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  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    China has consistently affirmed its full compliance with the NPT and its pursuit of a nuclear-weapon-free world (advocating the complete prohibition and thorough destruction of nuclear weapons).

    China has adhered to the policy of unconditional no-first-use of nuclear weapons (NFU).

    China has adhered to the policy of providing unconditional negative security assurances (NSA) to non-nuclear-weapon states (NNWS) and nuclear-weapon-free-zones (NWFZs).

    China has signed and ratified the Additional Protocol II to the Treaty for the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons in Latin America and the Caribbean, the Protocols II and III to the South Pacific Nuclear Free Zone Treaty, the Protocols I and II to the African Nuclear-Weapon-Free Zone Treaty, and the Protocol to the Treaty on a Nuclear-Weapon-Free Zone in Central Asia; shown support for the nuclear-weapon-free status of Mongolia and similar efforts in the Middle East.

    China has claimed to adhere to keeping its arsenal at the minimum level necessary for national security, though warhead numbers have grown and over 300 ICBM silos under construction have been discovered, raising concerns over China’s adherence especially when the calculation of “minimum level” is not explained.

    China has often emphasized NPT’s importance as the “cornerstone” of the non-proliferation regime.

    China has never threatened to use nuclear weapons against any country.

    China has never deployed nuclear weapons on foreign territory, nor provided extended deterrence to any other state.

    China has pushed hard to materialize the January 2022 P5 joint statement on preventing nuclear war and made extra efforts to add language such as “a nuclear war cannot be won and must never be fought” and the reaffirmation that none of the nuclear weapons are targeted at each other or at any other state.

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

    China has continued the above-mentioned commitment/policies, including the positive and negative ones:

    • China has proposed a P5-wide treaty or political statement on mutual NFU.
    • China has called for an international legal instrument on providing NSA to NNWS and NWFZs.
    • China has submitted working papers at the NPT PrepCom on all three pillars of the NPT.
    • China has made clear to take the lead in signing the Protocol to the Treaty on the Southeast Asia Nuclear Weapon-Free Zone.
    • China has increased the number of nuclear weapons at a faster rate based on mainstream estimations, raising concerns over its commitment to keeping its arsenal at the minimum level necessary for national security.
    • The 20th National Congress of the Chinese Communist Party delivered a report claiming that China will “establish a strong system of strategic deterrence,” raising concerns over its commitment to keeping its arsenal at the minimum level necessary for national security.

    Sources

    Chinese Delegation. “Statement by the Chinese Delegation on Nuclear Disarmament at the Third Session of the Preparatory Committee of the 2015 Review Conference of the Parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons.” May 2, 2014.

    People’s Republic of China. Implementation of the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons: Report Submitted by the People’s Republic of China. April 28–May 9, 2014.

    United Nations. NPT/CONF.2026/PC.I/WP.30 on Risk Reduction; WP.33 on No First Use; WP.39 on Peace and Development. Working papers submitted to the Preparatory Committee for the 2026 Review Conference of the Parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons.

    United Nations. “The Third Session of the Preparatory Committee for the 2020 Review Conference of the Parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT) Opens in New York.” April 30, 2019.

    Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the People’s Republic of China. “外交部官员:中国为推动五核国发表联合声明作出重要贡献 [MFA Officials: China Made Important Contributions to Promoting the Joint Statement of the P5 States].” January 4, 2022.

    Sun, Xiaobo. “Statement by the Director-General of the Department of Arms Control of the Foreign Ministry of China at the General Debate of the First Meeting of the Preparatory Committee for the 2026 NPT Review Conference.” August 2023.

    Geng, Shuang. “Remarks at the Thirteenth Conference on Facilitating the Entry into Force of the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty.” September 22, 2023.

    Sun, Xiaobo. “Statement by the Director-General of the Department of Arms Control of the Foreign Ministry of China at the General Debate of the Second Session of the Preparatory Committee for the 2026 NPT Review Conference.” July 2024.

    Sun, Xiaobo. “Statement by the Director-General of the Department of Arms Control of the Foreign Ministry of China at the General Debate of the Third Session of the Preparatory Committee for the 2026 NPT Review Conference.” April 2025.

    Ministry of National Defense of the People’s Republic of China. “China Firmly Supports Establishment of Southeast Asia Nuclear Weapon-Free Zone: Defense Spokesperson.” July 14, 2025.

    State Council Information Office of the People’s Republic of China. China’s Arms Control, Disarmament, and Nonproliferation in the New Era. White paper. November 27, 2025. Chinese Communist Party. “Full Text of the Report to the 20th National Congress of the Communist Party of China.” October 25, 2022.

    Kristensen, Hans M., Matt Korda, Eliana Johns, and Mackenzie Knight-Boyle. “Chinese Nuclear Weapons, 2025.” 2025.

    Kristensen, Hans M., and Matt Korda. “Nuclear Notebook: Chinese Nuclear Forces, 2021.” November 15, 2021.

    Kristensen, Hans M., Matt Korda, and Eliana Johns. “Nuclear Notebook: Chinese Nuclear Weapons, 2023.” March 13, 2023.

  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

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  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    China has closed down its nuclear weapon research and production facilities in areas including Chongqing and Qinghai.

    China is reportedly to have last produced HEU in 1989 and last produced separated plutonium in 1991.

    China has urged the two largest nuclear powers (the United States and Russia) to lead the way in making drastic and substantive cuts of their nuclear weapons.

    China has kept a qualitative posture that is more aligned with Action 3, such as the long-standing unconditional NFU, NSA, commitment to no nuclear sharing, no forward deployment, and no extended deterrence/nuclear umbrella arrangements.

    China has increased the number as well as the types of its nuclear weapons in contrast to reducing and ultimately eliminating all types of nuclear weapons.

    China has observed its commitment of a moratorium on nuclear tests, supported the preparation of the implementation of CTBT, and pledged not to be an obstacle for the entry into force of the CTBT.

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

    China has continued the above-mentioned commitment/policies, including positive and negative ones.

    China has declared to refrain from seeking nuclear parity and engaging in a nuclear arms race with any nuclear-weapon state.

    China has promoted NSA as a realistic and feasible nuclear disarmament measure, a “low-hanging fruit” in the field of nuclear disarmament.

    China has promoted a NFU treaty or a political statement on NFU as a way to help create a favorable international environment for further progress and achieve the objective of nuclear disarmament.

    Sources

    Chinese Delegation. “Statement by the Chinese Delegation on Nuclear Disarmament at the Third Session of the Preparatory Committee of the 2015 Review Conference of the Parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons.” May 2, 2014.

    Geng, Shuang. “Remarks at the Thirteenth Conference on Facilitating the Entry into Force of the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty.” September 22, 2023.

    Chinese Delegation. “Statement by the Chinese Delegation on the Issue of Negative Security Assurances at the Third Session of the Preparatory Committee for the 2026 NPT Review Conference.” May 7, 2025.

    “No-First-Use of Nuclear Weapons Initiative.” July 23, 2024.

    Arms Control and Proliferation Profile: China.

    State Council Information Office of the People’s Republic of China. China’s Arms Control, Disarmament, and Nonproliferation in the New Era. White paper. November 27, 2025.

  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

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  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    For (a) (b) (c) and (d), China has continued the above-mentioned commitment/policies from Action 1 and 3, including positive and negative ones.

    For (e), consider the legitimate interest of non-nuclear-weapon States in further reducing the operational status of nuclear weapons systems in ways that promote international stability and security, (f) reduce the risk of accidental use of nuclear weapons, and (g) further enhance transparency and increase mutual confidence:

    China has kept its nuclear forces at a low alert (de-mated storage);

    China has concluded a China–Russia launch notification agreement for ballistic missiles and carrier rockets in 2009, extended to 2030 as a risk-reduction/confidence-building measure;

    China has led the P5 Glossary working group, with the P5 explicitly identifying the Glossary and their common reporting framework as implementing Action 5(g);

    China has published two White Papers on arms control and disarmament (1995 and 2005).

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

    For (a) (b) (c) and (d), China has continued the above-mentioned commitment/policies from Action 1 and 3.

    For (e), (f), and (g):

    • China has kept its nuclear forces at a moderate state of alert, a slight increase from the past;
    • China has provided missile pre-launch notification to relevant states before its September 2024 ICBM test;
    • China has published a White Paper named “China’s Arms Control, Disarmament, and Nonproliferation in the New Era.”
    • China has submitted a working paper (NPT/CONF.2026/PC.I/WP.30) on nuclear risk reduction.
    • China has served as P5 coordinator again, working to promote greater communication about nuclear policies and strategic mutual trust among the five states.

    Sources

    Chinese Delegation. “Statement by the Chinese Delegation on Nuclear Disarmament at the Third Session of the Preparatory Committee of the 2015 Review Conference of the Parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons.” May 2, 2014.

    Kile, Shannon N., and Hans M. Kristensen. “Chinese Nuclear Forces, 2017.” 2017.

    Kristensen, Hans M., and Matt Korda. “Chinese Nuclear Forces, 2020.” 2020.

    Kristensen, Hans M., Matt Korda, Eliana Johns, and Mackenzie Knight-Boyle. “Chinese Nuclear Weapons, 2025.” 2025.

    State Council Information Office of the People’s Republic of China. China’s Arms Control, Disarmament, and Nonproliferation in the New Era. White paper. November 27, 2025.

    People’s Republic of China. “Nuclear Risk Reduction.” Working paper submitted by China. August 2023.

  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

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  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

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  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

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  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

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  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    China has supported and promoted CTBT on multilateral fora.

    China has maintained a moratorium on testing.

    China has consistently paid its contributions to the CTBTO Preparatory Commission in full and on time, and has been the second largest contributor since 2020.

    China has participated in CTBTO activities and development of the verification regime (IMS stations on Chinese territory).

    China has expanded the Lop Nur test site with the construction of buildings and at least one new tunnel, which, together with the lack of official explanation, raised concerns over its nuclear testing activities.

    China has expanded its contribution to the International Monitoring System:

    • As of 2014, China has undertaken the construction work of 11 monitoring stations and one radionuclide laboratory of the International Monitoring System, of which 6 seismic stations, 3 radionuclide stations, the Beijing radionuclide laboratory and the National Data Center in Beijing have been completed.
    • As of 2019, radionuclide stations in Beijing, Guangzhou, Lanzhou, and seismic stations in Hailar, Lanzhou have been certified and began real-time data transmission; China has accelerated the certification of remaining infrasound stations (e.g., Kunming).

    China has developed advanced verification technologies, including mobile Ar-37 measurement system (MARDS), and radioxenon sampling and analysis systems (XESPM). Contributed equipment and expertise to Integrated Field Exercise 2014 (IFE14).

    China has provided support for developing countries in CTBT capacity-building by hosting regional and international CTBTO training workshops.

    China has provided critical monitoring data during real-world nuclear events (DPRK tests, Fukushima).

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

    China has continued its previous commitment to and support for CTBT, and announced that China will never become an obstacle to CTBT’s entry into force.

    China has completed and certified all 11 of China’s IMS stations, feeding data to the international system.

    Sources

    People’s Republic of China. Implementation of the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons: Report Submitted by the People’s Republic of China. April 28–May 9, 2014.

    People’s Republic of China. Implementation of the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons in the People’s Republic of China. January 1–28, 2022.

    Geng, Shuang. “Remarks at the Thirteenth Conference on Facilitating the Entry into Force of the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty.” September 22, 2023.

    State Council Information Office of the People’s Republic of China. China’s Arms Control, Disarmament, and Nonproliferation in the New Era. White paper. November 27, 2025. Kristensen, Hans M., Matt Korda, Eliana Johns, and Mackenzie Knight-Boyle. “Chinese Nuclear Weapons, 2024.” January 15, 2024.

  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

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  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

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  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

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  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

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  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    China has expressed official support for the goal of FMCT and for early FMCT negotiations.

    China has actively participated in the useful discussions held by the relevant subsidiary bodies of the Conference on Disarmament on issues related to FMCT.

    China has participated in the UN preparatory group of high-level experts on such a treaty.

    China has organized a non-formal discussion on the FMCT during its Presidency in the CD.

    China has participated in the P5 coordination and the dialogue process of P5 with relevant countries.

    China is reportedly to have last produced HEU in 1989 and last produced separated plutonium in 1991.

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

    China has continued its support in principle and participation.

    Sources

    Chinese Delegation. “Statement by the Chinese Delegation on Nuclear Disarmament at the Third Session of the Preparatory Committee of the 2015 Review Conference of the Parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons.” May 2, 2014.

    People’s Republic of China. Implementation of the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons: Report Submitted by the People’s Republic of China. April 28–May 9, 2014.

    People’s Republic of China. Implementation of the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons in the People’s Republic of China. January 1–28, 2022.

    Arms Control and Proliferation Profile: China.

  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    Prior to 2017, China regularly reported its civilian plutonium stocks to the IAEA under INFCIRC/549. However, China has ceased submitting annual declarations of its civilian plutonium holdings to the IAEA under the voluntary INFCIRC/549 reporting framework since 2017.

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

    N/A: China has not declared HEU or plutonium as excess to defence needs, nor placed such material under IAEA verification.

    Sources

    International Atomic Energy Agency. “2021 Civilian Plutonium Declarations Submitted to the IAEA.” January 27, 2023.

  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

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  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

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  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

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  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    China has submitted national implementation reports for the 2015 and 2020 review processes (NPT/CONF.2015/32; NPT/CONF.2020/41), describing its disarmament, non-proliferation, and peaceful-use policies.

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

    China has proposed that the five nuclear-weapon States voluntarily negotiate the frequency of submitting national reports.

    Sources

    People’s Republic of China. Implementation of the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons: Report Submitted by the People’s Republic of China. April 28–May 9, 2014.

    People’s Republic of China. Implementation of the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons in the People’s Republic of China. January 1–28, 2022.

    People’s Republic of China. “Statement on Strengthening the Review Process: Specific Issues at the Third Session of the Preparatory Committee for the Eleventh NPT Review Conference.” May 9, 2025.

  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    China has agreed with other P5 states on a common reporting framework in 2014 and filed national reports according to the common framework.

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

    China has proposed that the five nuclear-weapon States voluntarily negotiate the frequency of submitting national reports and continue to submit reports under the common framework agreed upon by the five nuclear-weapon States in 2013, without imposing a universally applicable template.

    China has proposed that if the national reports of nuclear-weapon States are to be reviewed, reports from non-nuclear-weapon States under the “nuclear umbrella” should also be included.

    Sources

    People’s Republic of China. Implementation of the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons: Report Submitted by the People’s Republic of China. April 28–May 9, 2014.

    People’s Republic of China. Implementation of the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons in the People’s Republic of China. January 1–28, 2022.

    People’s Republic of China. “Statement on Strengthening the Review Process: Specific Issues at the Third Session of the Preparatory Committee for the Eleventh NPT Review Conference.” May 9, 2025.

  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

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  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

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  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

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  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

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  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

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  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

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  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    China has had an Additional Protocol in force since 2002 (signed in December 1998, and ratified in March 2002).

    China has actively encouraged others to follow suit and supported universalization of the AP as a new norm for verifying nuclear activities.

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

    China has continued to support the universal adoption of the Additional Protocol.

    Sources

    International Atomic Energy Agency. IAEA Safeguards. May 27, 2010.

    Li, Song. “Statement on the Peaceful Uses of Nuclear Energy at the Tenth NPT Review Conference.” August 8, 2022.

    Chinese Delegation. “Statement on Nuclear Non-Proliferation at the Third Session of the Preparatory Committee for the 2026 NPT Review Conference.” May 5, 2025.

  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

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  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

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  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

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  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

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  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

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  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

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  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

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  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

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  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

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  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

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  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

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  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

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  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

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  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

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  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

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  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

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  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

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  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

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  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

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  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

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  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

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  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    China has steadily increased financial contributions to IAEA’s Technical Cooperation Fund (TCF), which supports peaceful nuclear projects in developing states. By August 2022, China has become the second-largest donor to the TCF, having contributed a total of nearly $100 million to the fund, with an annual donation of over $10 million since 2020.

    China has helped build human capacity in NNWS by receiving more than 4,000 visits from other developing countries for the purposes of personnel training in science and technology areas, and sending over 3,000 Chinese experts to developing countries to provide services as of August 2022.

    China has signed inter-governmental agreements on nuclear energy cooperation with more than 30 countries to conduct mutually beneficial cooperation.

    China has voiced against restrictions that unfairly limit developing countries’ access to nuclear technology in the UN and IAEA.

    China has proposed a resolution on “Promoting International Cooperation on Peaceful Uses in the Context of International Security” which aims to balance states’ rights to access science/tech for peaceful benefits with non-proliferation and urges easier tech transfer while addressing security concerns. The resolution was adopted at the 76th session of the UN General Assembly.

    China has in October 2021 signed an agreement with the IAEA to strengthen South-South and triangular cooperation. Under the agreement, the IAEA is leveraging China’s wealth of institutional experience to assist developing countries’ efforts to achieve the SDGs. The agreement was the first of its kind for the IAEA with a national overseas development agency (CIDCA).

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

    China has continued to support the TCF. By May 2025, China has donated over $120 million to TCF.

    China has put China Atomic Energy Authority (CAEA)-IAEA-African Union cooperation on peaceful uses of nuclear technologies into the outcome document of the Beijing Summit of the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation in September 2024.

    China has continued its call for greater assistance to developing countries/Global South regarding the use of nuclear energy.

    China has signed key agreements with IAEA to deepen cooperation targeting the Global South, including in sectors like nuclear security, agriculture, healthcare, environment, and basic nuclear scientific research.

    China has committed to leveraging China’s nuclear research institutes and universities to train professionals from developing countries, thereby building human-resource capacity in the nuclear field globally.

    China has actively supported the IAEA’s “Ray of Hope” initiative, which expands cancer therapy capabilities in Africa using nuclear medicine, by providing various training workshops and scholarships.

    Sources

    International Atomic Energy Agency. “IAEA and China’s Development Agency Sign Groundbreaking Agreement to Support Developing Countries.” October 15, 2021.

    Li, Song. “Statement on the Peaceful Uses of Nuclear Energy at the Tenth NPT Review Conference.” August 8, 2022.

    Chinese Delegation. “Statement at the Thematic Discussion on Nuclear Weapons at the First Committee of the 78th Session of the United Nations General Assembly.” October 16, 2023.

    International Atomic Energy Agency. “IAEA DG Grossi in China: Nuclear Energy, Safety and Cooperation.” May 26, 2023.

    “核医疗点亮‘希望之光’——国际原子能机构放射治疗物理师培训班正式开班.” September 3, 2024.

    “核医疗点亮非洲‘希望之光’.” May 6, 2023.

    The Atomic Energy Scholarship Program of China, 2024. February 23, 2024.

    “China, IAEA to Deepen Cooperation for Global South’s Development.” April 10, 2025.

    People’s Republic of China. “Give Full Play to the Role of the NPT in Promoting Peace and Development in the New Era.” Working paper submitted by China. April 26, 2025.

    Chinese Delegation. “Statement on Peaceful Uses of Nuclear Energy at the Third Session of the Preparatory Committee for the 2026 NPT Review Conference.” May 9, 2025.

  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

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  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

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  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    China has conducted all activities in the Action 50 (which are also aligned with Action 53).

    China has assisted Ghana and Nigeria in converting their HEU-fuelled research reactor to LEU as part of the IAEA-coordinated “Research Reactor Conversion and HEU Minimization” activities.

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

    China has conducted all activities in the Action 50 (which are also aligned with Action 53.

    China has provided institutional hubs that extend IAEA’s reach and capacity-building, including: a nuclear and radiation safety centre designated as an IAEA Collaborating Centre in China’s “State Nuclear Security Technology Centre”; a collaborating centre at the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences for nuclear-techniques in food and agriculture; the China Atomic Energy Authority (CAEA) acts as a collaborating center for research, development, testing, and training in nuclear security detection and physical protection technologies.

    China has announced to open 12 nuclear research facilities to the world – including research reactors and advanced nuclear devices – to foster global scientific collaboration, which increases access for researchers from other countries, many of which are NNWS, to advanced nuclear research tools, boosting capacity development.

    Sources

    International Atomic Energy Agency. “Supporting Nuclear Non-Proliferation: Ghana Converts Research Reactor from HEU to LEU Fuel.” August 29, 2017.

    International Atomic Energy Agency. “Nigeria Converts Its Research Reactor from HEU to LEU Fuel.” December 20, 2018.

    International Atomic Energy Agency. “IAEA Strengthens Cooperation with China.” May 2023.

    “China Opens 12 Nuclear Research Facilities to Global Scientists.” September 18, 2024.

  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

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  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

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  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

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  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

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    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

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  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

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  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

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  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

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  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

    Sources

  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

    Sources

  • What has the NWS done so far (prior to the current Review Cycle)?

    What is the NWS doing on this action in the current Review Cycle?

    Sources