Why the Promise of Pillar 3 is on Shaky Ground this NPT Review Conference

8 May 2026 • 
Publications, Reports and Papers
In an article for the Pugwash-Carnegie Policy Briefs on Science and World Affairs, VCDNP’s Sanaa Alvira argues that discussions on peaceful uses of nuclear technologies at the 2026 NPT Review Conference are likely to be more contentious compared to previous review cycles, with attacks on civilian nuclear infrastructure among the key divisive issues.
Share this:

Debates on advancing the peaceful uses of nuclear technology – the third pillar of the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT) – have traditionally been less controversial at the NPT review conferences than those concerning disarmament and non-proliferation. Constructive discussion on ways to expand access to peaceful uses was considered the “quiet success” of the 2022 Review Conference, and for most of the current review cycle, it was expected that the 2026 Review Conference would build on this success.

In a new commentary, Japan Chair Fellow Sanaa Alvira writes that, due the developments of the past year, there is now growing anxiety about States Parties’ ability to negotiate Pillar 3 issues in a constructive and forward-looking manner. US-Israeli attacks on Iran’s nuclear facilities, along with the US opposition to Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and references to climate change and gender in the context of peaceful uses, will likely complicate the discussions at the 2026 NPT Review Conference. Sanaa Alvira argues that attacks on civilian nuclear infrastructure are a particularly controversial issue that raises questions regarding the credibility of nuclear supplier states whose actions undermine the inalienable right to peaceful uses recognized in Article IV of the NPT.

Sanaa Alvira identifies areas where constructive engagement may be possible, particularly through cooperation on non-power applications of nuclear technologies and support for the International Atomic Energy Agency’s Technical Cooperation Programme. She also offers recommendations on how the 2026 NPT Review Conference could address the issue of attacks on civilian nuclear facilities.

The brief was published in the first edition of the new Pugwash-Carnegie Policy Briefs on Science and World Affairs.


Related Experts

Sanaa Alvira
Japan Chair Fellow

Related Content

Finland and Non-Proliferation: 50 Years of Implementing the NPT

19 November 2020 • 
On 17 November 2020, the VCDNP and the Radiation and Nuclear Safety Authority of Finland (STUK) held a webinar launch event for an extensive new report on Finland’s historical contributions to non-proliferation and nuclear safeguards.
Read more

Louis Reitmann Shares Ways out of NPT Deadlock at European Forum Alpbach

31 August 2022 • 
VCDNP’s Louis Reitmann joined a panel on Europe’s role in the NPT’s future with the Dean of the Paris School of International Affairs and former Stockholm Initiative Co-Chair Arancha González Laya.
Read more
1 2 3 34
cross
linkedin facebook pinterest youtube rss twitter instagram facebook-blank rss-blank linkedin-blank pinterest youtube twitter instagram