, Head of the Department of Nuclear Safety and Security
Lydie Evrard and Head of the Department of Safeguards
Massimo Aparo, that on 1 September 2022 started IAEA's first inspection of a nuclear plant in a war zone, at
Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant in Ukraine In 1946
United Nations Atomic Energy Commission was founded, but stopped working in 1949 and was disbanded in 1952. In 1953,
U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower proposed the creation of an international body to both regulate and promote the peaceful use of atomic power (nuclear power), in his
Atoms for Peace address to the UN General Assembly. In September 1954, the United States proposed to the General Assembly the creation of an international agency to take control of
fissile material, which could be used either for nuclear power or for nuclear weapons. This agency would establish a kind of "nuclear bank". By November 1954, it had become clear that the
Soviet Union would reject any international custody of fissile material if the United States did not agree to disarmament first, but that a
clearinghouse for nuclear transactions might be possible. From 8 to 20 August 1955, the United Nations held the
International Conference on the Peaceful Uses of Atomic Energy in Geneva,
Switzerland. In October 1957, a Conference on the IAEA Statute was held at the Headquarters of the United Nations to approve the founding document for the IAEA, which was negotiated in 1955–1957 by a group of twelve countries. Former US Congressman
W. Sterling Cole served as the IAEA's first Director-General from 1957 to 1961. Cole served only one term, after which the IAEA was headed by two Swedes for nearly four decades: the scientist
Sigvard Eklund held the job from 1961 to 1981, followed by former
Swedish Foreign Minister
Hans Blix, who served from 1981 to 1997. Blix was succeeded as Director General by
Mohamed ElBaradei of
Egypt, who served until November 2009. Beginning in 1986, in response to the
nuclear reactor explosion and disaster near
Chernobyl, Ukraine, the IAEA increased its efforts in the field of
nuclear safety. The same happened after the 2011
Fukushima disaster in Fukushima, Japan. Both the IAEA and its then Director General, ElBaradei, were awarded the
Nobel Peace Prize in 2005. In his acceptance speech in Oslo, ElBaradei stated that only one percent of the money spent on developing new weapons would be enough to feed the entire world, and that, if we hope to escape self-destruction, then nuclear weapons should have no place in our collective conscience, and no role in our security. On 2 July 2009,
Yukiya Amano of Japan was elected as the Director General for the IAEA, defeating Abdul Samad Minty of South Africa and
Luis E. Echávarri of Spain. On 3 July 2009, the Board of Governors voted to appoint Yukiya Amano "by acclamation", and IAEA General Conference in September 2009 approved. He took office on 1 December 2009. After Amano's death, his Chief of Coordination Cornel Feruta of Romania was named Acting Director General. On 2 August 2019,
Rafael Grossi was presented as the Argentine candidate to become the Director General of IAEA. On 28 October 2019, the IAEA Board of Governors held its first vote to elect the new Director General, but none of the candidates secured the two-thirds majority (23 votes) in the 35-member IAEA Board of Governors that was needed to be elected. The next day, 29 October, the second voting round was held, and Grossi won 24 votes. He assumed office on 3 December 2019. Following a special meeting of the IAEA General Conference to approve his appointment, on 3 December Grossi became the first Latin American to head the Agency. During the
Russian invasion of Ukraine, Grossi visited Ukraine multiple times as part of the ongoing efforts to help prevent a nuclear accident during the
war. He warned against any complacency towards the dangers that the
Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant, Europe's largest nuclear power plant, was facing. The plant has come under fire multiple times during the war. ==Function and structure==