Las Vegas Review-Journal

Fears for Ukraine’s nuclear plants

U.N. atomic watchdog director goes to Russia

- By Stephanie Liechtenst­ein

VIENNA — The U.N. atomic watchdog agency’s director said that he’s due to depart for a trip to Moscow on Tuesday for high-level talks with Russian officials to discuss the issue of nuclear safety in Ukraine.

Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency Director-general Rafael Mariano Grossi made the announceme­nt Monday, the first day of a regular meeting of the agency’s 35-nation board of governors in Vienna. There was no immediate confirmati­on of the trip from the Kremlin.

“The situation continues to be very fragile,” Grossi told reporters, referring to the Zaporizhzh­ia Nuclear Power Plant located in southeaste­rn Ukraine.

The safety of the nuclear plant, which is Europe’s largest, is “of tremendous importance in terms of internatio­nal peace and security,” he said.

Grossi said that it was “the intention” that he will meet personally with Russian President Vladimir Putin during his upcoming trip, but added that he would expect Moscow as the host of the talks to officially confirm it.

Grossi last met with Putin in October 2022.

Grossi visited Ukraine in February, and crossed the front line to visit the Zaporizhzh­ia Nuclear Power Plant in person as part of the IAEA’S efforts to prevent a nuclear disaster amid an ongoing war. He also held a meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.

He told reporters in Vienna that he considered it important to maintain a dialogue with both sides.

Grossi said that he expected to discuss “technical issues” related to “the future operationa­l status of the plant” in Moscow. He also said that if the six-unit Zaporizhzh­ia Nuclear Power Plant, which is currently in cold shutdown, is to be restarted, he would need to discuss “what kind of safety evaluation” will be made. He also said that he needs to speak about the issue of the external power supply lines, since what the IAEA currently sees is “fragile and thin.”

The IAEA has repeatedly expressed alarm about the Zaporizhzh­ia facility amid fears of a potential nuclear catastroph­e. The plant has repeatedly been caught in the crossfire since Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24, 2022, and seized the facility shortly after.

 ?? Vahed Salemi The Associated Press file ?? IAEA Director-general Rafael Mariano Grossi, seen in 2023, will leave for Moscow on Tuesday to meet with Russian officials over Ukraine’s wartime nuclear safety.
Vahed Salemi The Associated Press file IAEA Director-general Rafael Mariano Grossi, seen in 2023, will leave for Moscow on Tuesday to meet with Russian officials over Ukraine’s wartime nuclear safety.

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