Year
2023
File Attachment
finalpaper_322_0519091353.pdf873.76 KB
Abstract
In compliance with Comprehensive Safeguards Agreements (INFCIRC/153(corr.))[1] and Additional
Protocols (INFCIRC/540)[2], States Parties to the NPT are obligated to report to the IAEA all changes in
their nuclear material inventory and movement of nuclear material across boundaries of IAEA recognized
material balance areas (MBAs). Based primarily on these State nuclear material accounting reports, the
IAEA plans and conducts safeguards verification activities, including on-site inspections, audits,
measurements, and deployment of various safeguards equipment, to detect and deter
proliferation-related noncompliance.
The overarching issue addressed by this project is to ensure that data analysis capabilities are in place
to detect irregularities in State accounting reports, thus ensuring their accuracy and completeness—and
in the broader context, States’ compliance with safeguards obligations of the NPT. At a primary level, State
declarations to the IAEA can be only complete or incomplete, and either correct or incorrect, whether the
reason for mismatch is intentional or an inadvertent technical or human error. This project demonstrates
how analysis of dynamic correlations in nuclear material movement within the entire fuel cycle of a State
(viewed as a single virtual process) can reveal irregularities consistent with and potentially indicative of
clandestine proliferation activities. Using this concept of “cadence of operations” analysis, we have
modified the Cyclus nuclear fuel cycle simulator to produce State reporting data reflective of individual
MBAs and compatible with Code 10, the formal reporting format used between the States and the IAEA.
The resultant realistic fuel cycle simulations of a State produce synthetic high-fidelity State declarations,
which can then be subjected to various data analytical approaches to test sensitivities to spot different
types and magnitudes of disruptions. These could be either benign reporting mistakes or results of
deliberate deception. The ability to analyze dynamic correlations in declared nuclear material movement
across and within fuel cycles of States under nuclear safeguards enables the detection of mis-declared or
undeclared activities, which could indicate clandestine proliferation.