Muscat Daily

Iran’s Bushehr nuclear plant back online after two weeks

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Tehran, Iran - Iran’s only nuclear power plant has been brought back online, its manager said early on Monday, after two weeks off-grid amid a power shortage and rolling blackouts across the Islamic republic.

The Bushehr plant’s shutdown was initially blamed on a ‘technical fault’ that required repairs followed by conflictin­g reports that it was a regular maintenanc­e operation.

The plant going offline came as Tehran and world powers in Vienna talks attempt to revive a hobbled 2015 agreement on Iran’s nuclear programme that was torpedoed by the United States.

It returns to the grid as major cities across Iran including the capital Tehran are experienci­ng frequent blackouts blamed on high summertime demand exceeding production levels.

The ‘technical fault’ that shut down the Bushehr plant ‘ was fixed’, Mahmoud Jafari, who is also deputy head of the Atomic Energy Organizati­on of Iran (AEOI), told ISNA news agency around midnight. That allowed the plant to be reconnecte­d to the national power grid and resume production.

Jafari said power generation had resumed on Sunday, and urged Iranians to ‘help’ the overburden­ed grid by minimising power consumptio­n as high temperatur­es are forecast in the coming days.

The plant on Iran’s southern coast and its 1,000MW reactor were built by Russia and officially handed over in September 2013 after years of delay.

Russian and Iranian firms started work on two additional 1,000MW reactors in 2016, with constructi­on expected to take ten years.

On June 20, the AEOI had blamed ‘a technical fault’ for the shutdown and said it had given the energy ministry one day’s notice before going offline.

It said two days later that the issue was with the plant’s ‘power generator’, without explaining further.

But Iran’s Foreign Ministry at the time described the shutdown as ‘routine’, saying it was carried out ‘once or twice each year’.

Record power consumptio­n

Bushehr plant chief Jafari said in late March that Iran was having a difficult time obtaining supplies to run Bushehr because of US sanctions, and warned of an imminent shutdown ‘if no solution is found’.

Tehran is engaged in talks with world powers in Vienna to revive the 2015 nuclear deal that gave Iran internatio­nal sanctions relief in exchange for limiting its nuclear programme.

But hopes for rising prosperity were dashed in 2018 when former US president Donald Trump unilateral­ly withdrew from the accord and reimposed punishing sanctions on Tehran.

Trump’s successor Joe Biden favours rejoining the accord and his administra­tion is indirectly involved in the Vienna talks to salvage the deal.

Bushehr going off-grid had raised concerns of worse blackouts after a string of power cuts in Iran blamed on heat, drought impacting hydro-electrical facilities, and surging electricit­y demand.

Iran introduced planned, rolling blackouts in May after Tehran and several other cities were hit by unannounce­d power cuts, sparking complaints from consumers and an apology from the energy minister.

A spokesman for Iran’s electricit­y company on Monday apologised for unplanned cuts the night before.

Mostafa Rajabi-Mashhadi said record consumptio­n of 65,900MW had exceeded Iranian power plants’ 55,000MW output and a ‘looming heat wave’ could exacerbate the situation, IRNA news agency reported.

Power cuts are not uncommon during Iran’s hot summers, when air-conditioni­ng use spikes. Adding to the problem, the country’s hydropower capacity has been hit by low rainfall.

A government report in May said precipitat­ion was down 34 percent compared to the long-term average, and warned of reduced water supplies for the year.

Power generation resumed on Sunday... urge Iranians to ‘help’ the overburden­ed grid by minimising power consumptio­n in the coming days

MAHMOUD JAFARI

 ?? (AFP) ?? The reactor building at the Russian-built Bushehr nuclear power plant about 1200km south of Tehran
(AFP) The reactor building at the Russian-built Bushehr nuclear power plant about 1200km south of Tehran

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