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The Guardian - AU
The Guardian - AU
World
Guardian staff and agencies

UN nuclear chief says situation at Zaporizhzhia plant is ‘serious’ but it can operate safely for ‘some time’

The head of the UN atomic energy agency has said the situation at the Russian-controlled Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant in Ukraine is “serious” and that ensuring water for cooling was a priority of his visit, adding that the station could operate safely for “some time”.

Rafael Grossi, of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), was inspecting the state of Europe’s largest nuclear plant following last week’s breach in the Kakhovka dam downstream on the Dnipro River. He said IAEA inspectors would remain at the site.

“What is essential for the safety of this plant is that the water that you see behind me stays at that level,” Grossi said in two tweets issued from near the station, including next to a pond that supplies water for cooling.

“With the water that is here the plant can be kept safe for some time. The plant is going to be working to replenish the water so that safety functions can continue normally.”

Grossi said the visit, his third to the plant in southern Ukraine since Russian forces occupied it in the first days of their February 2022 invasion, had gathered “a good amount of information for an assessment”.

A member of the IAEA walking near the Zaporizhzhia plant during an official visit of IAEA director Raphael Grossi
A member of the IAEA walking near the Zaporizhzhia plant during an official visit of IAEA director Raphael Grossi. Photograph: International Atomic Energy Agen/AFP/Getty Images

Russia and Ukraine have repeatedly accused each other of shelling near the plant, endangering its safe operation. The station’s six reactors are now in shutdown.

An IAEA spokesperson said gunfire briefly halted Grossi’s convoy as it headed back to Ukrainian-held territory after the visit, but the delegation was in no immediate danger.

A Russian energy industry official was earlier cited by Tass news agency as accusing Ukraine of opening fire at the convoy.

Earlier in the day, Grossi said it was unrealistic to expect Moscow and Kyiv to sign a document on the site’s security while fighting raged nearby.

The Kakhovka reservoir was normally used to refill the cooling pond adjacent to the plant but cannot do so now because of its falling water level after the breach, officials say.

Instead, the pond, which is separated from the reservoir, can be replenished using deep underground wells, they say.

Grossi was earlier quoted by Russian news agencies as saying the situation at the site was “serious”.

“On the one hand, we can see that the situation is serious, the consequences [of the dam’s destruction] are there, and they are real,” he said.

“At the same time, there are measures that are being taken to stabilise the situation.”

Grossi’s trip was delayed by a day for security reasons amid heavy fighting.

Russian forces captured both the nuclear plant and the Kakhovka hydroelectric dam shortly after President Vladimir Putin sent them into Ukraine in February 2022.

Grossi has repeatedly called for an end to fighting in the vicinity of the facility to avoid any catastrophic accidents.

Power lines have been repeatedly cut. There are diesel generators at the plant, which also has alternative water sources.

With Reuters and Agence France-Presse

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