Nuclear energy :

Overview of the Nuclear Industry up to date

  

The nuclear industry is undergoing a phase of renewal, though cautious, after a period of stagnation in the 2010s. It remains a strategic pillar for many countries, at the crossroads of energy, climate, economic and geopolitical issues.

  

Role in the Energy Transition

  

Nowadays, nuclear power is recognized as a low-carbon, dispatchable source of electricity capable of continuous production. In the context of slowing climate change while reducing dependence on fossil fuels, several countries consider nuclear energy as an essential complement to renewable energies (wind, solar), which are intermittent.

  

A Contrasting Global Landscape

  

  • Pro-nuclear countries: France, China, Russia, South Korea, and more recently, the United Kingdom and some Eastern European countries are currently investing in new reactors.
  • Retreat from or phase-out of nuclear power: Germany has closed its power plants, while other countries remain hesitant for political, economic, or societal reasons.
  • New entrants: Countries like the United Arab Emirates and Turkey are developing their first nuclear capacity.

  

Industrial and Economical Challenges

  

The area is currently facing some obstacles. 

  • ​High costs and budget overruns on major reactor projects.
  • Long construction times, which tend to hinder investment
  • The existing fleet are aging, particularly in Europe and North America, requiring extension or replacement programs.
  • Radioactive waste management, remaining a sensitive political and societal issue.

  

Innovations and New Technologies

  

One of the area's greatest hope lies in SMRs (Small Modular Reactors): smaller, standardized reactors that are potentially cheaper and more flexible. Moreover, research is also progressing on:

  •  safer, next-generation reactors,
  • fuel recycling,
  • and, in the longer run, nuclear fusion, which remains experimental.

  

Geopolitical and Sovereignty Issues

  

Nuclear energy is closely intertwined with energy sovereignty. Mastering the technology, uranium and the fuel cycle has become strategic, especially in a context of international tensions, added to a search for independence from energy imports.

  

Major Publications Regarding Nuclear Energy

There are many standards focusing on nuclear energy. The most prominent ones are RCC-M, the ASME Code, and ISO 19443.

You can read our detailed brochure in order to know more about the collection of standards related to nuclear energy.

The Certifications

  

All the documentation related to nuclear energy

DIN CEN ISO/TS 23406:2026-01

DIN CEN ISO/TS 23406:2026-01

Active Most Recent

Nuclear sector - Requirements for bodies providing audit and certification of quality management systems for organizations supplying products and services important to nuclear safety (ITNS) (ISO/TS 23406:2024, Corrected version 2025-07); German version CEN ISO/TS 23406:2024

€78.50

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DIN 25474:2026-01

DIN 25474:2026-01

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Measures of administrative character for conservation of criticality safety in nuclear facilities excluding reactors

€48.79

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DIN EN ISO 12800:2026-01

DIN EN ISO 12800:2026-01

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Nuclear fuel technology - Guidelines on the measurement of the specific surface area of uranium dioxide and plutonium dioxide powders by the BET method (ISO/DIS 12800:2026); English version prEN ISO 12800:2026

€63.27

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NBN ISO 20041-2:2025

NBN ISO 20041-2:2025

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Tritium and carbon-14 activity in gaseous effluents and gas discharges of nuclear installations — Part 2: Determination of tritium and carbon-14 activities sampled by bubbling technique

€166.00

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IEC 63374:2025

IEC 63374:2025

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IEC 63374:2025 Nuclear power plants - Instrumentation systems important to safety - Characteristics and test methods of nuclear reactor reactivity meters

€133.00

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NF EN ISO 7753, M60-481 (09/2025)

NF EN ISO 7753, M60-481 (09/2025)

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Sûreté-criticité - Systèmes de détection et d'alarme de criticité dans le cadre de l'exploitation

€107.33

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NBN ISO 7097-1:2025

NBN ISO 7097-1:2025

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Nuclear fuel technology — Determination of uranium in solutions, uranium hexafluoride and solids — Part 1: Iron(II) reduction/potassium dichromate oxidation titrimetric method

€92.00

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DIN EN ISO 16795:2025-11

DIN EN ISO 16795:2025-11

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Nuclear energy - Determination of GdO content in pellets containing uranium oxide by X-ray fluorescence spectrometry (ISO 16795:2024); English version EN ISO 16795:2025

€69.91

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NF EN ISO 16795, M60-460 (08/2025)

NF EN ISO 16795, M60-460 (08/2025)

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Énergie nucléaire - Détermination de la teneur de Gd2O3 par spectrométrie à fluorescence X dans des pastilles combustibles contenant de l'oxyde d'uranium

€65.33

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NBN EN ISO 12183:2024

NBN EN ISO 12183:2024

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Nuclear fuel technology - Controlled-potential coulometric measurement of plutonium (ISO 12183:2024)

€145.00

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NBN ISO 4917-1:2024

NBN ISO 4917-1:2024

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Design of nuclear power plants against seismic events — Part 1: Principles

€92.00

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NBN ISO 4917-6:2024

NBN ISO 4917-6:2024

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Design of nuclear power plants against seismic events — Part 6: Post-seismic measures

€58.00

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NBN ISO 4917-4:2024

NBN ISO 4917-4:2024

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Design of nuclear power plants against seismic events — Part 4: Components

€163.00

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NBN ISO 4917-3:2024

NBN ISO 4917-3:2024

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Design of nuclear power plants against seismic events — Part 3: Civil structures

€124.00

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NBN ISO 12749-1:2022

NBN ISO 12749-1:2022

Active Most Recent

Nuclear energy — Vocabulary — Part 1: General terminology

€37.00

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