Synergies Between Nuclear Security and Critical Infrastructure: National Legal and Regulatory Frameworks

Year
2024
Author(s)
Madalina Man - Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Jessica Burniske - Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Adom Cooper - Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Abstract

Nuclear reactors and other nuclear facilities should comprise part of a nation’s critical infrastructure assets. Key cross-sector interdependencies, in relation to energy, transportation systems, communications, emergency services, water, information technologies and others, result in inevitable synergies between legal frameworks for the security of nuclear facilities and legal frameworks for the protection of critical infrastructure. The protection of nuclear facilities against sabotage and other malicious acts is paramount in ensuring energy security and thus ensuring uninterrupted energy supply. The protection of other sectors, such as uninterrupted communications, secure water supply, and others, supports a safe and secure operation of nuclear facilities. Some countries rely on broader critical infrastructure frameworks to impose security requirements on nuclear facilities, or to achieve robust cybersecurity systems. This paper will analyze the interdependencies and synergies between the legal and regulatory frameworks for critical infrastructure protection and nuclear facilities’ security by comparing various national frameworks. The paper will also propose modalities to leverage the best practices and requirements from each framework towards energy security goals and stronger national nuclear security regimes.