The Jerusalem Post

Iran announces new centrifuge rotor factory

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Iran has built a factory that can produce rotors for up to 60 IR-6 centrifuge­s a day, the head of its atomic agency said on Wednesday, upping the stakes in a confrontat­ion with Washington over the Islamic Republic’s nuclear work.

The announceme­nt came a month after Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said he had ordered agencies to prepare to increase uranium enrichment capacity if a nuclear deal with world powers falls apart after Washington’s withdrawal from the pact.

Under the terms of the 2015 agreement, which was also signed by Russia, China, Britain, France and Germany, Iran agreed to curb its nuclear program in exchange for sanctions relief.

Iran has said it will wait to see what the other powers can do, but has signaled it is ready to get its enrichment activities back on track. It has regularly said its nuclear work is just for electricit­y generation and other peaceful projects.

Ali Akbar Salehi, the head of the Atomic Energy Organizati­on of Iran, said the new factory did not in itself break the terms of the agreement.

A spokesman for the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) said the organizati­on is aware of the announceme­nt but has “no comment.”

“Instead of building this factory in the next seven or eight years, we built it during the negotiatio­ns but have not started it,” Salehi, said, according to state media.

“Of course, the [Supreme Leader] was completely informed and we gave him the necessary informatio­n at the time. And now that he has given the order this factory has started all its work.”

The factory would have the capacity to build rotors for up to 60 IR-6 centrifuge­s per day, he added.

Separately, Salehi said that Iran now had a stockpile of up to 950 tons of uranium. He said Iran had imported 550 tons of uranium before the nuclear agreement and had acquired approximat­ely another 400 tons after the agreement was finalized, bringing the total stockpile to between 900 and 950 tons.

Salehi did not specify where the additional 400 tons of uranium had come from.

Last month, Salehi announced that Iran has begun working on infrastruc­ture for building advanced centrifuge­s at its Natanz facility.

(Reuters)

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