Presented By: Nuclear Engineering & Radiological Sciences
NERS Colloquium: A Day in the Life—18 Years as an IAEA Safeguards Inspector
Robert Marek, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Details TBA.
Robert Marek, Senior International Nuclear Professional
Technical and Operations Experience spanning 38 years in all aspects of the nuclear fuel cycle including (but not limited to) Uranium Enrichment and Fuel Fabrication, Power Reactors, Material Production Reactors, Conversion and Reprocessing, Weapons Production, Waste Treatment.
In-country experience in 32 countries including Australia, Austria, Belgium, China, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Hungary, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Kazakhstan, Kenya, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Mexico, Netherlands, Pakistan, Romania, Singapore, Slovakia, South Africa, South Korea, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Taiwan, Uganda, Ukraine, United States, United Kingdom.
Program and Project Management Experience including Financing and Expenditure, Disciplined Conduct of Operations, Strategic Planning, Project Design and Construction, Program Execution and Human Resource Utilization.
First hand, in-country experience in legal and technical implementation and verification of obligations under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty involving interactions with foreign government representatives as well as facility operators.
Provided leadership to a highly disparate group of nuclear experts (15 different nationalities covering all aspects of the nuclear fuel cycle) who are assigned to technologically advanced projects and facilities - molding them into cohesive and effective teams who deliver results consistently and efficiently. Responsible for verification of Non-proliferation Treaty obligations in Japan, South Africa, Australia, Malaysia, China, Singapore, and a number of other countries. This includes management of Additional Protocol activities and evaluation of these States as a whole regarding their adherence to Non-Proliferation Treaty obligations which includes: 1) verification of non-diversion of declared nuclear material; 2) confirmation that declared nuclear facilities and material are not used for non-peaceful purposes and 3) evaluation of all information available to confirm there are no undeclared activities or materials in the country which would indicated any undeclared non-peaceful activities.
Robert Marek, Senior International Nuclear Professional
Technical and Operations Experience spanning 38 years in all aspects of the nuclear fuel cycle including (but not limited to) Uranium Enrichment and Fuel Fabrication, Power Reactors, Material Production Reactors, Conversion and Reprocessing, Weapons Production, Waste Treatment.
In-country experience in 32 countries including Australia, Austria, Belgium, China, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Hungary, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Kazakhstan, Kenya, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Mexico, Netherlands, Pakistan, Romania, Singapore, Slovakia, South Africa, South Korea, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Taiwan, Uganda, Ukraine, United States, United Kingdom.
Program and Project Management Experience including Financing and Expenditure, Disciplined Conduct of Operations, Strategic Planning, Project Design and Construction, Program Execution and Human Resource Utilization.
First hand, in-country experience in legal and technical implementation and verification of obligations under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty involving interactions with foreign government representatives as well as facility operators.
Provided leadership to a highly disparate group of nuclear experts (15 different nationalities covering all aspects of the nuclear fuel cycle) who are assigned to technologically advanced projects and facilities - molding them into cohesive and effective teams who deliver results consistently and efficiently. Responsible for verification of Non-proliferation Treaty obligations in Japan, South Africa, Australia, Malaysia, China, Singapore, and a number of other countries. This includes management of Additional Protocol activities and evaluation of these States as a whole regarding their adherence to Non-Proliferation Treaty obligations which includes: 1) verification of non-diversion of declared nuclear material; 2) confirmation that declared nuclear facilities and material are not used for non-peaceful purposes and 3) evaluation of all information available to confirm there are no undeclared activities or materials in the country which would indicated any undeclared non-peaceful activities.
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