Russian UN Ambassador Vassily Nebenzia said IAEA officials could visit the site as soon as this month. Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba renewed calls for the IAEA to send a mission to the plant to as soon as possible to monitor the situation. In addition, vital monitoring equipment in the Chernobyl plant had been destroyed, damaged or stolen during the Russian military occupation. His team discovered a contaminated exclusion zone riddled with landmines - which stopped effective monitoring of the area. Grossi is also concerned that the Ukrainian staff who are under the command of the Russian occupiers at Zaporizhzhia are unable to properly carry out their duties and have faced threats of violence.īurnie is doubly concerned after a recent visit to survey the formerly Russian army-occupied Chernobyl nuclear plant, site of the world's worst nuclear disaster in 1986. "Is it true that there is explosives and other material stocked near the reactors?" he asked of reports that missiles and other weapons could be launched from the site, with counterattack impossible because of the extreme threat of an accident. " violation of every possible nuclear safety measure that you can imagine," Grossi told DW on July 29. Nuclear safety 'violated' by Russian occupiersĬoncern has been mounting that the plant is not being sufficiently maintained. "It's a strategic asset for the Russian military," Burnie said. Thursday's threat to shut down the plant aligns with the view that Russia might try to connect the plant to the grid in Crimea, which it occupied in 2014, and potentially to the Russian Federation, Burnie said.Īt its peak, the Zaporizhzhia plant alone supplied 10% of energy to Ukraine. "Artillery shelling of the Zaporizhzhia NPP is a terrorist act intended to destroy the plant's infrastructure, disrupt all of its power lines that feed electricity into Ukraine's power grid and cut off power in the south of the country," Energoatom wrote in a Telegram post on August 6. Ukrainian state electricity provider Energoatom has accused Russian occupying forces of attacking the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant with the goal of disconnecting it from the Ukrainian power grid. IAEA's Grossi: Situation at Zaporizhzhia 'not sustainable' Russia to disconnect plant from Ukrainian grid? But "this could change at any moment," International Atomic Energy Agency head Rafael Grossi told the UN Security Council on August 12. So far, no serious damage or radiation release has been detected and there is "no immediate threat" to the safety of the plant as a result of fighting. "Instead, urgent agreement is needed at a technical level on a safe perimeter of demilitarization to ensure the safety of the area." "The facility must not be used as part of any military operation," UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said in a statement after a meeting of the Security Council last week. About 500 Russian troops are reported to be currently at the site. Using the plant in this way violates the Geneva Convention, which states that particular care must be taken if "installations containing dangerous forces" are located near fighting. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy called Russia's actions a kind of "unconcealed nuclear blackmail." Russia has been widely accused of using the plant as a shield from which to launch attacks. "It's an incredibly serious situation," Burnie said. The plant's backup diesel generators and batteries remain insufficient to cool not only the six reactors, but large pools of highly radioactive spent fuel, Burnie said. If the remaining transmission line were to fail, it would leave the plant vulnerable to losing grid power, which significantly increases the risk of a meltdown. Three of the plant's four transmission lines were reportedly "down" as of last weekend, most likely because of attacks, Burnie said. He added that radioactive material could spread across Germany, Poland and Slovakia in the event of an accident. "I haven't seen any confirmed evidence whatsoever of any shelling by the Ukraine military on the plant itself," said Shaun Burnie, nuclear specialist at Greenpeace East Asia, who was in Ukraine last month to monitor the Chernobyl nuclear site.īut Igor Kirillov, head of Russia's radioactive, chemical and biological defense forces, said in a briefing that the plant's backup support systems had been damaged as a result of shelling. Kyiv has denied attacking the nuclear plant, which is the largest in Europe and has been occupied by Russian troops since March. Russia's Defense Ministry said it might have to shut down the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant after accusing Ukraine of shelling the facility.
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