The National - News

The Ukraine war risks Europe’s nuclear safety

▶ Experts say power cuts at the Zaporizhzh­ia nuclear plant are creating a ‘precarious’ situation

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When US president George W Bush and his Russian counterpar­t Vladimir Putin signed the Strategic Offensive Reductions Treaty, better known as the Moscow Treaty, on this day 21 years ago, the hope was that it would be another step towards reducing the risk of the superpower­s ever fighting a nuclear war.

Mercifully, such a conflict has not taken place, thanks in part to the high-level diplomacy that led to the 2002 treaty. It committed Russia and the US to cutting their strategic nuclear arsenal to between 1,700 and 2,200 warheads each. But it also formed part of a series of arms control treaties that kept an uneasy global peace – at least when it came to the use of weapons of mass destructio­n.

Despite these treaties, with nuclear energy – whether in the form of weapons or civilian nuclear power plants caught in the crossfire of a convention­al conflict – the consequenc­es of a miscalcula­tion are too enormous to contemplat­e. This is why the current fighting in Ukraine is perilous not only to its long-suffering population but also for the internatio­nal community. It is also another reason why efforts to end the war should be redoubled.

This urgency was underscore­d on Monday morning, when the Zaporizhzh­ia Nuclear Power Plant in south-eastern Ukraine lost all external power for several hours. The incident, said Rafael Grossi, head of the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency, underlined “the extremely precarious nuclear safety and security situation at the facility and the urgent need to protect it and prevent an accident”.

Europe’s largest nuclear power plant, which was seized by Russian forces days into the current conflict, has lost power seven times since the war began 15 months ago, the IAEA says. Jeopardisi­ng the power supply to such a critical piece of infrastruc­ture carries tremendous risks. Ukraine knows this better than most countries, given that it and its neighbours are still living with the after-effects of the 1986 Chernobyl disaster.

Amid reports of an imminent Ukrainian counter-offensive, observers will be watching the country’s nuclear infrastruc­ture closely, hoping that the fighting does not lead to a disaster.

Wars are unpredicta­ble, and the possibilit­y that a change on the battlefiel­d could lead to a nuclear accident or the misguided use of a nuclear device is one that should be foremost in the minds of the internatio­nal community. At the end of March, Izumi Nakamitsu, the UN’sundersecr­etary general and high representa­tive for disarmamen­t affairs, told the Security Council that the risk of nuclear arms being used is higher today than at any time since the end of the Cold War.

There is always the risk of the world falling into complacenc­y about a long-running conflict, and no one wants to talk up a potential catastroph­e, but no effort should be spared in trying to end the war. In the meantime, it is important for the internatio­nal community and nuclear agencies to remain engaged with both sides in this conflict to mitigate the risk of a disaster that would threaten not only Ukraine’s people but the lives of millions across the European continent.

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