Global Times

‘No nuclear safety, security concerns’ at Zaporizhzh­ia

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The Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) said on Monday that there were “no immediate nuclear safety or security concerns” at the Zaporizhzh­ia nuclear power plant in Ukraine despite intense shelling at the facility over the weekend.

The United Nations nuclear watchdog said in a statement that its experts at the Zaporizhzh­ia plant assessed the damage at the site earlier that day and found its “key equipment remained intact.”

“The status of the six reactor units is stable, and the integrity of the spent fuel, the fresh fuel and the low, medium and highlevel radioactiv­e waste in their respective storage facilities was confirmed,” the IAEA statement quoted its expert team as saying.

However, the IAEA said its experts “still observed widespread damage across the site” due to the shelling on Saturday evening and Sunday morning, described by the agency as “one of the most serious such incidents at the facility in recent months.”

The experts’ observatio­ns included damage to the plant’s condensate storage tanks and several impacts on the main road along the plant’s reactors, according to the statement.

Repair work for the damage is underway, the agency said, adding that there had been no further attacks on the plant on Monday.

The IAEA also said that its Director General Rafael Grossi had intensifie­d consultati­ons to establish a protection zone at the Zaporizhzh­ia plant following the latest attacks on the facility.

The Zaporizhzh­ia plant, one of the largest nuclear power plants in Europe, has been under the control of Russian forces since March.

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