovered sealed sources: 24.

Region: North America[A] and Central America; Reported lost or stolen 
sealed sources: 72; Recovered sealed sources: 65.

Region: South America; Reported lost or stolen sealed sources: 21; 
Recovered sealed sources: 10.

Region: South Pacific; Reported lost or stolen sealed sources: 44; 
Recovered sealed sources: 21.

Region: Total; Reported lost or stolen sealed sources: 612; Recovered 
sealed sources: 358.

Source: GAO.

[A] The United States was not included in this survey.

[End of table]

Thirty-five of the 49 countries we surveyed indicated that they had an 
organized process to search for orphan sources, and several of these 
countries listed one or more organizations that are responsible for 
removing the sources once they have been found. However, the remaining 
14 countries, spread across different regions, reported that they did 
not have a similar process to search for orphaned sources. Four of the 
14 countries were located in Africa.

Six countries indicated that there were disincentives to finding 
orphaned sources. In particular, they noted that an individual who 
reports finding a source might be held responsible for paying for its 
disposal. Russian officials told us that facilities possessing sealed 
sources that are no longer used are responsible for disposal costs. The 
disposal fees are very high and, as a result, the users are reluctant 
to notify authorities about them and frequently opt to dispose of them 
illegally.

Certain Lost, Stolen, or Abandoned Sealed Sources Pose a Significant 
Security Risk:

According to U.S. and international safety and security experts, among 
the most urgent problems are the security risks posed by the 
approximately 1,000 radioisotope thermoelectric generators located in 
the former Soviet Union. These generators were designed to provide 
electric power and are ideally suited for remote locations to power 
navigational facilities, such as lighthouses, radio beacons, and 
meteorological stations.[Footnote 8] Each has activity levels ranging 
from 40,000 to 150,000 curies of strontium-90--similar to the amount of 
strontium-90 released from the Chernobyl accident in 1986. These 
generators pose a security risk because they may not be adequately 
protected or secured. An international effort was initiated about 2 
years ago to recover and secure these generators in remote locations in 
the Republic of Georgia. Although the exact number of generators in 
Georgia is unknown, IAEA and Georgian officials told us that at least 
six generators have been recovered.

Figure 1: Radioisotope Thermoelectric Generators Manufactured in the 
Former Soviet Union:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

We met with the Russian organization that developed the radioisotope 
thermoelectric generators--the Russian National Technical Physics and 
Automation Research Institute. Institute officials told us that the 
generators pose a serious security and safety threat and should all be 
taken out of service. They noted that the units have a design service 
life of 10 to 15 years and that no repair or maintenance has been done 
on any of these units since 1991. However, Russian Ministry of Atomic 
Energy (MINATOM) officials said that the generators are technically 
sound and should not be completely removed from service without 
adequate replacement power. MINATOM officials said they are considering 
extending the life of the generators in order to keep them in service 
significantly longer than originally planned. Table 3 shows the 
estimated number of radioisotope thermoelectric generators located in 
the countries of the former Soviet Union.

Table 3: Estimated Number of Radioisotope Thermoelectric Generators in 
the Former Soviet Union:

Country: Armenia; Radioisotope thermoelectric generators: 1.

Country: Azerbaijan; Radioisotope thermoelectric generators: 1.

Country: Belarus; Radioisotope thermoelectric generators: 3.

Country: Georgia; Radioisotope thermoelectric generators: 12[A].

Country: Kazakhstan; Radioisotope thermoelectric generators: 3.

Country: Russia; Radioisotope thermoelectric generators: 998[B].

Country: Tajikistan; Radioisotope thermoelectric generators: 1.

Country: Ukraine; Radioisotope thermoelectric generators: 12.

Country: Total; Radioisotope thermoelectric generators: 1,031.

Sources: NRC, MINATOM, and Russian National Technical Physics 
Automation Research Institute.

[A] The estimated number of generators in Georgia ranges from 6 to 12.

[B] Includes 829 that are operational and 169 that are in storage.

[End of table]

There have been numerous attempts to steal the sealed sources from 
these generators. For example, in recent years there have been six 
attempts to disassemble the generators in Kazakhstan and a number of 
similar events in Georgia and Russia. Some of the strontium-90 sealed 
sources from the generators have been found in residential areas. In a 
few instances, people who have stolen the sealed sources have used them 
for heating and cooking, and officials have speculated that the metal 
shielding might have been used to make bullets. In 2001, three woodsmen 
in Georgia who found the strontium-90 sealed source from an abandoned 
and dismantled generator used it as a heat source and suffered severe 
radiation burns. IAEA and DOE officials told us that other devices 
containing sealed sources, such as seed irradiators that were used in 
the former Soviet Union, pose significant security risks. Seed 
irradiators were mounted on trucks and used to irradiate seeds in order 
to kill fungus and inhibit germination. According to IAEA and DOE, each 
irradiator has activity levels of over 1,000 curies of cesium-137 in 
powdery form (cesium chloride).

Figure 2: Abandoned Radioisotope Thermoelectric Generator in Russia:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

Figure 3: Seed Irradiators Used in the Former Soviet Union:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

IAEA's Director of the Division of Radiation and Waste Safety told us 
that no one knows the total number of orphan sources or their location 
in the former Soviet Union. IAEA is continuously obtaining new 
information about previously unknown devices using sealed sources. This 
makes it extremely difficult for the agency to develop strategies to 
locate and recover these sources in a systematic way. The Director also 
told us that the problem of orphan sources is not unique to the former 
Soviet Union and that similar problems exist in other parts of the 
world.

Countries Have Established Legislative and Regulatory Controls over 
Sealed Sources, but Adequacy of Controls Varies:

All of the countries responding to our survey said they have 
established legislative or regulatory controls over sealed sources. 
However, U.S. and international nuclear safety and security experts 
told us that controls placed on radioactive sources vary greatly 
between countries and focus primarily on protecting public health and 
safety and not on securing sealed sources from theft or destructive 
use. According to IAEA, as many as 110 countries worldwide do not have 
adequate controls over sealed sources and the agency has established a 
program to help 88 countries upgrade their regulatory infrastructures.

Countries Responding to Our Survey Reported That They Have Established 
Controls over Sealed Sources:

All of the countries that responded to our survey reported that they 
have established legislative or regulatory controls over sealed 
sources. The countries that responded to our survey identified various 
controls over sealed sources, including (1) licensing and inspection; 
(2) tracking the import and export of sources; (3) maintaining national 
registries of sources' users; (4) maintaining national inventories of 
sources; (5) searching for and recovering lost, stolen, or abandoned 
sources; (6) securing sources; and (7) regulating their safe transport. 
According to IAEA, controls over sealed sources are based on countries' 
development of a framework of laws and regulations. Twenty-five of the 
49 countries reported that they had established a strong legislative 
framework to control sealed sources and most of these same countries 
indicated that they had a strong regulatory framework as well. Several 
countries characterized their legislative or regulatory framework as 
weak. The countries that reported having a strong legislative or 
regulatory framework were spread across many regions, including the 
former Soviet Union, Europe, Africa, and the South Pacific. Countries 
reporting that they had weak or nonexistent regulatory frameworks were 
located primarily in the former Soviet Union, the Middle East, Europe, 
Africa, and South America.

Countries reported using various guidelines to develop their laws or 
regulations that serve as the basis for controls over sealed sources. 
Forty-four of the 49 countries said they used either one or both IAEA 
guidelines--(1) the International Basic Safety Standards for Protection 
against Ionizing Radiation and for the Safety of Radiation Sources and 
(2) the Code of Conduct on the Safety and Security of Radioactive 
Sources.[Footnote 9] Twelve of the countries responding to our survey 
indicated that they base their regulatory controls, in part, on 
European Union regulations. European Commission officials told us that 
efforts are under way to strengthen controls over sealed sources, 
including harmonizing measures among member states for the recovery of 
orphan sources. These efforts began prior to September 11, 2001, in 
response to accidents where orphan sources were melted with scrap 
metal, resulting in significant economic damages. In 2002, the 
commission adopted a proposed directive to improve controls over sealed 
sources that emit large amounts of radiation. The proposal urges that 
necessary measures be taken to protect public health from orphan source 
exposure. More recently, a commission committee proposed that users of 
radioactive sources in the European Union be charged a refundable 
deposit before acquiring sealed sources.

All of the countries responding to our survey identified one or more 
organizations responsible for regulating sealed sources. Forty-five of 
the 49 countries reported that regulatory organizations inspect 
facilities where sealed sources are stored or in use. Regarding 
enforcement, three countries failed to list any actions that inspectors 
could take to ensure compliance with laws and regulations. Many of the 
countries identified more than one enforcement mechanism available, 
including levying fines, suspending or terminating licenses, and 
closing a facility. Enforcement mechanisms, however, are not always 
used. Representatives from one European country--that did not respond 
to our survey but discussed these matters with us--told us that imposed 
fines tend to be so low that many users of sealed sources may find it 
cheaper to pay the fines rather than comply with the regulations.

All of the countries responding to our survey reported that users of 
sealed sources are required to secure radioactive materials in their 
possession. In addition, 39 of the respondents reported that they had 
facilities to store disused sources. However, only 18 countries 
indicated that they have a facility to permanently dispose of the 
sealed sources. Those countries that did not have any storage 
facilities were primarily located in Africa. Representatives from four 
former Soviet Union countries told us that the absence of secure 
storage poses a serious security problem, and an official from the 
Republic of Georgia told us that a well-protected centralized storage 
facility was urgently needed.

All but four of the countries responding to our survey said they had 
regulations covering the safe transport of sealed sources. The 
countries that did not have such regulations were located in Africa, 
South America, and the Middle East. Although Russia did not respond to 
our survey, Russian officials told us that they were concerned about 
moving sealed sources safely and securely. They said that sources that 
were no longer being used are moved great distances by trucks and are 
vulnerable to theft because the operators of the vehicles must stop to 
rest or lose communications owing to the remoteness of the locations 
where they are traveling.

Countries' Controls over Sealed Sources Vary and Are Weakest among 
Developing Countries:

Nuclear safety and security experts from the Departments of Energy, 
State, and Defense; NRC; IAEA; and the European Commission told us that 
controls placed on sealed sources vary greatly between countries and 
have focused primarily on protecting public health and safety and not 
on securing the sources from potential terrorists threats. According to 
IAEA, as many as 110 countries worldwide lack the regulatory 
infrastructure to adequately protect or control sealed sources. Many of 
these countries are considered less developed and are confronted with 
social, political, and economic problems that divert attention from 
imposing controls on the many thousands of radioactive sources used in 
hospitals, research facilities, industries, or universities. In many 
cases, these countries' regulatory organizations have a limited number 
of trained personnel. In the absence of regulatory controls, 
radioactive sources have been inadequately protected or secured; little 
or no attention has been paid to export or import controls of sources; 
and there has been a lack of basic record keeping. IAEA's Director of 
the Division of Radiation and Waste Safety told us that many countries 
also lack the commitment or political will to exercise controls over 
sealed sources.

In March 2003 over 700 delegates from more than 120 countries met in 
Vienna, Austria, to participate in an international conference on the 
security of radioactive sources. The conference, sponsored by the 
governments of the United States and the Russian Federation, emphasized 
that all users of sealed sources share a responsibility for managing 
them in a safe and secure manner and that the manufacturers of sources 
and regulators have important roles to play. The conference also noted 
that high-risk radioactive sources that are not under secure and 
regulated control, including orphan sources, raise serious security and 
safety concerns. U.S. and international experts are in the process of 
developing a systematic approach to identifying the highest-risk 
sources. In 2000 IAEA established a categorization of sealed sources 
to, among other things, determine the level of oversight that should be 
applied to the safety and security of a particular type of source. In 
response to growing concerns about sealed sources being used as a 
terror weapon, IAEA has revised the categorization. The categorization, 
which is still in draft, provides a relative numerical ranking of 
sealed sources and practices for which they are used. Appendix VIII 
provides more information about the conference, and appendix IX 
contains additional details about IAEA's revised categorization of 
sources.

IAEA Has Implemented a Program to Help Many Countries Improve 
Regulatory Controls:

In 1994 IAEA established a model project program to enhance countries' 
regulatory infrastructure. This program is available to any IAEA member 
state upon request. (See app. X for a list of countries participating 
in the program.) The program has expanded and includes 88 countries. As 
of December 2002, IAEA had spent $27.7 million to help these countries. 
Each country's progress is measured through five milestones, including 
the establishment of a regulatory framework.[Footnote 10] This 
milestone is considered the most time-consuming and requires that the 
country draft and implement radiation protection laws and regulations; 
designate and empower a national regulatory authority; and establish a 
system for the notification, authorization, and control of radioactive 
sources, including the preparation of an inventory of sources and 
installations. According to IAEA, about 77 percent of the countries 
participating in the program as of September 2001 had promulgated the 
necessary laws and established regulatory authorities. In addition, 
about 42 percent of the countries had adopted the necessary 
regulations; about 50 percent had systems for the notification, 
authorization, and control of radioactive sources in place and 
operational; and about 80 percent had systems in place to inventory 
sources. Considering that the program had been under way since the mid-
1990s, the level of achievement was much lower than expected, and the 
time necessary to overcome some of the difficulties faced by the 
countries was underestimated. The reasons that many of the countries 
had not fully implemented this milestone included (1) time-consuming 
legislative and regulatory procedures; (2) institutional instability; 
(3) budgetary constraints, resulting in, among other things, a high 
turnover of qualified staff; (4) unfocused regulatory structures, 
resulting in overlapping responsibilities; (5) limited regulatory 
independence and empowerment; and (6) insufficient financial and 
technical resources, trained staff, and support services. Several 
countries responding to our survey indicated that additional assistance 
is needed to improve controls over sealed sources, including radiation 
detection equipment and training for regulatory staff.

U.S. and international officials told us that there are about 50 
additional countries needing assistance that are not member states of 
IAEA and are not eligible for assistance under the model project 
program. According to IAEA, many of these countries have sealed sources 
that are being used without adequate controls. These officials are 
concerned that without appropriate regulatory oversight, sources in 
these countries pose a particularly serious threat because they are not 
adequately protected.

Officials from the Department of State, IAEA, and the European 
Commission told us that France has implemented a system for controlling 
sealed sources that could serve as a model for other countries, 
including many developing nations. France's system requires 
distributors of sealed sources to assume financial responsibility for 
recovering and disposing of these sources at the end of their 10-year 
life. According to French officials, this system has significantly 
reduced the number of orphan sources. France's system for controlling 
sources is discussed in more detail in appendix XI.

DOE Has a Program to Help Other Countries Secure Sealed Sources, but 
Strengthened Coordination and Planning Are Needed:

DOE has the primary U.S. government responsibility for helping other 
countries strengthen controls over sealed sources. Since fiscal year 
2002, DOE has received $36.9 million to, among other things, secure 
sources at several large nuclear waste repositories in Russia and other 
countries of the former Soviet Union. Other U.S. federal agencies, 
including the Departments of Defense and State, and NRC have efforts 
under way to help countries strengthen controls over sealed sources as 
well. DOE's initial efforts to secure sealed sources have lacked 
adequate planning and coordination, and the majority of program 
expenditures have been in the United States. According to DOE 
officials, efforts are under way to improve the management of the 
program, including the development of a plan and better coordination 
with other agencies.

DOE Is Leading the U.S. Effort to Help Other Countries Secure Sealed 
Sources:

DOE is leading U.S. government efforts to help other countries 
strengthen controls over sealed sources. DOE's effort is part of the 
overall U.S. national strategy to reduce the risk that terrorist groups 
could use these materials in a dirty bomb attack against the United 
States. A congressional report instructs DOE to use a portion of its 
fiscal year 2002 supplemental appropriation to address the threat posed 
by dirty bombs.[Footnote 11] In response to the congressional 
requirement, the National Nuclear Security Administration's Office of 
International Material Protection and Cooperation established the 
Radiological Threat Reduction program in January 2002, budgeting $20.6 
million for the program in fiscal year 2002, and received an additional 
$16.3 million appropriation in fiscal year 2003. The program is 
expected to receive an additional $22 million in supplemental 
appropriations in fiscal year 2003, including $5 million to secure 
nuclear material in Iraq.

Initially, DOE evaluated the threat to national security from 
radioactive materials and determined that sealed sources pose a greater 
threat than other radioactive materials, such as radioactive waste and 
nuclear fuel, because of their availability; radioactivity; and other 
physical characteristics, such as half-life. DOE did further studies of 
the dirty bomb threat, including (1) narrowing the list of sealed 
sources that are a high priority because of their characteristics and 
availability, (2) analyzing possible scenarios in which a radiological 
dispersion device could be used, and (3) determining what the economic 
consequences of a dirty bomb attack in the United States would be. The 
former assistant deputy administrator of the Office of International 
Material Protection and Cooperation told us that it would be impossible 
to secure all sealed sources but that by determining which sources pose 
the greatest risk, DOE could prioritize its efforts.

DOE has focused on securing sealed sources in the countries of the 
former Soviet Union because DOE officials have determined that is where 
the greatest number of vulnerable sealed sources is located. In April 
2002 the Radiological Threat Reduction program initiated its first 
security upgrade project at the Moscow Radon, a regional facility 
involved with collecting, transporting, processing, and disposing of 
sealed sources and low-and intermediate-level radioactive waste. There 
are 35 Radon facilities in the former Soviet Union, but the Moscow 
Radon is by far the largest and collects almost 80 percent of the 
institutional, industrial, and medical radioactive wastes in Russia 
from almost 2,000 enterprises in the city of Moscow, the Moscow region, 
and nine neighboring regions. During our visit to the Moscow Radon in 
October 2002, Radon officials showed us the building for which most of 
the DOE-funded upgrades are planned. (See fig. 4.) Planned upgrades at 
the site include surveillance cameras, motion detectors, vehicles, 
building upgrades, and a security facility where guards can monitor the 
building where most high-activity sources are stored. Although there 
have been no known attempts at theft of materials at the site, Radon 
officials told us that upgrades are needed because existing security is 
inadequate.

Figure 4: Moscow Radon Building Scheduled for DOE-Funded Security 
Upgrades:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

The program has also secured sealed sources in Uzbekistan and the 
Republic of Georgia. In Uzbekistan, DOE has funded security upgrades at 
research and irradiation facilities and the construction of a national 
repository for sealed sources, and plans to fund increased physical 
security upgrades at a dozen regional cancer treatment facilities. In 
the Republic of Georgia, DOE funded security upgrades at a facility 
where radioisotope thermoelectric generators and other high-activity 
sealed sources are stored. Upgrades in both countries included bricking 
up windows; reinforcing doors; improving or replacing roofs; upgrading 
storage vaults; installing motion detectors and alarm systems; and 
other low-cost, "low-tech" measures. Figure 5 shows an example of the 
security upgrades funded by DOE.

Figure 5: DOE-Funded Physical Security Upgrades in the Former Soviet 
Union:

[See PDF for image]

(Top) before: Weak doors and windows; door locked with a simple 
padlock; and gaps/holes in roof.

(Bottom) after: Reinforced steel doors with double locks that cannot be 
cut; bricked-up windows; alarm system; patched, reinforced roof.

[End of figure]

In June 2002 DOE launched two additional efforts--a bilateral 
initiative with MINATOM to secure sealed sources at Russian facilities 
identified by MINATOM, and a Tripartite Initiative with MINATOM and 
IAEA. The objective of the Tripartite Initiative is to improve the 
security of sealed sources in former Soviet states by developing 
inventories of sealed sources, locating the sealed sources, recovering 
the sealed sources, storing recovered sealed sources in a secure 
manner, and disposing of the sources.

Ultimately, DOE hopes that Russia will play a key role in recovering 
sealed sources in other former Soviet states because many of these 
sealed sources were manufactured in and distributed from Russia. In 
July 2002 MINATOM provided DOE with a number of priority projects for 
funding in Russia. These projects included recovering and securing 
radioisotope thermoelectric generators, and recovering orphan sources 
at 45 sites in Russia. According to DOE, the sites will be prioritized 
according to the type and activity level of the radioactive material 
present.

DOE has completed site assessments at four Radon sites in Russia. 
Upgrades at these facilities are expected to be completed by the end of 
fiscal year 2004. A key criterion for deciding if the site requires 
upgrades is an inventory of the sealed sources stored there--if the 
inventory includes sealed sources that DOE has determined to be high 
risk, security upgrades will be implemented.

Under the Tripartite Initiative, 19 additional Radon sites in other 
former Soviet states will be assessed. These Radon sites are located in 
Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus,[Footnote 12] Estonia, Georgia, 
Kazakhstan, Latvia, Lithuania, Moldova, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, 
Ukraine, and Uzbekistan. DOE also plans to perform site assessments and 
security upgrades at medical, industrial, and research facilities 
throughout the former Soviet Union, similar to those done in Uzbekistan 
and Georgia. DOE, IAEA, and MINATOM officials visited Moldova in the 
fall of 2002 to conduct a physical security evaluation, implement the 
upgrades at the Moldova Radon, and identify other sites where further 
work is needed to improve security. DOE and IAEA officials conducted a 
similar trip to Tajikistan in December 2002. Work in both countries is 
expected to be complete in the summer of 2003, and DOE plans to 
initiate projects in Ukraine, Kazakhstan, the Baltics, and possibly 
Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Kyrgyzstan in fiscal year 2003.

In March 2003 the Secretary of Energy announced a new initiative to 
broaden the Tripartite Initiative to other countries needing assistance 
to secure high-risk vulnerable sources. The emphasis of the expanded 
initiative will be on developing countries outside of the former Soviet 
Union. As part of this expanded effort, DOE expects to initiate work in 
Serbia and Indonesia this year.

Finally, DOE also has a program designed to strengthen other countries' 
controls over sealed sources managed by the Office of International 
Nuclear Safety within the National Nuclear Security Administration. The 
office is working with IAEA, other international organizations, NRC, 
and the State Department to develop a management program for sealed 
sources. The purpose of this program is to protect the health and 
safety of the public and people who work with sealed sources by 
developing literature and training programs. The program also 
contributed assistance for the international effort to recover orphan 
sources in the Republic of Georgia, including providing technical 
assistance, detection and personnel protection equipment, training, and 
software. In Armenia, this program is providing training, equipment, 
and other technical assistance to enhance the safety and security of 
sealed sources. As of September 30, 2002, DOE had spent about $330,000 
for these activities.

DOD, State, and NRC Also Have Programs to Strengthen Other Countries' 
Controls over Sealed Sources:

DOD, through its Cooperative Threat Reduction program,[Footnote 13] is 
helping Kazakhstan to inventory, secure, and dispose of about 2,000 
sealed sources, primarily cesium-137 and cobalt-60, from an out-of-
service industrial facility, and identify other facilities with sealed 
sources. The manager of the program told us that although sealed 
sources are not traditionally considered to be weapons of mass 
destruction, DOD undertook this project because the Kazakhstan 
government asked for assistance and the quantity and types of sealed 
sources posed a security threat. The program began in fiscal year 2001, 
prior to the establishment of DOE's program to secure sealed sources, 
and DOD does not expect to engage in any further projects to secure 
sources in the former Soviet Union countries. The $1.7 million project 
is expected to be completed by the end of fiscal year 2003.

The State Department is also funding various projects to strengthen 
controls. For example, State provided IAEA with $1 million in fiscal 
year 2002 to support the agency's projects related to the safety and 
security of radioactive sources. Additionally, State allocated $120,000 
in fiscal year 2002 from the Nonproliferation and Disarmament 
Fund[Footnote 14] for a pilot project to develop and improve radiation 
safety programs in developing countries, including controls over sealed 
sources. The project was initially developed by the Health Physics 
Society[Footnote 15] and proposed by State's Office of the Senior 
Coordinator for Nuclear Safety. Health Physics Society members 
volunteer their time, and State Department funding is used for travel, 
per diem, the cost of shipping donated equipment to the host countries, 
and evaluation of the project--about $3,000 spent to date. Four 
countries--Costa Rica, Ecuador, Jamaica, and Panama--were chosen for 
the pilot; however, work has been initiated in only two countries. The 
project was recently reactivated after a suspension of several months 
because of State Department concerns about program management, 
security, and liability issues.

The State Department has also contracted with Sandia National 
Laboratory for a $100,000 study to assess the current laws and 
procedures governing intercountry transfers of sealed sources. 
Specifically, the study is looking at six countries that are either 
major exporters or importers of sealed sources and will provide 
information on, among other things, the number of sources that is 
imported and exported, and whether exporters are required to verify 
whether the countries they are exporting to have controls in place to 
ensure the safety and security of sealed sources.

In addition, NRC has a program to strengthen controls that focuses on 
Armenia. NRC has spent $62,000 in Freedom Support Act funds transferred 
from USAID to assist Armenia. Initially, NRC will help Armenia develop 
a registry of sealed sources, including identifying the information 
required; develop the database; and help Armenia gather, assess, 
develop, and verify existing data on sources. Currently, Armenian 
regulations on sealed sources and other radioactive materials are 
spread across different ministries and departments, and many have not 
been changed since the fall of the Soviet Union. NRC plans to assist 
Armenia with reviewing existing regulations and developing consolidated 
regulations on, among other things, licensing and inspections of 
radioactive sources, which will apply governmentwide and meet 
international standards. In addition, NRC provided Russia and Ukraine 
with guidance and training on the licensing and regulation of sealed 
sources in the mid-1990s. NRC has also started working with Canada and 
Mexico to share information about controls over sealed sources in each 
country and improve cross-border controls and has provided cost-free 
experts to help IAEA update its Categorization of Radioactive Sources 
and Code of Conduct.

Finally, DOE and State are providing funds to support IAEA efforts to 
strengthen controls over sealed sources. DOE and State have pledged a 
total of $8.2 million--67 percent of the total $12.2 million pledged--
to IAEA's Nuclear Security Fund.[Footnote 16] This fund was established 
after the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, in conjunction with 
IAEA's action plan to improve nuclear security worldwide. The State 
Department has directed $1 million of its contribution specifically 
toward activities to improve the controls over sealed sources, and 
DOE's $3 million contribution is entirely directed to these efforts. 
Planned activities to improve the security of sealed sources in member 
states include, among other things, enhancing ongoing activities to 
improve controls of sealed sources; developing standards, guidelines, 
and recommendations on the security of radioactive sources; 
establishing security standards for the transport of radioactive 
material; and locating and securing orphan sources.

Table 4 summarizes the amounts that the Departments of Energy, State, 
and Defense, and NRC have received, obligated, and spent to help other 
countries strengthen their controls over sealed sources as of January 
31, 2003.

Table 4: Assistance to Improve Controls over Radioactive Sources 
through January 31, 2003:

Program/Activity: DOE Radiological Threat Reduction program; 
Description: Assisting Russia and other former Soviet Republics to 
secure sealed sources. Includes $3 million for IAEA activities.; 
Received: $36,900,000; Obligated: $11,426,600; Spent: $8,934,000.

Program/Activity: DOE International Emergency Management program; 
Description: Training program for control and management of radioactive 
materials. Also provides assistance to help locate, handle, and safely 
remove high-risk sources.; Received: 430,000; Obligated: 430,000; 
Spent: 330,000.

Program/Activity: DOD Cooperative Threat Reduction program[A]; 
Description: Securing, inventorying, and disposing of sources in 
Kazakhstan.; Received: 1,703,884; Obligated: 1,699,214; Spent: 
975,140.

Program/Activity: State Department Radiation Safety without Borders 
Pilot project; Description: Assisting to build radiation safety 
infrastructures in developing countries participating in the IAEA model 
project.; Received: 120,020; Obligated: 120,020; Spent: 3,094.

Program/Activity: State Department study conducted by Sandia National 
Laboratory; Description: Studying protocols on international transfers 
of sealed sources in several countries.; Received: 100,000; Obligated: 
100,000; Spent: 49,300.

Program/Activity: State Department Nuclear Safety; Description: 
Funding to IAEA.; Received: 1,000,000; Obligated: 1,000,000; Spent: 
1,000,000.

Program/Activity: Nuclear Regulatory Commission; Description: 
Designing and developing a registry of sources, and assistance to 
assess and develop regulations related to radioactive materials in 
Armenia.; Received: 250,000; Obligated: 250,000; Spent: 62,000.

Program/Activity: Total; Description: Received: $40,503,904; 
Obligated: $15,025,834; Spent: $11,353,534.

Sources: DOE, DOD, Department of State, and NRC.

[A] DOD figures are through April 1, 2003.

[End of table]

DOE Efforts Have Not Been Well Planned and Coordinated with Those of 
Other U.S. Agencies:

DOE is in the process of developing a plan to guide its efforts to help 
other countries secure sealed sources. According to DOE officials, 
initial attempts to develop a plan were stopped in May 2002 because the 
former administrator of the Office of International Material Protection 
and Cooperation felt that the program needed to show tangible results 
quickly. In the absence of a plan, DOE officials told us that the 
program has modeled its work in Russia on previous DOE projects to 
secure fissile materials in Russia through its Material Protection, 
Control, and Accounting program. The director of the program told us 
that while the initial approach to securing sealed sources in Russia--
focusing on improving physical security at Radon sites--was a good 
idea, it hindered DOE from setting priorities among other sites in 
Russia. He further noted that the program is now focusing on improving 
the security of the most vulnerable high-risk sources first.

DOE officials told us that they recognize that the development of a 
plan is essential. DOE's draft plan has established short-and long-term 
program elements, including consolidating and securing dangerous 
materials in vulnerable locations; leveraging critical partnerships, 
such as continuing to work with IAEA on key efforts such as the model 
projects program and the code of conduct; and continuing to help 
countries detect smuggled radioactive materials through its Second Line 
of Defense program.[Footnote 17] In addition to the plan, DOE officials 
said they are also developing a more detailed action plan; 
radioactivity thresholds for vulnerable high-risk radioactive 
materials; and guidelines for describing the actions that should be 
taken by DOE when sources are found to exceed those radioactivity 
thresholds. As part of its overall effort, DOE officials told us that 
more detailed planning and analysis will be needed to, among other 
things, (1) determine which countries present the greatest security 
risk and most urgently require assistance, (2) identify future funding 
requirements, and (3) develop performance measures to gauge program 
success.

Despite these recent initiatives to improve program planning, officials 
from Gosatomnadzor, the Russian agency responsible for regulating 
sealed sources in use at almost 8,000 facilities in Russia, told us 
that beyond an initial meeting, DOE had not consulted with them in the 
selection or prioritization of sites for physical security upgrades. In 
particular, Gosatomnadzor officials were surprised that DOE was 
focusing so much attention on improving security at the Radon 
facilities in Russia where they believed the probability that sealed 
sources will be stolen is low. They said that it would be preferable to 
begin securing sealed sources from other vulnerable sites near Moscow, 
for example, out-of-service irradiation and research facilities. A 
systematic approach is required to assess needs, identify priorities, 
and develop a comprehensive approach to securing sealed sources. In 
their view, DOE's initial approach had the potential to be superficial.

DOE officials told us that they are now working more closely with 
Gosatomnadzor. In a March 31, 2003, letter from DOE's Acting Deputy 
Assistant Secretary for International Material Protection and 
Cooperation to Gosatomnadzor's First Deputy Chairman, the DOE official 
noted the need for regulatory oversight of the Russian radiological 
industry and suggested that a proposal be formulated jointly with NRC 
to work cooperatively in this area.

DOE is also seeking to improve planning and coordination of the 
Tripartite Initiative. According to an IAEA official, DOE coordinated 
its efforts with IAEA and Russia on the Moldova visit that contributed 
to a successful start of the Tripartite Initiative. The participants 
jointly developed and implemented a common approach for securing some 
vulnerable sealed sources, and arrangements were made to construct a 
facility to store these sources. However, the IAEA official told us 
that the Tajikistan assessment was not well coordinated. He noted that 
DOE was not flexible in scheduling the preliminary assessment visit and 
that Russia did not participate in the visit. Because of the timing of 
the visit, IAEA's representative to the Tripartite Initiative was 
unable to participate in the visit, however, an official from IAEA's 
Department of Technical Cooperation did accompany the DOE team.

DOE officials told us that they were unable to make changes to their 
existing itinerary because they would have incurred significant delays 
if travel dates were changed due to country clearance restrictions for 
U.S. government travel in Tajikistan. Furthermore, they noted that 
because of the different roles that DOE, MINATOM, and IAEA play under 
the Tripartite Initiative, it is not necessary that representatives of 
each organization be present on each visit. As currently envisioned, 
the Russian and IAEA participants will act as an advance team, 
gathering information about which sealed sources exist in a given 
country and their current level of vulnerability. Subsequently, the 
U.S. team will visit the country and negotiate contracts to improve 
security at the vulnerable sites.

IAEA's official also told us that, overall, the Tripartite Initiative 
has not been well planned. Initial efforts have been ad-hoc, and a more 
systematic approach is needed as the program continues. He said that 
improved planning is essential particularly because the Tripartite 
Initiative will be used as a model to guide future efforts as the 
program expands worldwide. DOE officials agreed that improved 
coordination is needed. DOE, MINATOM, and IAEA are working to finalize 
a "Terms of Reference" document that defines the objectives, scope, 
roles, operational framework, and procedures to be followed for 
implementing projects under the Initiative. Furthermore, preliminary 
schedules for missions to several countries have been jointly developed 
through August 2003.

Department of State and NRC officials told us that DOE has not fully 
coordinated its efforts with their agencies, although they noted that 
efforts were recently under way to improve coordination. These 
officials told us that DOE needs their input to ensure that a 
comprehensive governmentwide strategy is taken to, among other things, 
leverage program resources, maximize available expertise, avoid 
possible duplication of effort, and help ensure long-term success. DOE 
has not systematically undertaken the kind of comprehensive planning 
that would foster better coordination with the other agencies and could 
also lead to better coordination with other countries' nuclear 
organizations. For example, DOE did not adequately consult NRC or State 
when developing the Radiological Threat Reduction program or developing 
the Tripartite Initiative with MINATOM and IAEA. Officials from NRC and 
the State Department expressed interest in sharing information and 
working with DOE to plan and execute the Radiological Threat Reduction 
program, but told us that there had been limited information sharing 
between agencies.

Both NRC and the State Department have extensive experience in nuclear 
regulatory and safety-related issues in the former Soviet Union. NRC 
has received approximately $50 million from fiscal year 1991 through 
fiscal year 2002 to support regulatory strengthening efforts in the 
countries of central and eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union. 
These efforts have included training other countries' regulators in all 
aspects of licensing and inspection procedures, advising on how to 
establish a legal basis for nuclear regulations, and developing a 
control and accounting system for nuclear materials. The State 
Department's Office of the Senior Coordinator for Nuclear Safety, which 
was established about 10 years ago, provides overall policy guidance 
for efforts to improve the safety of Soviet-designed nuclear power 
reactors. Since then, the office's mandate has expanded to include the 
safety of other foreign civilian nuclear facilities, including research 
reactors and waste facilities. In addition, State Department officials 
said that more recently, State has been leading U.S. negotiations to 
revise IAEA's Code of Conduct and leading consultations within the U.S. 
government with large exporters of sealed sources to strengthen export 
controls on international transfers of them.

Several officials also told us that DOE was focusing too narrowly on 
rapid physical security upgrades and not taking into account long-term 
needs to develop better regulatory infrastructures in host countries. 
These officials also said that a coordinated, targeted effort to 
identify and secure the most vulnerable and high-risk sealed sources 
could eliminate the greatest risks, and that developing regulatory 
frameworks in host countries would significantly improve the safety and 
security of sealed sources. DOE noted that part of the program's 
strategy is to support IAEA initiatives to leverage resources of member 
states to improve the security of sealed sources in their countries. 
They are hoping to build on the work IAEA has done in this area, 
particularly on the development of regulatory infrastructure.

The Majority of DOE's Program Expenditures Have Been in the United 
States:

DOE budgeted $20.6 million for the Radiological Threat Reduction 
program in fiscal year 2002 and received an additional $16.3 million in 
fiscal year 2003. DOE had spent about $8.9 million of the total $36.9 
million received as of January 31, 2003, including $3 million 
transferred to IAEA's Nuclear Security Fund. Of the remaining $5.9 
million in expenditures, 93 percent was spent in the United States by 
DOE's national laboratories for labor, travel, equipment, and overhead. 
Only $407,900 had been spent by the national laboratories in the 
countries receiving assistance. Table 5 shows expenditures by the 
laboratories by component of cost as of January 31, 2003.

Table 5: Radiological Threat Reduction Program Expenditures by DOE's 
National Laboratories as of January 31, 2003:

Dollars in thousands.

Argonne National Laboratory; Program activities in the United 
States: Labor[A]: $707; Program activities in the United States: 
Travel[B]: $82.7; Program activities in the United States: Equipment: 
$3.1; Program activities in the United States: Overhead: $0.4; 
Program activities in the former Soviet Union: Travel[C]: 0; Program 
activities in the former Soviet Union: Services and equipment: $3.0; 
 Total: $796.2.

Los Alamos National Laboratory; Program activities in the 
United States: Labor[A]: 1,263.9; Program activities in the United 
States: Travel[B]: 114.4; Program activities in the United States: 
Equipment: 103.2; Program activities in the United States: Overhead: 0; 
 Program activities in the former Soviet Union: Travel[C]: 
29.5; Program activities in the former Soviet Union: Services and 
equipment: 0; Total: 1,511.0.

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory; Program activities in 
the United States: Labor[A]: 65.3; Program activities in the United 
States: Travel[B]: 8.4; Program activities in the United States: 
Equipment: 0.6; Program activities in the United States: Overhead: -
0.1[D]; Program activities in the former Soviet Union: 
Travel[C]: 0; Program activities in the former Soviet Union: Services 
and equipment: 0; Total: 74.2.

Nonproliferation and National Security Institute; Program 
activities in the United States: Labor[A]: 142.9; Program activities in 
the United States: Travel[B]: 3.5; Program activities in the United 
States: Equipment: 0; Program activities in the United States: 
Overhead: 0; Program activities in the former Soviet Union: 
Travel[C]: 0; Program activities in the former Soviet Union: Services 
and equipment: 0; Total: 146.4.

Nevada Operations Office; Program activities in the United 
States: Labor[A]: 65.4; Program activities in the United States: 
Travel[B]: 6.0; Program activities in the United States: Equipment: 0; 
Program activities in the United States: Overhead: 9.1; 
Program activities in the former Soviet Union: Travel[C]: 15.7; Program 
activities in the former Soviet Union: Services and equipment: 10.0; 
 Total: 106.2.

Oak Ridge National Laboratory; Program activities in the 
United States: Labor[A]: 208.5; Program activities in the United 
States: Travel[B]: 0; Program activities in the United States: 
Equipment: 1.3; Program activities in the United States: Overhead: 0; 
 Program activities in the former Soviet Union: Travel[C]: 0; 
Program activities in the former Soviet Union: Services and equipment: 
0; Total: 209.8.

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory; Program activities in 
the United States: Labor[A]: 2,316.2; Program activities in the United 
States: Travel[B]: 132.3; Program activities in the United States: 
Equipment: 45.8; Program activities in the United States: Overhead: 
12.5; Program activities in the former Soviet Union: 
Travel[C]: 0; Program activities in the former Soviet Union: Services 
and equipment: 327.9; Total: 2,834.7.

Remote Sensing Laboratory; Program activities in the United 
States: Labor[A]: 175.2; Program activities in the United States: 
Travel[B]: 38.5; Program activities in the United States: Equipment: 
1.9; Program activities in the United States: Overhead: 7.6; 
Program activities in the former Soviet Union: Travel[C]: 11.8; Program 
activities in the former Soviet Union: Services and equipment: 10.0; 
 Total: 245.0.

Sandia National Laboratory; Program activities in the United 
States: Labor[A]: 10.5; Program activities in the United States: 
Travel[B]: 0; Program activities in the United States: Equipment: 0; 
Program activities in the United States: Overhead: 0; Program 
activities in the former Soviet Union: Travel[C]: 0; Program activities 
in the former Soviet Union: Services and equipment: 0; Total: 
10.5.

Total; Program activities in the United States: Labor[A]: 
$4,954.9; Program activities in the United States: Travel[B]: $385.8; 
Program activities in the United States: Equipment: $155.9; Program 
activities in the United States: Overhead: $29.5; Program 
activities in the former Soviet Union: Travel[C]: $57.0; Program 
activities in the former Soviet Union: Services and equipment: $350.9; 
 Total: $5,934.0.

Source: DOE.

[A] Includes salaries, wages, fringe benefits, and pensions that are 
directly chargeable to the Radiological Threat Reduction program. DOE's 
headquarters employees' salaries are not charged directly to the 
program but are funded through DOE's Office of International Material 
Protection and Cooperation.

[B] Includes both travel and per diem costs--foreign and domestic--for 
laboratory officials and subcontractors.

[C] Includes travel costs for officials from other countries.

[D] The negative amount reflects funds from a prior fiscal year that 
were returned to the Radiological Threat Reduction program by the 
laboratory.

[End of table]

DOE officials cited several reasons why only a small percentage of the 
funds allocated to the program since fiscal year 2002 had been spent as 
of January 31, 2003, including the following:

* The new program required significant start-up effort to assess the 
threat posed by sealed sources, determine the potential impacts from 
the detonation of a dirty bomb, and categorize and prioritize the types 
of sources that pose the greatest security risk.

* Difficulties and other unforeseen delays are frequently associated 
with doing work in the former Soviet Union. For example, the Russian 
Ministry of Construction, which maintains the Radon sites in Russia, 
raised concerns, after work had already started, that it had to 
authorize any work performed at those sites. Consequently, work was 
stopped at the Radon sites for several months. Initially, this Ministry 
had not been consulted by DOE and MINATOM in discussions about 
performing work at the Radon sites.

* It took DOE a significant amount of time to establish appropriate 
contacts in the countries of the former Soviet Union where DOE plans to 
provide assistance. While DOE has a long history of working with Russia 
to secure fissile materials through its Material Protection, Control, 
and Accounting program, DOE was required to identify and work with a 
different set of organizations responsible for regulating sealed 
sources.

DOE officials told us that expenditures in countries of the former 
Soviet Union and other regions of the world are expected to increase as 
the program evolves. According to DOE, as the program matures security 
upgrades will be followed by comprehensive and costly consolidation and 
disposition activities, all of which will take place in foreign 
countries. DOE has requested an additional $36 million for the program 
in fiscal year 2004. The director of the program said that the amount 
requested was an estimate based on anticipated future funding 
requirements. He expects that the funds will be allocated for, among 
other things, continued work in Russia, including securing large 
numbers of radioisotope thermoelectric generators, additional 
contributions to IAEA's Nuclear Security Fund, and expanded efforts to 
secure sources in countries outside of the former Soviet Union. The 
director also noted that plans to secure sources in other parts of the 
world are still being developed and that DOE wants to ensure that it 
has a sound basis for determining which countries to select for 
assistance.

Conclusions:

The attacks that occurred in September 2001 widened the array of 
potential scenarios and challenges that U.S. decision makers must 
confront concerning terrorist threats. Sealed sources containing 
radioactive material, which have many beneficial industrial, medical, 
and research applications, must now be considered possible terrorist 
weapons. These sealed sources are in virtually every country of the 
world and are often inadequately secured or accounted for. The central 
question is, What can the United States and the world community do to 
confront this problem, given the likely vast and unknown number of 
sources that exist and continue to be manufactured and distributed 
globally?

DOE appears to be well suited to help countries secure sealed sources 
because of its long history in securing weapons grade material in the 
former Soviet Union. Further, DOE's efforts to develop a plan to guide 
its efforts is a step in the right direction. However, additional 
planning and detailed analyses will be needed to, among other things, 
systematically identify and prioritize countries that require 
assistance, establish realistic time frames and resources necessary to 
accomplish these tasks, and develop meaningful performance 
measurements. The elements of such a plan assumed greater importance in 
light of the Secretary of Energy's recent announcement that DOE's 
program will expand beyond the countries of the former Soviet Union. 
For this reason alone, it is imperative that a comprehensive plan be 
established and implemented before significant amounts of appropriated 
funds are spent to improve international controls over sealed sources. 
Regarding program expenditures, we agree with DOE's objective to 
maximize program resources in the recipient countries. To date, the 
national laboratories have spent the majority of the program funds in 
United States and we believe that this trend needs to be reversed as 
the program evolves. We would expect that in the future, a markedly 
smaller percentage of program funds will be directed toward the 
national laboratories and the greatest percentage will go to the 
countries that need the assistance to strengthen controls over sealed 
sources.

We share the views of Department of State and NRC officials who 
expressed their concerns that DOE was not adequately coordinating its 
efforts with the other agencies. The Department of State and NRC have a 
long history of working on international nuclear safety issues, and 
their expertise and insights would be valuable, we believe, in crafting 
an overall governmentwide plan for strengthening controls over sealed 
sources. In particular, NRC has experience in working closely with many 
countries of the former Soviet Union to develop and strengthen national 
regulatory infrastructures. Clearly, any long-term plan requires that 
countries have a competent regulatory authority that can place 
appropriate levels of controls on sealed sources.

Recommendations for Executive Action:

We recommend that the Secretary of Energy (working with the 
Administrator of the National Nuclear Security Administration):

* Develop a comprehensive program plan for helping other countries 
secure sealed sources that includes (1) a unified set of program goals 
and priorities, including a well-defined plan for meeting these goals 
in the countries to be included; (2) program cost estimates; (3) time 
frames for effectively spending program funds; (4) performance 
measures; (5) ways to sustain upgrades to the facilities and equipment 
financed, including cost estimates; and (6) an exit strategy for each 
country, including a plan for transferring responsibilities to the host 
country for building and equipment maintenance. The plan should be 
flexible and updated periodically to ensure that long-term efforts are 
sustainable.

* Take the lead in developing a comprehensive governmentwide plan to 
strengthen controls over other countries' sealed sources. The plan 
should be developed in conjunction with the Secretaries of State, 
Defense, and Homeland Security, and the Chairman of NRC. In addition, 
this plan should be coordinated with the International Atomic Energy 
Agency to avoid overlap or duplication of effort.

* Strengthen efforts to increase program expenditures in the countries 
requiring the assistance.

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation:

We provided the Departments of Energy, State, and Defense, and the 
Nuclear Regulatory Commission with draft copies of this report for 
their review and comment. We also provided IAEA with pertinent sections 
of the report for review. DOD had no comments on the draft report. 
DOE's, State's, and NRC's written comments are presented as appendixes 
XII, XIII, and XIV, respectively. The three agencies and IAEA also 
provided technical comments, which we incorporated into the report as 
appropriate.

DOE's National Nuclear Security Administration agreed with our 
recommendations that the program needs strengthening and noted that the 
Secretary and the Administrator are actively involved with the 
international community to address the security of other countries' 
sealed sources. However, DOE disagreed with our finding that it had not 
coordinated its efforts with NRC and the Department of State to ensure 
that a governmentwide strategy is established. Further, DOE believes 
that it is important to place the report's findings in context since 
the program is in its startup phase. Regarding DOE's point about 
coordination, we had been told several times during the course of our 
review by NRC and State Department officials that DOE had not 
systematically included these agencies in the development of a 
comprehensive strategy to strengthen other countries' controls over 
sealed sources. In fact, we raised this issue with DOE program 
officials during our review and these officials acknowledged that DOE 
needed to do a better job in coordinating its program with other U.S. 
agencies. Although NRC and State Department officials told us that 
coordination has improved recently, they endorsed the need for the 
development of a governmentwide strategy to ensure that they fully 
participate in future U.S. efforts. Regarding DOE's concern about 
putting the report's findings in context, we noted in the draft report 
that the program required a significant start-up effort to, among other 
things, assess the threat posed by sealed sources, determine the 
potential impacts from the detonation of a dirty bomb, and prioritize 
the types of sources that pose the greatest threat.

State agreed with the facts presented in our report and noted that a 
comprehensive approach to controlling sources will require a concerted 
diplomatic effort that should be combined with the technical expertise 
possessed by DOE in recovering and securing sealed sources in other 
countries. State said that it possesses a unique perspective that is 
crucial to the success of the program and hoped that we would clarify 
our recommendation to delineate between DOE's technical programmatic 
responsibilities and State's overall diplomatic role in guiding 
international strategies for securing radiation sources. Regarding 
State's point, we acknowledge State's responsibility to develop and 
implement international strategies on behalf of the U.S. government. 
However, we believe, as noted in the report, that DOE is well suited to 
help other countries secure sealed sources because of its long history 
in securing weapons grade material in the former Soviet Union and that 
it should take the lead in developing a comprehensive plan to 
strengthen controls of other countries' sealed sources.

NRC made several points. First, NRC believed that our report should 
have focused more attention on high-risk radioactive sources rather 
than on radioactive sources of all types. NRC stated that the vast 
majority of radioactive sources in use in the United States and abroad 
are not useful to a terrorist and that it has been working with DOE and 
IAEA to finalize IAEA's revised Code of Conduct on Safety and Security 
of Radioactive Sources and the revised Categorization of Sources. In 
addition, NRC noted that only a few of the radioactive sources that are 
lost or stolen in the United States are high-risk and that a majority 
of the sources reported lost or stolen involve small or short-lived 
sources which are not useful as a radiological dispersion device. 
Second, NRC identified various efforts that it has undertaken to 
improve the security of high-risk sources in the United States. Third, 
NRC pointed out that we should consider including the Department of 
Homeland Security in our recommendation that calls for the development 
of a governmentwide plan to help other countries secure sealed sources.

Regarding NRC's comments, one of the objectives of our report was to 
specifically determine the number of sealed sources worldwide, and we 
believe that it is important to develop information, to the extent 
possible, regarding the number of all sealed radioactive sources that 
are in use. In fact, IAEA has placed great emphasis, particularly among 
developing countries, on the importance of developing and maintaining 
inventories of sources for safety and security purposes. As we noted in 
our report, current IAEA policy does not allow for the approval of any 
Technical Co-operation project involving the use of significant 
radiation sources, unless the member state in question, among other 
things, complies with the requirements to maintain an effective 
regulatory framework that includes an inventory of sources.

While we agree with NRC that the highest-risk sources present the 
greatest concern as desirable material for a "dirty bomb," other sealed 
radioactive sources could also be used as a terrorist weapon. No one 
can say with certainty what the psychological, social, or economic 
costs of a dirty bomb--regardless of the radioactive material used to 
construct it--would be. In addition, it is important to note that work 
by NRC, IAEA, and others to characterize sources is still ongoing.

Regarding NRC's comments about its activities to increase the security 
of the highest-risk sources, we will address these matters in our 
forthcoming report on U.S. efforts to strengthen controls over sealed 
sources in the United States. Finally, during the course of our review, 
no agency we met with was aware of or told us of a role being played by 
the Department of Homeland Security in securing sealed sources in other 
countries. However, we agree with NRC that it makes sense to coordinate 
the development of a governmentwide plan for this activity with the 
Department of Homeland Security and we have revised our recommendation 
to include the department.

:

As agreed with your office, unless you publicly announce its contents 
earlier, we plan no further distribution of this report until 30 days 
after the date of this letter. We will send copies of this report to 
the Secretary of Energy; the Administrator, National Nuclear Security 
Administration; the Secretary of State; the Secretary of Defense; the 
Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security; the Chairman, Nuclear 
Regulatory Commission; the Director, Office of Management and Budget; 
and interested congressional committees. We will make copies available 
to others upon request. In addition, the report will be available at no 
charge on the GAO Web site at http://www.gao.gov.

If you have any questions concerning this report, I can be reached at 
202-512-3841 or robinsonr@gao.gov. Major contributors to this report 
are included in appendix XV.

Sincerely yours,

Robert A. Robinson 
Managing Director, Natural Resources and Environment:

Signed by Robert A. Robinson:

[End of section]

Appendixes:

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology:

To answer our objectives related to (1) number of sealed sources 
worldwide and how many sources are lost, stolen, or abandoned and (2) 
the legislative and regulatory controls that countries that possess 
sealed sources use, we distributed a questionnaire to 127 member 
countries of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), including 3 
countries whose IAEA membership had been approved but had not yet taken 
effect at the time of our survey. We did not, however, survey all IAEA 
member states. Specifically, we did not distribute questionnaires to 
Afghanistan, Cuba, Iran, Iraq, Ivory Coast, Libya, Sudan, Syria, and 
the Holy See. The State Department recommended that we not correspond 
with the first eight countries listed. We determined from discussions 
with IAEA that the Holy See did not have any sealed sources. We did not 
include the United States because it is being treated separately in 
another GAO report.

IAEA provided us with a list of the appropriate contacts for most of 
the countries we planned to survey. These officials were primarily from 
member countries' regulatory authorities. We pretested the survey with 
the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) and with representatives 
from Brazil, Poland, the United Kingdom, Uganda, and Uzbekistan. After 
revising the survey to reflect the comments of these officials, we 
distributed it in December 2002 via E-mail and fax, and through 
countries' embassies in Washington, D.C., and Vienna, Austria, where 
IAEA is located. As a follow-up for nonrespondents, we also distributed 
questionnaires directly to many countries' representatives who were 
attending an international conference in Vienna, Austria, on the 
security of radioactive sources. We also sent out periodic reminders to 
the countries from January through March 2003 requesting their 
assistance to complete the survey in a timely fashion. We received 
responses from 49 IAEA member states (39 percent), including countries 
from Asia, North and South America, the former Soviet Union, Europe, 
the Middle East, and Africa. According to IAEA officials, the response 
rate was consistent with the rate it achieves when it sends out similar 
types of questionnaires to member states. In addition we were told by 
IAEA officials and others that there is an inherent difficulty 
associated with trying to obtain these types of data from countries 
owing to the sensitive nature of some of the questions and countries' 
concerns about ensuring the confidentiality of their responses. Our 
survey results were used without attempting to project the information 
to the universe of IAEA members. We did not assume that nonrespondent 
countries would have had similar answers to our survey. Regarding the 
matter of confidentiality, we notified the countries that the results 
from the survey would be reported in aggregate and that individual 
responses would not be disclosed.

We supplemented the results obtained from the survey with interviews 
with officials from several countries, including Brazil, France, 
Kazakhstan, the Republic of Georgia, Russia, the United Kingdom, and 
Uzbekistan to learn more about how they regulate and control sealed 
sources. We also met with officials from IAEA and the European 
Commission to obtain their views on the security problems and 
challenges associated with sealed sources. In addition, we also 
interviewed and obtained pertinent documents from officials of several 
U.S. government agencies, including the Departments of Defense, Energy, 
and State, and NRC.

We attended two DOE-sponsored conferences related to the security of 
sealed sources. The first conference, held in London, United Kingdom, 
during September-October 2002, focused on international approaches to 
nuclear and radiological security. The second conference, which was 
held in Vienna, Austria, in March 2003, focused on the security of 
radioactive sources and was attended by representatives from more than 
120 countries.

To determine what assistance has been provided by the United States to 
other countries to strengthen their controls over sealed sources, we 
obtained budget, obligation, and expenditure data from the four 
agencies providing assistance--the Departments of Energy, State, and 
Defense, and NRC. To assess how well the programs were being 
implemented, we interviewed program officials from each agency and 
reviewed pertinent documents, including agency plans as available. We 
also obtained information about these programs through interviews with 
representatives of IAEA and officials from some of the countries 
receiving U.S. assistance.

Finally, we visited Russia to obtain a first-hand look at a waste 
facility that contains sealed sources. Specifically, we traveled to the 
Moscow Radon site at Sergiyev Posad, located about 90 kilometers from 
Moscow. While in Russia we also interviewed officials from the Ministry 
of Atomic Energy, the Ministry of Health, the Kurchatov Institute, 
Gosatomnadzor (Russia's nuclear regulatory organization), the Russian 
Academy of Sciences, and the Russian National Technical Physics and 
Automation Research Institute.

We performed our review from May 2002 through May 2003 in accordance 
with generally accepted government auditing standards.

[End of section]

Appendix II: Results of Survey of IAEA Member Countries:

This appendix presents a copy of the survey sent to 127 IAEA member 
countries and the results of that survey.

:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

[End of section]

Appendix III: List of Countries Surveyed by GAO and Responses:

Table 6 lists all of the countries that we sent surveys to and 
identifies whether or not they completed the survey when this report 
was being written.

Table 6: Countries Surveyed and Surveys Received:

Country: Albania; Completed the survey. 

Country: Algeria; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Angola; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Argentina; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Armenia; Completed the survey. 

Country: Australia; Completed the survey. 

Country: Austria; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Azerbaijan; Completed the survey. 

Country: Bangladesh; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Belarus; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Belgium; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Benin; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Bolivia; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Bosnia and Herzegovina; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Botswana; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Brazil; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Bulgaria; Completed the survey. 

Country: Burkina Faso; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Cambodia; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Cameroon; Completed the survey. 

Country: Canada; Completed the survey. 

Country: Central African Republic; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Chile; Did not complete the survey.

Country: China; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Colombia; Completed the survey. 

Country: Costa Rica; Completed the survey. 

Country: Croatia; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Cyprus; Completed the survey. survey: 

Country: Czech Republic; Completed the survey. 

Country: Democratic Republic of the Congo; Completed the survey.

Country: Denmark; Completed the survey. 

Country: Dominican Republic; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Ecuador; Completed the survey. 

Country: Egypt; Did not complete the survey.

Country: El Salvador; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Eritrea[A]; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Estonia; Completed the survey. 

Country: Ethiopia; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Finland; Completed the survey. 

Country: France; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Gabon; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Georgia; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Germany; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Ghana; Completed the survey. 

Country: Greece; Completed the survey. 

Country: Guatemala; Completed the survey. 

Country: Haiti; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Honduras[B]; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Hungary; Completed the survey. 

Country: Iceland; Completed the survey. 

Country: India; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Indonesia; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Ireland; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Israel; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Italy; Completed the survey. 

Country: Jamaica; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Japan; Completed the survey. 

Country: Jordan; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Kazakhstan; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Kenya; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Korea (Republic of); Did not complete the survey.

Country: Kuwait; Completed the survey. 

Country: Kyrgyzstan[A]; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Latvia; Completed the survey. 

Country: Lebanon; Completed the survey. 

Country: Liberia; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Liechtenstein; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Lithuania; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Luxembourg; Completed the survey. 

Country: Macedonia; Completed the survey. 

Country: Madagascar; Completed the survey.

Country: Malaysia; Did not complete the survey

Country: Mali; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Malta; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Marshall Islands; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Mauritius; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Mexico; Completed the survey. 

Country: Moldova; Completed the survey. 

Country: Monaco; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Mongolia; Completed the survey. 

Country: Morocco; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Myanmar; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Namibia; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Netherlands; Did not complete the survey.

Country: New Zealand; Completed the survey. 

Country: Nicaragua; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Niger; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Nigeria; Completed the survey. 

Country: Norway; Completed the survey. 

Country: Pakistan; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Panama; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Paraguay; Completed the survey. 

Country: Peru; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Philippines; Completed the survey. 

Country: Poland; Completed the survey. 

Country: Portugal; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Qatar; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Romania; Completed the survey. 

Country: Russian Federation; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Saudi Arabia; Completed the survey. 

Country: Senegal; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Sierra Leone; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Singapore; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Slovakia; Completed the survey. 

Country: Slovenia; Did not complete the survey.

Country: South Africa; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Spain; Completed the survey. 

Country: Sri Lanka; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Sweden; Completed the survey. 

Country: Switzerland; Completed the survey. 

Country: Tajikistan; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Tanzania; Completed the survey. 

Country: Thailand; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Tunisia; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Turkey; Completed the survey. 

Country: Uganda; Completed the survey. 

Country: Ukraine; Completed the survey. 

Country: United Arab Emirates; Did not complete the survey.

Country: United Kingdom; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Uruguay; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Uzbekistan; Completed the survey. 

Country: Venezuela; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Vietnam; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Yemen; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Yugoslavia; Completed the survey. 

Country: Zambia; Did not complete the survey.

Country: Zimbabwe; Did not complete the survey.

Source: GAO.

[A] IAEA membership has been approved by the IAEA General Conference and 
will take effect once the necessary legal instruments are deposited.

[B] IAEA member state as of March 17, 2003.

[End of table]

[End of section]

Appendix IV: Information on Trafficking Incidents Involving Sealed 
Sources:

This appendix provides information about the illicit trafficking in, or 
smuggling of, radioactive material over the past decade and focuses 
primarily on 17 incidents involving sealed radioactive sources. There 
is sketchy--and sometimes contradictory--information about many of 
these cases for a number of reasons, including (1) many trafficking 
incidents are never detected by authorities; (2) some may be known but 
not reported because the country does not participate in IAEA's Illicit 
Trafficking Database program; (3) details about these incidents may be 
considered sensitive by the countries where they occur; and (4) until 
recently, trafficking of radioactive materials was not considered by 
U.S. and international nonproliferation experts to be as great a 
concern as the trafficking of weapons-grade nuclear material. IAEA is 
encouraging countries to provide more details about all trafficking 
incidents involving radioactive materials so that better information 
can be developed and more accurate assessments and analysis can be 
performed.

Since the early 1990s, there have been numerous reports of illicit 
trafficking in, or smuggling of, radioactive material worldwide, 
including sealed sources. According to IAEA, sealed sources, such as 
cesium-137, cobalt-60, strontium-90, and iridium-192 are considered to 
pose the greatest security risk. In 1993, IAEA established a database 
to record incidents involving illicit trafficking in nuclear and 
radioactive materials. Seventy countries, or about one-half of IAEA's 
member states, currently participate in the database. As of December 
31, 2002, IAEA listed 272 confirmed incidents involving the illicit 
trafficking of radioactive materials, including sealed 
sources.[Footnote 18] According to IAEA, a confirmed incident is one in 
which the information has been verified to IAEA through official points 
of contact from the reporting country. Of the 272 confirmed illicit 
trafficking incidents reported by IAEA, there were 179 incidents with 
potentially high risk sealed sources that pose the greatest security 
risks. More than two-thirds of the 179 incidents involving these 
sources occurred after 1997. Figure 6 depicts the frequency of reported 
international trafficking incidents involving sealed sources since 
1993. Figure 7 provides information on types of sealed sources and 
other radioactive materials involved in international trafficking 
incidents.

Figure 6: Reported International Trafficking Incidents Involving 
Radioactive Sources, 1993-2002:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

Figure 7: Illicit Trafficking Incidents by Type of Radioactive Source, 
1993-2002:

[See PDF for image]

Sources: IAEA (data); GAO (presentation).

[End of figure]

Trafficking Incidents Involving Sealed Sources:

Several observations can be made based on the incidents involving the 
illicit trafficking of sealed sources.

* The majority of the incidents involved deliberate intent to illegally 
acquire, smuggle, or sell radioactive material. Several other incidents 
reported, however, do not reflect criminal intent but have resulted 
from, among other things, the inadvertent transportation of 
contaminated scrap metal. The unregulated scrap metal industry 
throughout the former Soviet Union and Eastern Europe poses potential 
security and safety risks nonetheless because many radioactive sources 
are stolen for the metal shielding, leaving the source exposed and 
potentially very dangerous.

* Since the mid-1990s, the trafficking of radioactive materials has 
generally increased. The increase in illicit trafficking cases may be 
due, in part, to the increased reporting of these incidents by 
countries and/or improved radiation detection systems placed at 
countries' border crossings.

* From 1993 through 1998, trafficking incidents involving radioactive 
material were primarily reported in Russia, Germany, and Estonia. In 
the past few years, there appears to have been an increase in 
trafficking through Ukraine, Bulgaria, and Romania.

* According to the illicit trafficking incidents reported by IAEA, 
high-risk sealed sources are more likely to be trafficked than weapons-
grade fissile material, such as highly-enriched uranium. This is 
because such sources have numerous beneficial applications and are not 
as tightly controlled as fissile materials.

IAEA and DOE officials told us that the actual number of trafficking 
cases involving sealed sources is larger than what is currently being 
reported because many trafficking incidents are never detected by 
authorities and many countries are not always willing to share 
sensitive trafficking information. Another factor that affects the 
number of confirmed cases reported is the credibility of the 
information. According to DOE, a significant amount of time and 
expertise is required to assess a particular incident before it can be 
deemed credible. Despite difficulties in drawing conclusions from 
illicit trafficking data, the threat posed by illicit trafficking is a 
real and growing problem. The Director of IAEA's Office of Nuclear 
Security also told us that every reported case should be taken 
seriously. Furthermore, she noted that countries need to report their 
smuggling incidents more systematically so that better assessments can 
be performed.

Table 7 provides information about 17 significant cases of illicit 
trafficking identified by IAEA and others since 1993. A brief 
discussion of each case follows the table.

Table 7: Significant Seizures of Illicitly Trafficked Sealed Sources 
Since 1993:

Date: April 1993; Country where material was seized: Estonia; 
Material: Cesium-137; How material was found: Interdiction by police.

Date: July 1993; Country where material was seized: Germany; Material: 
Strontium-90; How material was found: Discovered by police 
investigation.

Date: September 1994; Country where material was seized: Bulgaria; 
Material: Multiple sources; How material was found: Discovered by 
police investigation.

Date: October 1994; Country where material was seized: Romania; 
Material: Strontium-90; How material was found: Discovered by police 
investigation.

Date: July 1995; Country where material was seized: Estonia; Material: 
Radium-226; How material was found: Discovered by police investigation.

Date: November 1995; Country where material was seized: Russia; 
Material: Cesium-137; How material was found: Tip provided to news 
reporter.

Date: October 1998; Country where material was seized: Ukraine; 
Material: Multiple sources; How material was found: Discovered by 
customs officials at airport.

Date: July 1999; Country where material was seized: Russia; Material: 
Californium-252; How material was found: Discovered by police 
investigation.

Date: August 1999; Country where material was seized: Turkey; 
Material: Cesium-137; How material was found: Discovered by police 
investigation.

Date: September 1999; Country where material was seized: Ukraine; 
Material: Strontium-90; How material was found: Discovered by police 
investigation.

Date: August 1999; Country where material was seized: Russia; 
Material: Cesium-137; How material was found: Discovered by police 
investigation.

Date: February 2000; Country where material was seized: Ukraine; 
Material: Strontium-90; How material was found: Discovered by police 
investigation.

Date: March 2000; Country where material was seized: Uzbekistan; 
Material: Radioactively contaminated material; How material was found: 
Interdiction at border by customs officials.

Date: December 2000; Country where material was seized: Romania; 
Material: Multiple sources; How material was found: Discovered by 
police investigation.

Date: January 2001; Country where material was seized: Greece; 
Material: Multiple sources; How material was found: Discovered by 
police investigation.

Date: January 2002; Country where material was seized: Belarus; 
Material: Strontium-90; How material was found: Discovered by police 
investigation.

Date: May 2002; Country where material was seized: Bulgaria; Material: 
Multiple sources; How material was found: Interdiction by police.

Sources: IAEA, Monterey Institute of International Studies Center for 
Nonproliferation Studies, and Ridgway Center for International Security 
Studies.

[End of table]

Khohtla-Jarve, Estonia, 1993:

This incident involved two men who worked as assistants to an "engine" 
driver at a mineral fertilizer plant, which is located in Khohtla-
Jarve, Estonia. The two men stole a device containing 2.8 grams of 
cesium-137 and were arrested. According to available information, the 
suspects intended to sell the cesium to an unspecified buyer.

Saarbrucken, Germany, 1993:

In July 1993, German police recovered an unidentified amount of 
strontium-90 that had been transported from Ukraine. The material, 
which was packed in small containers, was found by police from 
information provided by Ukrainian security services. Reportedly, the 
containers were discovered in three plastic bags after Ukrainian police 
had told the German police where to find them. Police in Kiev, Ukraine, 
arrested 17 people in connection with the operation.

Sofia, Bulgaria, 1994:

In September 1994, following a 5-day undercover operation, Bulgarian 
authorities arrested six Bulgarians and confiscated 19 containers of 
radioactive substances, including plutonium, cesium-137, strontium-90, 
plutonium-beryllium sources, and thallium-204 that had been stolen from 
the Izotop Enterprise near the capital, Sofia. According to available 
information, the theft was made possible by poor security at the 
laboratory.

Urechesti, Romania, 1994:

In October 1994, Romanian authorities arrested three Moldovans, two 
Jordanians, and two Romanians for trying to sell 7 kilograms of 
strontium in a lead pipe. One suspect, a former military officer, had 
smuggled the strontium to Moldova. The material was then passed to 
intermediaries in the Romanian province of Transylvania, where it was 
offered to the Jordanians for $400,000.

Tallinn, Estonia, 1995:

In July 1995, Estonian security police arrested two Estonians who had 
radium-226 in their car. According to available information, it was 
thought that the radium was smuggled into Estonia via middlemen in St. 
Petersburg, Russia, indicating that more people were probably involved.

Moscow, Russia, 1995:

In November 1995, acting on a tip, Russian television reporters 
discovered a 32-kilogram container, containing cesium-137 and wrapped 
with explosives, in a Moscow park. According to available information, 
Chechen separatists were responsible for this incident and had 
reportedly obtained the radioactive material from either cancer-
treatment equipment or an instrument calibration device used in flaw 
detection equipment. The Chechens threatened to detonate the device if 
Russia decided to resume combat operations in the region.

Kiev, Ukraine, 1998:

In October 1998, a radiation health specialist at a German company that 
consults on reactor safety was arrested by customs police at Kiev 
airport in possession of a container of radioactive material from 
Chernobyl. According to available information, a Russian scientist 
asked the health specialist to take a metal container holding a small 
amount of radioactive material out of the country for analysis. Russian 
officials were unsure of the exact type of material involved, but 
suspected it contained cesium, strontium, and zirconium.

St. Petersburg, Russia, 1999:

In July 1999 Russian law enforcement officials arrested two men who 
attempted to sell 5 grams of californium-252. One of those arrested, a 
technician from Murmansk, was approached by a criminal group who 
enlisted his help to procure californium-252. The technician, who was 
responsible for removing spent nuclear components from a nuclear-
powered icebreaker, smuggled the radioactive material off the 
icebreaker. Along with an accomplice, the technician packed the 
californium-252 into a container filled with paraffin, which they 
placed within a canister of water. After the initial offer from the 
criminal group fell through, the technician and his accomplice traveled 
to St. Petersburg in search of another buyer, where they were arrested.

Istanbul, Turkey, 1999:

In a joint operation, the Istanbul Organized Crime and Arms Smuggling 
Office and the National Intelligence Organization arrested five people, 
one of whom was from the Republic of Georgia, as they tried to sell 
cesium-137 to policemen acting as buyers in Istanbul in August 1999. 
The cesium, which was in two separate steel tubes and weighed 49 grams, 
was smuggled into Turkey from an unknown location.

Uzhgorod, Ukraine, 1999:

In September 1999, a Russian citizen was arrested after police officers 
discovered that he was carrying two containers of strontium-90. The 
material was discovered on the suspect during a document check by 
Ukrainian police. It is believed that the suspect was taking the 
radioactive materials from Russia to Western Europe. The suspect was in 
possession of a number of forged documents, including a forged 
diplomatic identification card.

Volgograd, Russia, 1999:

In August 1999, Russian security police recovered six containers of 
cesium-137, which were stolen from a Volgograd oil refinery in May 
1998. Earlier efforts to locate the stolen containers, including the 
establishment of checkpoints with radiation monitors on local roads, 
had proven fruitless. According to reports, the thieves had hidden the 
stolen cesium containers to avoid this police dragnet and hoped to sell 
the material after the search for it had finally been abandoned.

Donetsk, Ukraine, 2000:

In February 2000, A Ukrainian law enforcement unit confiscated 27 
containers of strontium-90. Five individuals were reportedly involved 
in the illegal trafficking of this material. The group allegedly tried 
to contact foreign buyers, who were in fact members of the law 
enforcement unit. The radioactive material was reportedly stolen from a 
military unit deployed in the region and was stored in an apartment. 
Reports stated that the individuals were attempting to sell the 27 
containers for $168,000.

Beshkoprik, Uzbekistan, 2000:

In March 2000, Uzbekistan customs officers seized an Iranian-registered 
truck on the Kazakhstan-Uzbekistan border about 20 kilometers from 
Tashkent, the capital of Uzbekistan, after discovering it contained 
highly radioactive material. Kazakhstan customs officials had cleared 
the truck and issued a certificate indicating that it had passed 
radiation screening. Uzbekistan officials determined that the level of 
gamma radiation emitted by the cargo was 100 times over the acceptable 
level. Uzbekistan customs officials then returned the truck to their 
Kazakhstani counterparts. The destination listed on the truck's 
manifest was Quetta, Pakistan, and some reports speculated that the 
incident involved efforts to smuggle radioactive material intended for 
use by terrorist groups to build a radiological weapon.

Piatra Neamt City, Romania, 2000:

In December 2000, five suspects were arrested while trying to sell 1 
kilogram of radioactive material (strontium, plutonium, and cobalt), to 
undercover police officers posing as prospective buyers of radioactive 
material. The suspects included a former officer of an antiorganized 
crime police unit in Moldova and four Romanians who were bodyguards in 
charge of protecting the shipments and who were responsible for 
organizing the sale of the materials.

Thessaloniki, Greece, 2001:

In January 2001, Greek law enforcement officials uncovered several 
hundred metal "wafers" of commercially available alpha-emitting 
ionization sources, containing a total of 3 grams of plutonium and 
americium. The cache was found buried in a forest 12 kilometers from 
Thessalonki. The sources were believed to be smuggled from Eastern 
Europe, and there was speculation about organized criminal involvement 
in the smuggling of these sources. An investigation was launched, but 
to date, there have been no publicly released results.

Minsk, Belarus, 2002:

In January 2002, police in Minsk, Belarus, arrested two persons in 
connection with an attempt to sell four sealed sources of strontium-90 
that one of the suspects had been storing in his apartment. One of the 
suspects had stolen the sources 4 years earlier during his military 
service, and the other was arrested while trying to sell them.

Veliko Tarnova, Bulgaria, 2002:

In May 2002, Bulgarian authorities seized 101 plutonium sources and an 
americium-beryllium source from a vehicle near Veliko Tarnova. The 
sources were detected when police officers stopped a taxi with four 
individuals during a routine inspection. Thirty-nine of the plutonium 
sources had certificates indicating that they had been manufactured in 
1990 by Izotop-Moscow and had been ordered for a ferryboat station in 
Varna. Because the 10-year guaranteed service life of the sources had 
expired, it is possible that the sources were diverted after they had 
been removed from service for disposal.

[End of section]

Appendix V: Information About Accidents Involving Sealed Sources:

According to IAEA and the World Health Organization, there have been 
more than 100 accidents involving sealed sources over the past 50 
years. Many of these accidents have been small and resulted in few 
injuries. The actual number of accidents worldwide is unknown because 
many countries do not report or record such events. This appendix 
describes 10 accidents that occurred since the early 1980s. Although 
these accidents were not the result of malevolent actions, they are 
useful in gaining a better understanding of the potential consequences 
following the loss of control of sealed sources.

We have included, to the extent that it was available, information on 
the economic impacts of the accidents. The costs associated with lost 
equipment, damage to property, and the disposal of radioactive waste 
can be very significant. The cost components associated with 
radiological accidents include:

* medical treatment of exposed individuals;

* radiation surveillance, including searching for lost sealed sources 
and contaminated areas;

* decontamination and dismantling of contaminated buildings and 
property,

* loss of production capacity;

* radioactive waste management and disposal;

* monetary compensation to individuals who received excessive doses of 
radiation;

* rebuilding or possible relocation costs; and:

* effects on international trade.

Nonmonetary impacts may include:

* loss of public confidence and credibility in the government, and:

* public questions about all uses of ionizing radiation.

:

Table 8 provides information about 10 significant cases of accidents 
identified by IAEA and the World Health Organization since 1983. A 
brief discussion of each case follows the table.

Table 8: Selected Accidents Involving Sealed Sources Since 1983:

Year: 1983; Location: Juarez, Mexico; Type of sealed source involved: 
Cobalt-60; Number of significant exposures: 80; Number of related: 
deaths: 0; Associated costs: $34 million.

Year: 1984; Location: Morocco; Type of sealed source involved: Iridium-
192; Number of significant exposures: 11; Number of related: deaths: 8; 
 Associated costs: Unknown.

Year: 1987; Location: Goiania, Brazil; Type of sealed source involved: 
Cesium-137; Number of significant exposures: 50; Number of related: 
deaths: 4; Associated costs: $36 million.

Year: 1994; Location: Tammiku, Estonia; Type of sealed source involved: 
Cesium-137; Number of significant exposures: 3; Number of related: 
deaths: 1; Associated costs: Unknown.

Year: 1996; Location: Gilan, Iran; Type of sealed source involved: 
Iridium-192; Number of significant exposures: 1; Number of related: 
deaths: 0; Associated costs: Unknown.

Year: 1997; Location: Lilo, Georgia; Type of sealed source involved: 
Cesium-137; Number of significant exposures: 11; Number of related: 
deaths: 0; Associated costs: Unknown.

Year: 1998; Location: Los Barrios, Spain; Type of sealed source 
involved: Cesium-137; Number of significant exposures: 6; Number of 
related: deaths: 0; Associated costs: $28 million.

Year: 1999; Location: Yanango, Peru; Type of sealed source involved: 
Iridium-192; Number of significant exposures: 1; Number of related: 
deaths: 0; Associated costs: Unknown.

Year: 2000; Location: Samut Prakarn, Thailand; Type of sealed source 
involved: Cobalt-60; Number of significant exposures: 10; Number of 
related: deaths: 3; Associated costs: Unknown.

Year: 2001; Location: Lja, Georgia; Type of sealed source involved: 
Cesium-137; Number of significant exposures: 2; Number of related: 
deaths: 0; Associated costs: Unknown.

Sources: IAEA and the World Health Organization.

[End of table]

Juarez, Mexico, 1983:

A teletherapy unit containing a cobalt-60 source was purchased and 
imported by a Mexican hospital without compliance with existing import 
requirements. After the unit was stored for 6 years in a warehouse, its 
scrap value attracted the attention of a maintenance technician. The 
technician dismantled the unit and removed the cylinder containing the 
sources and other metal parts. He then loaded them into a pickup truck, 
drove to a junkyard, and sold the parts as scrap. Before arriving at 
the junkyard, he ruptured the sealed cobalt source, dispersing about 
6,000 tiny pellets of cobalt-60 in the truck bed.

When cranes moved the ruptured cylinder, the cobalt-60 pellets were 
spread over the junkyard and mixed with other metal materials. 
Consequently, pellets and pellet fragments were transferred to vehicles 
used for transporting the scrap to various foundries. The technician's 
pickup truck remained parked on the street for 40 days and was then 
moved to another street, where it remained for an additional 10 days. 
An unknown number of people passed by the truck each day and children 
used it as a play area. It was later discovered that contaminated scrap 
metal from the junkyard had been used to manufacture reinforcing rods 
and metal table bases. A truck transporting contaminated rods passed 
near a DOE national laboratory, where radiation detectors indicated the 
presence of radioactivity. Two days later, the authorities ascertained 
the origin of the contaminated rods.

U.S. and Mexican officials spent an estimated $34 million to track, 
recover, and secure these radioactive products. An extensive 
investigation showed that 30,000 tables and 6,000 tons of reinforcing 
rods had been made from the contaminated material. In addition, 814 
buildings were partly or completely demolished because the 
radioactivity in the reinforcing rods resulted in higher-than-
acceptable levels of radiation. The accident exposed 4,000 people to 
radiation, and 80 people received significant doses. Table 9 provides a 
breakdown of the estimated costs associated with the accident.

Table 9: Estimated Costs Related to the Accident in Mexico:

Dollars in thousands.

Transport and disposal of contaminated material; Cost: $15,640.

Demolition and reconstruction to remove contaminated reinforcement bars 
in buildings; Cost: 8,500.

Loss of production capacity; Cost: 3,740.

Value of contaminated material; Cost: 2,040.

Technical and operational personnel and equipment; Cost: 680.

Security and surveillance by police and army forces, and legal or 
political problems; Cost: 3,400.

Total; Cost: $34,000.

Source: IAEA.

[End of table]

Morocco, 1984:

In 1984, iridium-192 sources were being used to radiograph welds in a 
fossil-fuel power plant under construction. One of these sources 
dropped to the ground from a radiography camera, where a passerby 
picked it up and took it home. The source was lost from March to June 
1984 and, as a result, eight persons died from overexposure to 
radiation. In addition, three others suffered severe injuries from 
overexposure that required hospitalization. It was initially assumed 
that the deaths were from poisoning. Only after the last family member 
died was it suspected that the deaths might have been caused by 
radiation.

Goiania, Brazil, 1987:

A private radiography institute moved to new premises and left behind a 
cesium-137 teletherapy unit without notifying the licensing authority. 
Because the building was partially demolished, the teletherapy unit was 
unsecured. Two people entered the building and removed the source 
assembly. They dismantled the source assembly at home and ruptured the 
sealed source. After the sealed source was ruptured, remnants of the 
source assembly were sold for scrap to a junkyard owner. He noticed 
that the material had a blue glow in the dark. Over a period of days, 
friends and relatives came to witness the phenomenon. Fragments of the 
source, the size of rice grains, were distributed to several families. 
Five days later, a number of persons started to show gastrointestinal 
distress.

Because the sealed source contained cesium chloride, which is highly 
soluble and easily dispersed, there was considerable contamination of 
the environment, resulting in external irradiation and internal 
contamination of several persons. Some individuals suffered very high 
internal and external contamination because of the way they had handled 
the cesium chloride powder, such as rubbing it on their skin, eating 
with contaminated hands, and handling various objects. Consequently, 
four people died within 4 weeks of being hospitalized. In total, 249 
people were contaminated, and 112,000 people were screened for 
contamination.

The environment was also severely contaminated. Eighty-five houses were 
significantly contaminated, and 41 of these had to be evacuated. The 
decontamination process required the demolition of seven residences and 
various other buildings and generated 3,500 cubic meters of radioactive 
waste.

The accident had a great psychological impact on the whole region. Many 
people feared contamination, irradiation, and incurable diseases. Over 
8,000 persons requested monitoring for contamination in order to obtain 
certificates stating that they were not contaminated. These were needed 
because operators of commercial airplanes and buses refused to allow 
people from the region to board and hotels refused to register them. 
The social and psychological impact of the accident was so great that 
an outlying region to Goiania, where the waste repository was 
established, has incorporated the trifoil symbol of radioactivity into 
the region's flag.

Economically, there was discrimination against products from Goiania, 
resulting in a 20 percent decrease in the sales of cattle, grains, and 
other agricultural products from the region. Tourism decreased 
virtually to zero and the gross domestic product for the region 
decreased by 15 percent. It took 5 years for the gross domestic product 
to return to preaccident levels. In total, the direct and indirect 
costs for emergency response and remedial action are estimated to be 
$36 million.

Figure 8: Contaminated Radioactive Debris from Demolished Residences in 
Goiania:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

Tammiku, Estonia, 1994:

In October 1994 a sealed source that was discovered in scrap metal was 
recovered and transferred to a radioactive waste repository under the 
supervision of the national government. Three brothers entered the 
repository without authorization and removed a metal container 
enclosing a cesium-137 source and the source fell out of the container. 
One of the men placed the source in his pocket and took it home. The 
source remained in the house for 27 days, resulting in the overexposure 
of five individuals, including one fatality. The sealed source was 
thought to be part of a gamma irradiator, but none had ever been used 
or registered in Estonia. According to available information, it is 
possible that the source was brought into Estonia from the Russian 
Federation with miscellaneous scrap metals for export to Western 
Europe.

Gilan, Iran, 1996:

At a combined cycle fossil fuel power plant in Iran, radiography 
equipment with an iridium-192 sealed source was used to examine welds 
from a boiler. At the end of the radiographer's shift, the source 
became detached from its drive cable and fell to the floor unnoticed. 
Later, a worker moving thermal insulation materials around the plant 
noticed a shiny, pencil-sized metal object in a trench and put it in 
his pocket. The source was in his chest pocket for approximately two 
hours, resulting in a high radiation dose. As a result of this 
exposure, the worker had abnormal redness of the skin, severe bone 
marrow depression, and an unusually extended radiation injury requiring 
plastic surgery.

Lilo, Georgia, 1997:

Eleven border frontier guards became ill owing to exposure from 
multiple radioactive sources, including 12 cesium-137 sources, one 
cobalt-60 source, and 200 radium-226 sources. These sources were 
abandoned when the military site was transferred from the Soviet Union 
to the Republic of Georgia. All individuals suffered from skin 
ulcerations and chronic radiation sickness. No deaths were associated 
with this accident.

Figure 9: Location Where Sealed Sources Were Found, Lilo, Georgia:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

Los Barrios, Spain, 1998:

In May 1998, a cesium-137 source was accidentally melted at a stainless 
steel factory. As a result of the periodic maintenance and cleaning of 
the filter system at the factory, the dust was removed, and much of it 
was sent to two different factories several hundred kilometers from the 
factory. The dust was contaminated with cesium-137, and about 400 
people were monitored for contamination. Measurements of a large number 
of water, air, and soil samples were obtained from nearby towns and at 
locations several hundred kilometers away. Traces of cesium-137 were 
found but considered negligible. In countries outside of Spain, the 
environmental impact was minimal. The economic consequences of the 
accident, including temporary suspension of factory operations, 
decontamination operations, and management of the resulting radioactive 
waste, were estimated to be over $25 million.

Yanango, Peru, 1999:

In February 1999 an iridium-192 source fell out of a radiography camera 
being used at a hydroelectric power plant. Later that day, a welder 
picked up the iridium-192 source and placed it in the right back pocket 
of his trousers. For the next several hours, the welder continued his 
work and later took a minibus home with 15 other people onboard. Once 
home, the welder's wife fed their 18-month-old child while she was 
sitting on the welder's trousers, and two other children were 2-3 
meters from the iridium source for approximately 2 hours. The welder 
received extensive radiation burns that required the amputation of his 
right leg. The wife suffered lesions on her lower back after her brief 
exposure to the sealed source. No radiation effects were reported for 
the children.:

Samut Prakarn, Thailand, 2000:

A company in Bangkok, Thailand, possessed several teletherapy devices 
containing cobalt-60 without authorization from the Thailand Office of 
Atomic Energy for Peace. The teletherapy device was originally 
installed at a hospital in Bangkok, Thailand, in 1969. In 1981, a new 
source was installed, and the hospital received no further maintenance 
from the manufacturer of the teletherapy unit and source. When the 
teletherapy unit was removed from service in 1994, the maintenance 
contractor had gone bankrupt and the manufacturer was no longer 
producing cobalt-60 units. As a result, the hospital was left with the 
disused source to manage and control. Since the hospital did not have 
sufficient storage space, it sold the device and source to a new 
supplier without the authorization of the regulatory authority. In 1999 
the new supplier was notified that its lease of the warehouse was to be 
terminated and relocated the device to a parking lot that was owned by 
its parent company.

In the autumn of 1999, the company relocated the teletherapy devices to 
an unsecured storage location without the authorization of the national 
regulatory authority. In late January 2000, several individuals 
obtained access to the unsecured storage location and partially 
disassembled the teletherapy device. The individuals took the unit to a 
residence and attempted to disassemble it further.

In early February 2000, two individuals took the disassembled device to 
a junkyard in Samut Prakarn, Thailand, to segregate component metals 
and sell them separately as scrap. While a junkyard worker was 
disassembling the device, the cobalt-60 source fell out of its housing 
unobserved by the junkyard workers or the individuals. By the middle of 
February 2000, several of the people involved, including the finders of 
the source and junkyard workers, had begun to feel ill and sought 
medical assistance. Physicians at the hospital suspected the 
possibility of radiation exposure and reported their suspicions to the 
regulatory authority. Altogether, 10 people received high doses of 
radiation from the source. Three of those people, all workers at the 
junkyard, died within 2 months of their exposure.

Lja, Georgia, 2001:

In December 2001 three woodsmen found two heat-emanating metallic 
containers near their campsite in a forest near the village of Lja in 
western Georgia. This village is in the Abkhazia region of the 
Caucasus. This region is subject to political unrest and has sought its 
independence from the Republic of Georgia. As a result, during the past 
decade, the region has been largely inaccessible to Georgian and 
international authorities. The woodsmen involved in the accident used 
the containers as a heat source and experienced nausea, vomiting, and 
dizziness within hours of exposure to the containers. At a local 
hospital in Tbilisi, Georgia, the woodsmen were diagnosed with 
radiation sickness and severe radiation burns, and at least two of the 
three were in serious condition. In February 2002, an IAEA-sponsored 
search and recovery team found the containers and discovered that each 
one was previously used in Soviet-era radioisotope thermoelectric 
generators.

[End of section]

Appendix VI: Information on Producers and Distributors of Radioactive 
Material:

This appendix provides information about the major producers and 
distributors of radioactive material used to manufacture sealed 
sources. Six countries are the major suppliers of the radioactive 
material: Argentina, Belgium, Canada, the Netherlands, Russia, and 
South Africa. Canada is the largest exporter of radioactive material 
and has provided over half of all radioactive material used in medical 
applications worldwide. Table 10 lists the major producers and 
distributors of radioactive material used to manufacture sealed 
sources.

Table 10: Major Producers and Distributors of Radioactive Material Used 
to Manufacture Sealed Sources:

Country: Argentina; Major organizations producing and/or distributing 
sources: National Atomic Energy Commission and INVAP S.E..

Country: Australia; Major organizations producing and/or distributing 
sources: Australian Nuclear Science and; Technology Organization.

Country: Belgium; Major organizations producing and/or distributing 
sources: National Institute for Radio Elements and Belgian Nuclear 
Research Centre.

Country: Brazil; Major organizations producing and/or distributing 
sources: Instituto de Pasquisas Energeticas Nucleares.

Country: Bulgaria; Major organizations producing and/or distributing 
sources: Institute for Nuclear Research and Nuclear Energy.

Country: Canada; Major organizations producing and/or distributing 
sources: Atomic Energy of Canada, Ltd., and MDS Nordion.

Country: China; Major organizations producing and/or distributing 
sources: China Isotope Corporation and Nuclear Power Institute of 
China.

Country: Czech Republic; Major organizations producing and/or 
distributing sources: Nuclear Research Institute.

Country: Denmark; Major organizations producing and/or distributing 
sources: Risoe National Laboratory.

Country: France; Major organizations producing and/or distributing 
sources: CIS Bio International; Commissariat A L'Energie Atomique 
Centre D'Etudes De Valduc.

Country: Germany; Major organizations producing and/or distributing 
sources: AEA Technology QSA, GmbH., Chemotrade,; Isotope Products 
Europe Blaseg, GmbH., and; STS--Steuerungstechnik & Strahlesnschutz 
GmbH.

Country: Hungary; Major organizations producing and/or distributing 
sources: Atomic Energy Research Institute and Institute of Isotopes 
Co., Ltd..

Country: India; Major organizations producing and/or distributing 
sources: Bhabha Atomic Research Centre.

Country: Indonesia; Major organizations producing and/or distributing 
sources: National Nuclear Energy Agency.

Country: Japan; Major organizations producing and/or distributing 
sources: Japan Atomic Energy Research Institute and Institute for 
Atomic Energy Rikkyo University.

Country: Malaysia; Major organizations producing and/or distributing 
sources: Malaysian Institute for Nuclear Technology Research.

Country: Netherlands; Major organizations producing and/or 
distributing sources: I.D.B. Holland B.V..

Country: Russia; Major organizations producing and/or distributing 
sources: Atomenergoexport, Institute of Physics and Power Engineering, 
Kurchatov Institute, Mayak Production Association, Scientific and 
Research Institute of Atomic Reactors, and St. Petersburg Institute of 
Nuclear Physics.

Country: South Africa; Major organizations producing and/or 
distributing sources: South African Nuclear Energy Corporation.

Country: South Korea; Major organizations producing and/or distributing 
sources: Korea Atomic Energy Research Institute.

Country: Sweden; Major organizations producing and/or distributing 
sources: Studsvik AB.

Country: United Kingdom; Major organizations producing and/or 
distributing sources: Ametek Advanced Measurement Technology, Nycomed 
Amersham, and Reviss Services Limited.

Country: United States; Major organizations producing and/or 
distributing sources: Department of Energy.

Country: Uzbekistan; Major organizations producing and/or distributing 
sources: Institute of Nuclear Physics.

Sources: IAEA and Monterey Institute of International Studies Center 
for Nonproliferation Studies.

[End of table]

[End of section]

Appendix VII: The Nuclear Regulatory Commission's Policy on Exports of 
Sealed Sources:

In most cases, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission grants a general 
license for the export of sealed sources to all countries containing 
byproduct material except certain proscribed countries: Cuba, Iran, 
Iraq, Libya, North Korea, and Sudan. Byproduct material is (1) any 
radioactive material (except special nuclear material) yielded in, or 
made radioactive by, exposure to the radiation incident to the process 
of producing or using special nuclear material (as in a reactor) and 
(2) the tailings, or wastes produced by the extraction or concentration 
of uranium or thorium from ore.

According to NRC, limited quantities of sealed sources can also be 
exported under a general license to "restricted" countries: 
Afghanistan, Andorra, Angola, Burma, Djibouti, India, Israel, Oman, 
Pakistan, and Syria. A general license, provided by regulation, grants 
authority to a person for certain activities, in this case, the export 
of sealed sources, and is effective without filing an application with 
NRC or the issuance of a licensing document to the person or 
organization exporting the sealed source. NRC has placed most sealed 
sources for export under a general license for several reasons, 
including the following: (1) subject to NRC or Agreement State[Footnote 
19] oversight, the United States is responsible only for ensuring the 
safe use and control of radioactive materials used to manufacture 
sealed sources within U.S. territory; (2) foreign countries have the 
sovereign responsibility for ensuring appropriate regulatory controls 
over radioactive material, including such material imported from other 
countries; and (3) control over radioactive material would not be 
enhanced by requiring specific licenses for material exported from the 
United States. A specific license would not ensure that the exported 
materials would be subject to controls and regulatory oversight in a 
foreign country because the license does not ensure that the recipient 
country has adequate regulatory controls over the material that is 
exported from the United States. Under a specific license, the export 
request must be reviewed and approved by NRC in consultation with other 
appropriate agencies, including the Departments of Commerce, State, 
Defense, and Energy.

NRC officials told us that they are required only to maintain a 
database of exports of sealed sources that are issued under a specific 
license and certain other exports of concern, such as americium-241 and 
neptunium-237. The United States, as a nuclear weapon state, has agreed 
to report all exports of americium and neptunium to IAEA. With regard 
to shipments of sealed sources, NRC officials told us that the 
Department of Homeland Security's Bureau of Customs and Border 
Protection maintains a database of all transactions, identified by 
tariff number, including those including sealed sources that are 
exported under a general license. However, these officials also said 
that it would be very difficult for the Bureau of Customs and Border 
Protection to track these specific shipments of sealed sources because 
the information on manifests is general in nature.

NRC officials told us that they were not aware of any sealed sources 
that were exported under a general license from the United States that 
have been used for malicious purposes. They noted that there have been 
thousands of such exports, most of which involve material in forms or 
quantities that pose minimal safety or health risks if properly used 
and controlled. However, there have been a few cases where lax local 
regulatory oversight over high-risk materials resulted in instances 
where sealed sources were eventually lost or improperly disposed of, 
resulting in harmful exposure to individuals.

Specific licenses are required to export radioactive material in waste 
and tritium for recovery and recycling purposes. This is because a 
final NRC rule (59 F.R. 48994), effective November 10, 1994, revoked 
the general license for bulk tritium and alpha-emitting radionuclides 
having an alpha half-life of 10 days or greater but less than 200 years 
to conform NRC's regulations to the export control guidelines of the 
Nuclear Suppliers' Group[Footnote 20] for nuclear-related, dual-use 
items. Tritium and reactor-produced alpha-emitting radionuclides are 
two commodities on the Nuclear Suppliers' Groups dual-use list whose 
exports are regulated by NRC. In addition, tritium and alpha-emitting 
radionucliedes are controlled by the Nuclear Suppliers' Group because 
of their potential application in the production of weapons of mass 
destruction.

Another final rule on the import and export of radioactive material (60 
F.R. 37556), effective August 21, 1995, established specific licensing 
requirements for the import and export of radioactive material in the 
form of waste coming into or leaving the United States to conform with 
NRC's regulations to the guidelines of the IAEA Code of Practice on the 
International Transboundary Movement of Radioactive Waste.

In view of increased post-September 11 terrorism concerns, NRC is 
considering changes to its general license provisions to improve 
controls over exports. Possible changes include (1) ensuring that the 
exporter confirm that the customer in the foreign country is authorized 
by the recipient country to possess the material; (2) requiring prior 
notification to NRC for risk-significant shipments; and (3) as 
appropriate, providing national or international source registries with 
data for risk-significant shipments. Changes under consideration are 
expected to be implemented in fiscal year 2004 by orders with 
compensatory measures and in fiscal years 2004-2005 by a rule change as 
part of a broader NRC plan to improve controls over the imports and 
exports of sealed sources. Other possible and more restrictive controls 
for exports include a requirement for a specific export license for 
high-risk material such as high-activity cobalt-60 sources or imposing 
a specific prohibition on such exports to countries that do not have 
acceptable sealed source security, control, and accountability 
requirements. The United States is coordinating these efforts with 
other countries that export sealed sources to ensure consistent, 
adequate controls. In addition, in conjunction with the change of the 
national threat level to "orange" in March 2003, NRC issued a security 
advisory to licensees concerning certain quantities of certain high-
risk sources, which included exports and imports.

[End of section]

Appendix VIII: Results of the International Conference on the Security 
of Radioactive Sources:

This appendix provides information concerning several key findings and 
recommendations from the international conference on the security of 
radioactive sources held in Vienna, Austria, in March 2003. The 
conference was sponsored by the governments of the United States and 
the Russian Federation and hosted by the government of Austria. It was 
organized by IAEA in cooperation with the European Commission, the 
World Customs Organization, the International Criminal Police 
Organization, and the European Police Office. Over 700 delegates from 
more than 120 countries attended the conference.

The conference produced key findings in the following areas: (1) 
identifying, searching for, recovering, and securing high-risk 
radioactive sources; (2) strengthening long-term control over 
radioactive sources; (3) interdicting illicit trafficking; (4) planning 
the response to radiological emergencies arising from the malevolent 
use of radioactive sources; and (5) recognizing the role of the media/
public education, communication, and outreach.

Regarding identifying and searching for sources, the conference 
encouraged countries to:

* develop and implement national action plans, on the basis of their 
own specific conditions, for locating, searching for, recovering, and 
securing high-risk radioactive sources;

* accelerate the establishment of a coherent and transparent scheme for 
the categorization of radioactive sources in order to provide for the 
safety and security of sources; and:

* assist other countries, as appropriate, in identifying, searching 
for, recovering, and securing high-risk sources.

Concerning strengthening long-term control over radioactive sources, 
the conference encouraged countries to:

* formulate and implement national plans for the management of sources 
throughout their life cycle;

* develop, to the extent practical, standards for the design of sealed 
sources and associated devices that are less suitable for malevolent 
use (e.g., alternative technologies and less-dispersible forms of high-
risk sources); and:

* establish arrangements for the safe and secure disposal of disused 
high-risk sources, including the development of disposal facilities.

Regarding illicit trafficking, the conference recognized the need for 
greater international efforts to detect and interdict the illicit 
trafficking of high-risk sources and to take appropriate enforcement 
actions. In support of this objective, the conference encouraged 
countries to:

* further develop and strengthen measures to detect, interdict, and 
respond to the illicit trafficking of high-risk radioactive sources;

* deploy and widely use technologies for detecting high-risk 
radioactive sources, with emphasis on ensuring the sustainability of 
monitoring and detection equipment;

* undertake further research on and development of detection 
technologies for use at borders and elsewhere;

* enhance cooperation between government agencies responsible for 
preventing, detecting, and responding to illicit trafficking incidents, 
especially in the fields of information sharing, communications, and 
training;

* pool resources through, for example, the sharing of monitoring and 
detection equipment on common borders; and:

* continue support for and development of IAEA's illicit trafficking 
database.

The conference recommended that countries develop comprehensive plans 
to prepare for and respond to radiological emergencies involving 
radioactive sources. In support of this recommendation, the conference 
encouraged countries to, among other things,

* enhance current national and international response arrangements, 
taking into account the need to respond both proactively and reactively 
to the new scenarios presented by the possibility of the malevolent use 
of high-risk radioactive sources and:

* consider establishing mechanisms to facilitate effective coordination 
in the event of a radiological emergency.

Finally, the conference recognized that the public's understanding of 
the nature and consequences of radiological emergencies will largely 
determine how the public reacts to such emergencies. As a result, the 
conference encouraged countries to:

* conduct public outreach and awareness programs to foster a better 
understanding of radiological threats and the appropriate response in 
the event of a radiological emergency in order to minimize social and 
economic disruption;

* educate the public regarding the nature of radioactivity, the 
consequences of the malevolent uses of high-risk radioactive sources, 
and the procedures for mitigating those consequences in order to reduce 
the psychological impact of radiological terrorism;

* strengthen their education and training programs as a means to 
promote confidence building within the public; and:

* assume greater responsibility for gaining the trust of the media and 
informing them about the potential threat of radiological terrorism to 
help ensure that the media will communicate information accurately in a 
nonsensational manner to avoid fueling public fear and panic.

[End of section]

Appendix IX: Information on IAEA's Revised Categorization of 
Radioactive Sources:

The purpose of IAEA's Categorization of Radioactive Sources is to 
provide a fundamental and internationally harmonized basis for risk-
informed decision making. The draft document provides a categorization 
for radioactive sources used in industry, medicine, agriculture, 
research, and education. The principles of the categorization can be 
equally applied to radioactive sources, such as radioisotope 
thermoelectric generators that may be under military control. The 
categorization does not apply to radiation-generating devices such as 
X-ray machines and particle accelerators, although it may be applied to 
radioactive sources produced by, or used as, target material in such 
devices. The revised categorization divides sources into five 
categories, according to their potential to cause harmful health 
effects, should the source not be managed safely and securely. The 
categories are defined as follows:

* Category 1 sources are considered extremely dangerous. If not safely 
managed safely, the radioactive material would likely cause permanent 
injury to a person who handled it or were otherwise in contact with it 
for more than a few minutes. It would probably be fatal to be close to 
this amount of unshielded material for a period of a few minutes to an 
hour. Furthermore, the amount of radioactive material, if dispersed by 
fire or explosion, could possibly--but would be unlikely to--
permanently injure persons in the immediate vicinity or be life 
threatening to them. There would be little or no risk of immediate 
heath effects to persons beyond a few hundred meters. It would be 
highly unlikely for a category 1 source to contaminate a public water 
supply to dangerous levels, even if the radioactive material were 
highly soluble in water.

* Category 2 sources are also considered personally dangerous. If not 
safely managed or securely protected, the radioactive material could 
cause permanent injury to a person who handled it or were otherwise in 
contact with it for a short time (minutes to hours). It could possibly 
be fatal to be close to this amount of unshielded radioactive material 
for a period of hours to days. The amount of radioactive material, if 
dispersed by fire or explosion, could possibly--but would be very 
unlikely to--permanently injure or be life threatening to persons in 
the immediate vicinity. It would be virtually impossible for a category 
2 source to contaminate a public water supply to dangerous levels, even 
if the radioactive material were highly soluble in water.

* Category 3 sources are also considered to be dangerous. If not safely 
managed or securely protected, the radioactive material could cause 
permanent injury to a person who handled it or were otherwise in 
contact with it, for some hours. It could possibly--although it is 
unlikely--be fatal to be in close contact to this amount of unshielded 
radioactive material for a period of days to weeks. The amount of 
radioactive material, if dispersed by fire or explosion, could 
possibly--but is extremely unlikely to--permanently injure or be life 
threatening to persons in the immediate vicinity. It would be virtually 
impossible for a category 3 source to contaminate a public water supply 
to dangerous levels, even if the radioactive material were highly 
soluble in water.

* Category 4 sources are unlikely to be dangerous. It is very unlikely 
that anyone would be permanently injured by this amount of radioactive 
material. This amount of radioactive material, if dispersed by fire or 
explosion, could not permanently injure persons.

* Category 5 sources are not considered dangerous. No one could be 
permanently injured by this amount of radioactive material. 
Furthermore, this amount of radioactive material, if dispersed by fire 
or explosion, could not permanently injure persons.

IAEA has developed a list on the basis of practices (such as 
irradiators, industrial radiography, and teletherapy) as part of its 
relative ranking of sealed sources. Examples of the most dangerous 
(category 1) include radioisotope thermoelectric generators, 
sterilization and food preservation facilities containing cobalt-60 or 
cesium-137, and medical equipment containing cobalt-60. The least 
dangerous (category 5) include low-dose-rate brachytherapy devices and 
lightning detectors containing americium-241.

[End of section]

Appendix X: Countries Participating in IAEA's Model Project Program:

Table 11 provides a list of the countries participating in IAEA's model 
project program and the year they joined the program.

Table 11: Countries Participating in IAEA's Model Project Program:

Country: Albania; Year joined the program: 1996.

Country: Algeria; Year joined the program: 2002.

Country: Angola[A]; Year joined the program: 2001.

Country: Armenia; Year joined the program: 1996.

Country: Azerbaijan; Year joined the program: 2003.

Country: Bangladesh; Year joined the program: 1996.

Country: Belarus[B]; Year joined the program: 1996.

Country: Benin[A]; Year joined the program: 2003.

Country: Bolivia; Year joined the program: 1996.

Country: Bosnia and Herzegovina; Year joined the program: 1996.

Country: Bulgaria; Year joined the program: 2001.

Country: Burkina Faso[A]; Year joined the program: 2001.

Country: Cameroon[A]; Year joined the program: 1996.

Country: Central African Republic[A]; Year joined the program: 2003.

Country: China; Year joined the program: 2001.

Country: Columbia; Year joined the program: 1998.

Country: Costa Rica; Year joined the program: 1996.

Country: Croatia; Year joined the program: 2001.

Country: Cyprus; Year joined the program: 1996.

Country: Democratic Republic of the Congo[A]; Year joined the program: 
1996.

Country: Dominican Republic; Year joined the program: 1996.

Country: Ecuador; Year joined the program: 2000.

Country: Egypt; Year joined the program: 2001.

Country: El Salvador; Year joined the program: 1996.

Country: Ethiopia; Year joined the program: 1996.

Country: Estonia; Year joined the program: 1996.

Country: Gabon[A]; Year joined the program: 1996.

Country: Georgia; Year joined the program: 1997.

Country: Ghana; Year joined the program: 1996.

Country: Guatemala; Year joined the program: 1996.

Country: Haiti; Year joined the program: 1999.

Country: Hungary; Year joined the program: 2001.

Country: Indonesia; Year joined the program: 2001.

Country: Iran; Year joined the program: 2001.

Country: Ivory Coast[A]; Year joined the program: 1996.

Country: Jamaica; Year joined the program: 1997.

Country: Jordan; Year joined the program: 1997.

Country: Kazakhstan; Year joined the program: 1996.

Country: Kenya; Year joined the program: 2001.

Country: Kuwait; Year joined the program: 2001.

Country: Latvia; Year joined the program: 1996.

Country: Lebanon; Year joined the program: 1996.

Country: Libya; Year joined the program: 2001.

Country: Lithuania; Year joined the program: 1996.

Country: Macedonia; Year joined the program: 1996.

Country: Madagascar; Year joined the program: 1996.

Country: Malaysia; Year joined the program: 2001.

Country: Mali[A]; Year joined the program: 1996.

Country: Malta; Year joined the program: 2001.

Country: Mauritius[A]; Year joined the program: 1996.

Country: Moldova; Year joined the program: 1996.

Country: Mongolia; Year joined the program: 1996.

Country: Morocco; Year joined the program: 2001.

Country: Myanmar; Year joined the program: 1996.

Country: Namibia[A]; Year joined the program: 1996.

Country: Nicaragua; Year joined the program: 1996.

Country: Niger[A]; Year joined the program: 1996.

Country: Nigeria[A]; Year joined the program: 1996.

Country: Pakistan; Year joined the program: 2001.

Country: Panama; Year joined the program: 1996.

Country: Paraguay; Year joined the program: 1996.

Country: Philippines; Year joined the program: 2001.

Country: Portugal; Year joined the program: 2001.

Country: Qatar; Year joined the program: 1996.

Country: Romania; Year joined the program: 2001.

Country: Saudi Arabia; Year joined the program: 1996.

Country: Senegal[A]; Year joined the program: 1996.

Country: Sierra Leone[A]; Year joined the program: 1996.

Country: Singapore; Year joined the program: 2001.

Country: Slovenia; Year joined the program: 2001.

Country: South Africa; Year joined the program: 2002.

Country: Sri Lanka; Year joined the program: 1996.

Country: Sudan; Year joined the program: 1996.

Country: Syria; Year joined the program: 1997.

Country: Tajikistan; Year joined the program: 2002.

Country: Tanzania; Year joined the program: 2001.

Country: Thailand; Year joined the program: 2001.

Country: Tunisia; Year joined the program: 2001.

Country: Turkey; Year joined the program: 2001.

Country: Uganda[A]; Year joined the program: 1996.

Country: United Arab Emirates; Year joined the program: 1996.

Country: Uruguay; Year joined the program: 2000.

Country: Uzbekistan; Year joined the program: 1996.

Country: Venezuela; Year joined the program: 2002.

Country: Vietnam; Year joined the program: 1996.

Country: Yemen; Year joined the program: 1996.

Country: Yugoslavia; Year joined the program: 2003.

Country: Zambia; Year joined the program: 2002.

Country: Zimbabwe[A]; Year joined the program: 1996.

Source: IAEA.

[A] These countries are participating only in milestones 1 and 2 of the 
model project program.

[B] Belarus completed the program in 2000.

[End of table]

[End of section]

Appendix XI: France's System for Controlling Sealed Sources:

French officials told us that their system for controlling sealed 
sources has several key components, including stringent controls on the 
licensing and tracking of the sources. Distributors of devices 
containing sealed sources must be authorized to market such devices and 
must send monthly accounts of the movement of sources to the French 
government agency responsible for regulating sealed sources. End users 
must have a license covering each site where the sources are used, and 
the maximum duration of a license is 5 years. For items such as smoke 
detectors, the end user is not required to have a license, but the 
distributor must be licensed. Approximately 30,000 sources in use in 
France are tracked by the government, and there are nearly 5,000 
licensees. This number does not include very small sources like iodine 
grains used for medical purposes (there are about 80,000 such sources) 
and smoke detectors (for 400,000 buildings), which are exempt from 
licensing requirements for end users.

Sealed sources are subject to an annual inspection, and the end user 
pays for the inspections. The fee is a function of the number of sealed 
sources owned by the licensee. The inspection is designed to confirm 
that the sealed sources are properly accounted for, adequately secured, 
and safely used. In order to renew a license, the licensing agency must 
be provided with documentation of the annual inspections. If the end 
user is not inspected, it is subject to fines and may also be fined if 
the inspection shows that it is not adequately protecting devices 
containing sealed sources. Fines are based on health and safety 
infractions--not security violations--and the fines can be as high as 
about $15,000.

France has also established a system to control orphan sources that has 
three main components.

* End users are required to remove any source from service not more 
than 10 years after it was purchased.

* The company supplying the source to the end user is required to 
include disposal costs within the purchase price.

* All other companies in the supply chain agree contractually to take 
back the source after 10 years.

Under France's system, the company supplying--or distributing--the 
sealed source is required to ensure, through a financial guarantee, 
that funds will be available to pay for the disposal of the source in 
case the distributor goes out of business or files for bankruptcy. The 
financial guarantee is made either through an annual fee paid to an 
association of source distributors or by providing France's national 
waste management agency with a deposit. The association represents 99 
percent of all distributors of devices containing sealed sources in 
France. About 50 distributors are members of the association. 
Typically, the distributor makes an initial deposit of about $1,000 and 
then pays an annual fee on the basis of the total activity of sources 
it has distributed, the technology that the sealed sources are used 
for, and the value of the source. French officials responsible for 
administering the system told us that, initially, distributors did not 
like it because of the excessive amount of paper work involved. 
However, companies now see the value of the system.

Distributors also have the option of contracting with France's 
radioactive waste management agency for disposal of the sources if they 
do not want to join the association. Typically, the smaller 
distributors who choose this option do so because they may only supply 
one or two sources per year and do not want to share the risk of 
joining the larger association, where costs are spread among many 
distributors. Distributors who choose this option are required to 
deposit funds with the agency to guarantee that disposal costs will be 
covered. The deposit ranges from about $1,000 to several thousand 
dollars. When a source is returned, the agency returns the deposit 
(less an administrative fee) to the distributor. According to French 
officials, only 1 percent of the distributors of sources in France use 
this option because they believe it is more expensive than belonging to 
the association, which spreads the financial risk among all of its 
members. In addition, the cost determined by the waste management 
agency is based on the entire cost of disposal and takes into account 
inflation and other economic factors. To date, the waste management 
agency has not had to use the fund to dispose of any disused sealed 
sources. The agency has always been able to locate a source's 
manufacturer to take back the source or find another manufacturer 
willing to accept it.

According to French officials, when the system was first put into 
place, it posed a difficulty for distributors, who had to pass the cost 
of the financial guarantee to the end user. However, now that the 
system has been in place for many years, the additional costs are 
accepted, and users are pleased not to have to deal with disposing of 
the sources on their own. We were told that the process works well and 
has contributed to the reduction in the number of lost, stolen, or 
abandoned sealed sources. Currently, about one sealed source per year 
is orphaned in France.

[End of section]

Appendix XII: Comments from the Department of Energy:

Department of Energy 
National Nuclear Security Administration 
Washington, DC 20585

MAY 06 2003:

Mr. Bob Robinson:

Managing Director, Natural Resources and Environment:

General Accounting Office Washington, DC 20548:

Dear Mr. Robinson:

The National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) appreciates the 
opportunity to review the draft report, Nuclear Nonproliferation: U.S. 
and International Efforts to Control Sealed Radioactive Sources Need 
Strengthening (GAO-03-638). GAO was requested to determine (1) the 
number of sealed sources worldwide and how many have been reported 
lost, stolen, or abandoned; (2) the controls, both legislative and 
regulatory, used by countries that possess sealed sources; and (3) the 
assistance provided by the Department of Energy and other U.S. Federal 
agencies to strengthen other countries' control over sealed sources and 
the extent to which these efforts are believed to be effectively 
implemented.

NNSA has reviewed the draft report, and disagrees with GAO that "the 
department has not coordinated its efforts with NRC and the Department 
of State to ensure that a governmentwide strategy is established." 
NNSA, however does agree with GAO's recommendations that the program 
does need strengthening. NNSA further believes that placing the 
findings of the report in context is extremely important particularly 
since this program is in its "startup" phase. Therefore, we have 
enclosed specific technical comments and recommended revisions to the 
report. The Secretary and NNSA's Administrator are actively involved 
with the international community to address security of other 
countries' sealed sources as you recommend in your report.

If you have any questions, please contact Richard Speidel of my staff 
at 202-586-5009.

Sincerely,

Michael C. Kane:

Acting Associate Administrator for Management and Administration:

Signed by Michael C. Kane:

Enclosure:

[End of section]

Appendix XIII: Comments from the Department of State:

United States Department of State 
Washington, D. C. 20520:


APR 30 2003:

Dear Ms. Westin:

We appreciate the opportunity to review your draft report, "NUCLEAR 
NONPROLIFERATION: U.S. and International Assistance Efforts to Control 
Sealed Radioactive," GAO-03-638, GAO Job Code 360199.

The enclosed Department of State comments are provided for 
incorporation with this letter as an appendix to the final report.

If you have any questions concerning this response, please contact Ron 
Burrows, Bureau of Nonproliferation, at (202) 647-6425.

Christopher B . Burnham:

Assistant Secretary and Chief Financial Officer:

Signed by Christopher B . Burnham:

Enclosure:

As stated.

cc: GAO/IAT - Glen Levis State/OIG - Luther Atkins State/NP/SC - Warren 
Stern:

Ms. Susan S. Westin, Managing Director, International Affairs and 
Trade, U.S. General Accounting Office.

Department of State Comments on GAO Draft Report:

NUCLEAR NONPROLIFERATION: U.S. and International Assistance Efforts to 
Control Sealed Radioactive Sources Need Strengthening (GAO 03-638, GAO 
Job Code 360199):

The Department of State appreciates the opportunity to comment on the 
GAO's draft report on U.S. and International Assistance Efforts to 
Control Sealed Radioactive Sources. Since September 11, 2001, the need 
to ensure that radioactive material is kept out of the hands of 
potential terrorists is critical and improving the security of high-
risk radioactive sources that could be used in "dirty bombs" is a top 
priority for our nation.

Overall, we agree with the facts as presented in the report. Despite 
the early problems with interagency coordination noted in your report, 
we are currently working cooperatively with the Department of Energy. 
However, we are concerned that your recommendation to give DOE the 
responsibility of developing and coordinating a comprehensive U.S. 
government-wide effort to strengthen international controls over sealed 
sources could be interpreted as conflicting with our diplomatic 
responsibilities. The Department of Energy (DOE) is technically 
qualified and experienced in recovering and securing sealed sources and 
can assist other countries in achieving the same. However, the State 
Department is responsible for developing and implementing international 
strategies.

As noted in your report, the Department of State has been addressing 
the problem of unsecured sources for some time. For example, for many 
years, we have nurtured and funded IAEA programs in this regard. This 
includes aiding in the development of the IAEA Code of Conduct on the 
Safety and Security of Radioactive Sources and funding so-called Model 
Project, which helps countries to develop legal and regulatory 
infrastructures to control sources. In addition, despite the limited 
resources available to us for these purposes, we provided the first 
funding for DOE and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission efforts to 
enhance the security of sources (in Georgia and Armenia) through 
Freedom Support Act funds.

A comprehensive approach to controlling sources, will require a 
concerted diplomatic effort. It is imperative in this process that this 
be coordinated with our technical efforts. The security of radioactive 
sources depends on convincing states to change the fundamental ways 
that they manage and secure sources. While we can and should secure 
high-risk sources, we need to recognize that this is only a small part 
of the problem. We need to ensure those receiving assistance are 
themselves committed to securing sources as these sources continue to 
be used widely in commercial activities. Given the overall broader 
concerns behind this program, the Department of State has a unique 
perspective that is crucial to its success.

We hope that you will clarify your recommendation to delineate between 
DOE's technical programmatic responsibilities and State's overall 
diplomatic role in guiding international strategies for securing 
radiation sources. Please do not hesitate to contact us if we can be of 
further assistance.

[End of section]

Appendix XIV: Comments from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission:

UNITED STATES:

NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION WASHINGTON, D.C. 20555-0001:

May 1, 2003:

Mr. Bob Robinson:

Managing Director, Natural Resources and Environment United States 
General Accounting Office:

441 G Street, NW Washington, DC 20548:

Dear Mr. Robinson:

I would like to thank you for the opportunity to review and submit 
comments on the draft report, "NUCLEAR NONPROLIFERATION: U.S. and 
International Assistance Efforts to Control Sealed Radioactive Sources 
Need Strengthening" (GAO-03-638). The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory 
Commission (NRC) appreciates the time and effort that you and your 
staff have taken to review this important topic.

Overall, this report contains a wealth of information, however, it 
should have focused more on high-risk radioactive sources, rather than 
on all radioactive sources. It is important to note that the vast 
majority of radioactive sources in use in the U.S. and abroad are not 
useful to a terrorist. Additional security measures are not needed for 
such sources. Too often in the report very large numbers are used, for 
example, the number of sources lost in a year or the total number of 
sources in use in the U.S, or in Europe. Although these numbers are 
accurate, they can be misleading without the proper context.

The NRC, Department of Energy (DOE), and the International Atomic 
Energy Agency (IAEA) all recognize the need to focus security efforts 
on the sources of highest risk, those that would be most useful to a 
terrorist. In this regard, the NRC and DOE have recently identified the 
handful of radionuclides that are of greatest concern for potential 
misuse by terrorists and have identified action levels (activity 
thresholds) for these radionuclides. The NRC and DOE intend to apply 
additional security measures, such as national inventory controls and 
export/import controls, to those high-risk sources above the action 
thresholds. The NRC and DOE also continue to work aggressively with the 
IAEA in finalizing the IAEA's revised Code of Conduct on Safety and 
Security of Radioactive Sources and revised Categorization of Sources 
(TECDOC-1344). The Commission believes that Category I and Category II 
sources need to be the focus of additional security measures 
internationally. The report should make it clear that very few of the 
sources which are lost or stolen in the U.S. are high-risk sources. A 
large majority of those reported lost or stolen involve small or short-
lived radioactive sources which are not useful as a radiological 
dispersal device (RDD). In the U.S., only one high-risk source has been 
lost and not recovered in the last 5 years. However, this source 
(Iridium-192) would no longer be considered a high-risk source because 
much of the radioactivity has decayed away since it was reported stolen 
in 1999. In fact, the combined total of all unrecovered sources over a 
5-year time span would barely reach the NRC/DOE threshold for one high-
risk radioactive source.

We believe that the report should also note that NRC is continuing to 
move ahead with activities to increase the security of high-risk 
radioactive sources. For example, on March 17, 2003, as part of 
Operation Liberty Shield the NRC, with full coordination with the 
Department of Homeland Security, the Homeland Security Council, and 
other agencies, sent an advisory to all NRC and Agreement State 
licensees who were authorized to possess radionuclides of concern above 
the action levels. This advisory contained additional security measures 
which these licensees should implement to further protect the high-risk 
material at their facilities. NRC will soon issue an Order to large 
panoramic irradiators requiring additional security measures at those 
facilities. The NRC and Department of Transportation are working 
together to develop security measures for the transportation of large 
quantities of radioactive material and, as mentioned above, the NRC and 
the DOE are working in conjunction with the IAEA to finalize the Code 
of Conduct and Categorization of Sources documents.

We would also like to note that the report is written retrospectively, 
and although the recommendations presumably apply to future actions, 
there is no reference to the need for coordination with the Department 
of Homeland Security regarding future international activities. We 
believe that such coordination is important and recommend that the GAO 
consider integrating this into the report section on Recommendations 
for Executive Action. The enclosure provides additional specific 
comments on areas of the report we feel should receive clarification.

Should you have any questions or about the NRC's comments, please 
contact either:

Mr. William Dean, at (301) 415-1703, or Ms. Melinda Malloy, at (301) 
415-1785, of my staff.

Sincerely,

William D. Travers 
Executive Director for Operations:

Signed by William D. Travers:

Enclosure: Specific Comments on Draft Report GAO-03-638:

cc: Glen Levis, GAO:

[End of section]

Appendix XV: GAO Contacts and Staff Acknowledgments:

GAO Contact:

Gene Aloise (202) 512-3841:

Acknowledgments:

In addition to the individual named above, Kerry Dugan Hawranek, 
Preston S. Heard, Glen Levis, Judy K. Pagano, Terry L. Richardson, and 
Rebecca Shea also made key contributions to this report.

(360199):

FOOTNOTES

[1] Affiliated with the United Nations, IAEA's aims are to promote the 
peaceful use of nuclear energy and to verify that nuclear material 
under its supervision or control is not used to further any military 
purpose. 

[2] As the European Union's executive body, the European Commission has 
three main tasks: to serve as the sole initiator of policy, to act as 
guardian of the European Union treaties by investigating treaty 
breaches, and to supervise the implementation of European Union law in 
the member states. 

[3] The curie is a unit of measurement of radioactivity. In modern 
nuclear physics, it is precisely defined as the amount of substance in 
which 37 billion atoms per second undergo radioactive disintegration. 
In the international system of units, the becquerel is the preferred 
unit of radioactivity. One curie equals 3.7 x 1010 becquerels. 

[4] Radioactive material emits alpha and beta particles, gamma rays, 
neutrons, or a combination thereof. For example, americium-241 emits 
alpha particles and gamma rays; cobalt-60 emits beta particles and 
gamma rays; and strontium-90 emits only beta particles. Alpha particles 
are not a hazard outside of the body; beta particles can be more 
penetrating and cause radiation damage. Both, however, are generally 
most hazardous when ingested or inhaled. Gamma rays are an external 
hazard because they can easily pass through clothing and skin. Neutron 
particles are less common but can also cause damage.

[5] Under NRC regulations sealed sources may not be exported to certain 
countries and may only be exported to certain other countries in 
limited quantities. Sealed sources may not be exported to Cuba, Iran, 
Iraq, Libya, North Korea, and Sudan. 10 C.F.R. § 110.28. Sealed sources 
may be exported only in limited quantities to Afghanistan, Andorra, 
Angola, Burma, Djibouti, India, Israel, Oman, Pakistan, and Syria. 10 
C.F.R.§ 110.29. 

[6] The American International Health Alliance and its partners 
identify the health needs of local populations, develop strategies for 
meeting those needs, and implement programs and services to help local 
populations attain their goals. The equipment supplements voluntary and 
in-kind commitments of individual health care professionals, partner 
hospitals, and universities.

[7] IAEA's technical cooperation program is designed to provide its 
member states with technical assistance by providing equipment, expert 
services, and training that support the upgrading and establishment of 
nuclear techniques and facilities.

[8] The United States had also deployed a small number of radioistope 
thermoelectric generators in Alaska. 

[9] The International Basic Safety Standards are intended to ensure (1) 
the protection of individuals and the population against radiation 
exposure, (2) the safety of radiation sources in order to prevent 
accidents, and (3) the security of sources to prevent the relinquishing 
of control over their use. IAEA's Code of Conduct is a nonbinding 
document that applies to all radioactive sources that may pose a 
significant risk to health and the environment. It does not cover 
fissile materials used to construct weapons of mass destruction and 
sources within military or defense programs. The code is currently 
being revised to reflect member states' increased concerns about the 
security risks posed by sealed sources. 

[10] The five milestones are (1) the establishment of a regulatory 
framework, (2) the establishment of occupational exposure control, (3) 
the establishment of medical exposure control, (4) the establishment of 
public exposure control, and (5) the establishment of emergency 
preparedness and response capabilities.

[11] H.R. Conf. Rep. No. 107-350, at 431 (2001).

[12] Current U.S. policy is to restrict assistance in Belarus to 
humanitarian assistance and exchange programs with state-run 
educational institutions; Russia and IAEA will likely carry out any 
work to secure sealed sources in Belarus under the Tripartite 
Initiative. 

[13] The Cooperative Threat Reduction program is designed to help the 
countries of the former Soviet Union destroy and prevent the 
proliferation of nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons of mass 
destruction. 

[14] The mission of the Nonproliferation and Disarmament fund is to 
undertake high-priority, rapid response projects to halt the 
proliferation of and destroy or neutralize weapons of mass destruction, 
and limit the spread of advanced conventional weapons.

[15] The Health Physics Society is a scientific and professional 
organization whose members specialize in occupational and environmental 
radiation safety.

[16] Other countries that have pledged voluntary contributions to the 
Nuclear Security Fund include Australia, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, 
France, Greece, Iran, Ireland, Israel, Japan, the Netherlands, New 
Zealand, Norway, Romania, Slovenia, South Korea, Sweden, and the United 
Kingdom. The Nuclear Threat Initiative, a nongovernmental organization, 
has also pledged to contribute to the fund. 

[17] See Nuclear Nonproliferation: U.S. Efforts to Help Other Countries 
Combat Nuclear Smuggling Need Strengthened Coordination and Planning 
(GAO-02-426, May 16, 2002). 

[18] The IAEA database includes incidents since January 1, 1993, that 
involved radioactive material other than nuclear material. In most 
cases, the radioactive material was in the form of sealed sources, but 
some incidents involving unsealed radioactive sources or radioactively 
contaminated materials, such as contaminated scrap metal, have also 
been reported to the illicit trafficking database and are included in 
the statistics. 

[19] A U.S. state that has signed an agreement with NRC under which the 
state regulates the use of by-product and other materials within that 
state. Currently, there are 32 U.S. Agreement States.

[20] The Nuclear Suppliers' Group consists of 30 nuclear supplier 
countries and seeks to control exports of nuclear materials, equipment, 
and technology, both dual-use and specially designed and prepared.

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