Office of the Spokesperson
Department of State
Washington, DC
January 8, 2015
The U.S. Government has contributed $1 million to the International
Atomic Energy Agency for a new project that will improve and streamline
efforts to diagnose the Ebola virus in Africa. Of the total U.S.
contribution, $650,000 is provided through the IAEA’s Peaceful Uses
Initiative and $350,000 through other extra-budgetary contributions to
the IAEA.
The IAEA’s project will provide high-quality training and
cutting-edge equipment based on nuclear science applications to teams of
virologists in 11 African countries—Cote d’Ivoire, Guinea, Liberia,
Mali, Mauritania, Niger, Nigeria, Senegal, Sierra Leone, South Africa,
and Uganda—to help them more quickly and safely diagnose emerging
diseases, including Ebola.
Since the launch of the IAEA peaceful uses initiative in May 2010,
the United States has contributed more than $50 million in the last five
years and allocated more than $45 million of this amount to specific
projects. This initiative, announced at the 2010 Nuclear
Nonproliferation Treaty Review Conference, reinforced the commitment of
the United States and other donors to IAEA activities that promote
peaceful uses of nuclear technology in areas such as human health, water
resource management, food security and agriculture, environmental
protection, and nuclear power infrastructure development. To date the
United States,17 other donor countries, and the European Union have
contributed approximately $77 million to the PUI, which funds IAEA
projects that benefit more than 120 countries. This is in addition to
annual voluntary contributions from member states, including the United
States, averaging more than $85 million to the IAEA’s Technical
Cooperation program.
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