1 / 12

Criteria for IEC Standards

Criteria for IEC Standards. Gary Johnson Chairman SC45A kg6un@mac.com. IEC Standards must be useable in all SC45A Member States. Argentina Belgium Canada China Czech Republic Egypt Finland France Italy Japan Korea. Netherlands Norway Pakistan Romania Russia South Africa

branxton
Télécharger la présentation

Criteria for IEC Standards

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Criteria for IEC Standards Gary Johnson Chairman SC45A kg6un@mac.com

  2. IEC Standards must be useable in all SC45A Member States • Argentina • Belgium • Canada • China • Czech Republic • Egypt • Finland • France • Italy • Japan • Korea • Netherlands • Norway • Pakistan • Romania • Russia • South Africa • Spain • Sweden • Ukraine • UK • US

  3. To make standards useful in all of these states standards must: Technical issues • Be technically acceptable to the Member States • Be NPP technology neutral • Or explicitly restricted to specific type of plant or plants • Fit the regulatory environment of all Member States • Use normative references that are accepted by all Member States • Use terminology that has been accepted by Member States and that is consistently applied across the set of standards. Framework Issues

  4. IEC standards must be technically acceptable to the Member States • Technical agreement is reached through the working groups. • Technical agreement is formally endorsed by the vote of National Committees

  5. IEC standards should be plant technology neutral* BWR GE BWR Toshiba BWR Hitachi BWR ABWR Asea-Atom BWR KWU BWR LMR BN-600 Gas reactor AGR PHWR CANDU Siemens PHWR • I&C Technology • “Analog” • Computer-Based • FPGA Based Much variation within these categories • PWR • FramatomePWR • CPR-1000 • CNP-600 • EPR • VVER-1000 • VVER-440 • Westinghouse PWR • Mitsubishi PWR • CNP-300 • CE PWR • OPR-1000 • APR-1400 • AP-1000 • Siemens PWR • KWU-PWR • B&W PWR *or explicitly state the plant technologies to which they apply

  6. Achieving technology neutral standards • Working groups typically include members who are familiar with most of these designs • Formal review by National Committees is expected to consider how the standards apply to the designs used in their country • Scope of a standard may be limited to one or a few technologies

  7. IEC standards must fit the regulatory environment of all member states • There are many different regulatory environments, for example: • US • Specific regulations and extensive guidance • UK • General regulations and high level review guidance • France • General regulations and TSO technical review • Russia • Specific regulations but no published review guidance • Ukraine • Regulations based upon Russian model, I&C requirements based upon IAEA NS-G-1.3 We need a reference set of regulatory principles, but 1) the principles of a single Regulator won’t work and 2) it is impossible to merge the requirements of all regulators

  8. Only IAEA requirements documents been endorsed by all member states • For NPP I&C the most significant IAEA requirements are • SSR 2/1, Safety of Nuclear Power Plants: Design • NS-R-3, Safety of Nuclear Power Plants: Operation • GS-R-3, The Management System for Facilities and Operations • Management systems include the definition and implementation of quality assurance activities • NS-G-1.3 plays the role of IEEE 603 • Different scopes (important to safety vs safety)

  9. Achieving consistency between IAEA and Member State regulatory environment • Ensuring consistency with Member State practices is the job of three review groups • Nuclear Safety Standards Committee (NUSSC) • http://www-ns.iaea.org/committees/default.asp?s=5&l=37 • Committee on Safety Standards (CSS) • Same as above • IAEA Board of Governors • http://www.iaea.org/About/Policy/Board/ • WENRA Safety Reference Levels are based upon the IAEA Safety Requirements. • WENRA is cited in the European Directive on Nuclear Safety and Waste • http://eur-lex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/LexUriServ.do?uri=OJ:L:2009:172:0018:0022:EN:PDF

  10. IEC standards use normative references that are accepted by all Member States • Three sets of standard document are accepted by all member states • IEC • ISO • IAEA

  11. IEC standards use terminology that is commonly understood by all Member States • IAEA, IEC, and ISO have terminology that has been accepted by all member states • IAEA Safety Glossary • http://www-pub.iaea.org/MTCD/publications/PDF/Pub1290_web.pdf • SC45A Safety Glossary • http://std.iec.ch/terms/terms.nsf/ByTC?OpenView&Count=-1&RestrictToCategory=45A • IEC International Electrotechncal Vocabulary • http://www.electropedia.org/IEC Glossary of Terms • ISO Concept Database • http://www.iso.org/obp/ui/

  12. Achieving a consistent use of terminology • SC45A takes the IAEA Safety Glossary as the authority for nuclear safety terms • In exceptional cases SC45A may adapt the IAEA definition, and recommend changes to IAEA • Existing definitions in the SC45A glossary are used to ensure consistency • SC45A takes the IEV and the ISO concept database as sources of terminology that are not nuclear I&C specific • Avoid new definitions where possible • Draft standards are reviewed against this policy.

More Related