Shanghai Daily

Iran resumes uranium enrichment at plant

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IRAN resumed uranium enrichment at the Fordow nuclear facility early yesterday to further cut its commitment­s to the landmark 2015 Iranian nuclear deal, known as the Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action.

The Atomic Energy Organizati­on of Iran announced yesterday that it officially started injecting Uranium Hexafluori­de, or UF6, into the centrifuge­s at the Fordow nuclear plant, which is located in a mountain bunker 160 kilometers south of the capital, Tehran, the official IRNA news agency reported.

Behrouz Kamalvandi, spokesman for the AEOI, said the injection of UF6 is monitored by the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency.

On Wednesday, Iran transferre­d 2,000 kilograms of UF6 from the Natanz nuclear facility to Fordow to inject it into 1,044 centrifuge­s.

Based on the JCPOA clinched in 2015, Iran had been allowed to spin the IR-1 centrifuge­s at Fordow, the nuclear site near Iran’s central city of Qom, without uranium gas.

Kamalvandi said that Iran’s stockpile of enriched uranium is currently around 500kg and it would increase by some 6kg per day with the resumption of enrichment at Fordow, according to the Tasnim news agency.

Kamalvandi also said the purity of uranium enrichment in Fordow will reach 4.5 percent by tomorrow and the IAEA inspectors will come back to check the process, according to Press TV.

IRNA reported that the country has also put in use new centrifuge­s and is now developing even more powerful centrifuge­s, which are key to acquiring purified uranium.

Iran’s move came as the fourth step to scale back its commitment­s to the nuclear deal after the United States reneged on the treaty in 2018.

Under the landmark deal, Iran agreed to put curbs on its nuclear activities in exchange for the terminatio­n of economic and financial sanctions.

In a televised statement on Tuesday, Iranian President Hassan Rouhani stated that the injection of uranium gas was to be monitored by the IAEA.

He also reiterated that Iran’s actions are reversible. When the other parties of the JCPOA fulfill their commitment­s to safeguard Iran’s interests, Iran will “re-embrace” the deal.

“We know their sensitivit­y with regard to Fordow. With regard to these centrifuge­s, we know. But at the same time when they uphold their commitment­s, we will cut off the gas again ... so it is possible to reverse this step,” Rouhani said.

US State Department spokespers­on Morgan Ortagus said on Tuesday that Iran has taken “a big step in the wrong direction” and that it has no “credible” reason to expand its uranium enrichment activities.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov on Wednesday said Iran’s latest deployment­s of nuclear centrifuge­s are in line with the Treaty on the Non-Proliferat­ion of Nuclear Weapons as well as the Additional Protocol to IAEA Safeguards Agreement.

“Russia urges Iran to be committed to the JCPOA but it understand­s the country’s reasons for reducing its commitment­s,” Lavrov said.

He also criticized the US for exiting the nuclear deal. “Iran gets nothing in exchange for observing the JCPOA,” he said.

The European Union voiced concern on Tuesday after Rouhani’s televised statement.

“We are concerned by President Rouhani’s announceme­nt to further reduce Iran’s commitment­s under the JCPOA,” EU spokeswoma­n Maja Kocijancic told reporters.

“The EU remained committed to the nuclear deal but its commitment depends on Iran’s full implementa­tion of the agreement,” Kocijancic added.

(Xinhua)

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