DIPLODESK / index
CONF Conferences

(14th meeting) Review Conference of the Parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT)

At the 2026 NPT Review Conference (27 April - 22 May), States parties will examine the implementation of the Treaty's provisions since 2022, noting that, despite intensive consultations, the 2015 Review Conference and the 2022 Review Conference were not able to reach agreement on the substantive part of the draft Final Document.

Concluded · 1m 6 languages

Description

Plenary

The Eleventh Review Conference of the Parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT) will be held at United Nations Headquarters in New York, from 27 April to 22 May 2026. The President-designate of the Eleventh Review Conference is Ambassador Do Hung Viet of Viet Nam.

The 2026 NPT Review Conference is expected to consider a range of issues, including the universality of the Treaty; nuclear disarmament, including specific practical measures; nuclear non-proliferation, including the promotion and strengthening of safeguards; measures to advance the peaceful uses of nuclear energy, including safety and security; regional disarmament and non-proliferation, including the implementation of the 1995 resolution on the Middle East; measures to address withdrawal from the Treaty; and ways to strengthen the review process to improve its effectiveness, efficiency, transparency, accountability, coordination and continuity. In doing so, the Conference will also take into account the evolving international security environment and recent developments affecting the Treaty and the broader nuclear non-proliferation regime.

The NPT entered into force in 1970 and was extended indefinitely in 1995. The Treaty is regarded as the cornerstone of the global nuclear disarmament and non-proliferation regime. It was designed to prevent the proliferation of nuclear weapons, to further nuclear disarmament and to promote cooperation in the peaceful uses of nuclear energy.

Conferences to review the operation of the Treaty have been held at five-year intervals since the Treaty went into effect in 1970. While States Parties have consistently sought to achieve consensus on an outcome document, doing so has become increasingly challenging in recent cycles.

Full transcript en transcript

The 14th plenary meeting of the ten 26th Review conference of the parties to the Treaty on nonproliferation of nuclear weapons is called to order.
Excellencies, Distinguished delegates, we continue this morning our consideration of the revised draft outcome document, NPT slash 2026 slash CRP two slash rev two.
I have received a number of requests from states parties pursuant to Rule 43.1 of the rules of procedure to hold this morning's plenary meeting in private as we continue our discussion of the draft outcome document.
In the hope that this format may facilitate more interactive discussion, I would therefore seek the indulgence of the conference to hold this plenary meeting in such a format.
As you are aware, this would mean that only states parties can attend the meeting and it will not be webcast.
I wish to now formally put that proposal to the conference.
I hear no objection.
It is so decided.
I thank all of the international, regional, and non governmental organizations who have attended our work thus far.
Please allow the Secretariat a few minutes to switch the meeting room into a private closed setting.
This meeting is suspended.

Machine-generated · not human-reviewed · verify against the official record before citing or relying on this transcript

Session Summary Auto generated from session transcript

Synthesis hasn't been generated for this session yet.

The summarize pipeline runs after the English transcript is available.

Machine-generated · not human-reviewed · verify against the official record before citing or relying on this summary