Los Angeles Times

Energy worries multiply amid war in Ukraine

Blackouts hit areas around nuclear plant; Europe sees politics in gas pipeline cutbacks.

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KYIV, Ukraine — Ukraine and Europe were beset with energy problems as much of the Russia-controlled region that’s home to a crippled nuclear power plant suffered a blackout for part of Sunday.

Only one of six reactors at the Zaporizhzh­ia facility was connected to the electricit­y grid, and Russia’s main pipeline carrying natural gas to Germany remained shut down.

The fighting in Ukraine and related disputes over pipelines lie behind the electricit­y and natural gas shortfalls that have worsened as Russia’s war in Ukraine, which began Feb. 24, grinds on for a seventh month.

Both issues will take center stage this week. U.N. nuclear agency inspectors are scheduled to brief the Security Council on Tuesday about their inspection and safeguard visit to the Zaporizhzh­ia power plant. European Union energy ministers were slated to hold an emergency meeting Friday in Brussels to discuss the bloc’s electricit­y market, which European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen has said “is no longer operating.”

Much of the Zaporizhzh­ia region, including the key city of Melitopol, lost power Sunday.

But it was later restored, said Vladimir Rogov, an official in the Russia-installed administra­tion in Enerhodar, the city where the nuclear power plant is. To the southwest, power was also out in parts of the port city of Kherson, according to Russia’s Tass news agency.

Although Rogov said no new shelling of the area around the six-reactor Zaporizhzh­ia plant was reported Sunday, the effects of earlier strikes lingered.

The Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency said Saturday that the plant was disconnect­ed from its last main external power line and one reactor was disconnect­ed because of grid restrictio­ns. Another reactor was still operating and producing electricit­y for cooling and other essential safety functions at the site, as well as externally for households and factories through a reserve power line, the IAEA said.

Russian forces have held the Zaporizhzh­ia facility, Europe’s largest nuclear plant, since early March, with its Ukrainian staff continuing to operate it.

IAEA Director-General Rafael Mariano Grossi said he will brief the U.N. Security Council on Tuesday on a mission he led to the plant last week. The 14-member delegation braved gunfire and artillery blasts to reach the plant Thursday after months of negotiatio­ns to enable passage through the fighting’s front lines.

Without blaming either side, Grossi said his big concerns are the plant’s physical integrity, its power supply and the staff ’s condition.

Europe’s energy picture remains clouded by the war.

Just hours before Russian energy company Gazprom was due to resume natural gas deliveries to Germany through a major pipeline after a three-day stoppage, it announced Friday that it couldn’t do so until oil leaks in turbines are fixed.

That is the latest developmen­t in a saga in which Gazprom has cited technical problems as the reason for reducing gas flows through Nord Stream 1 — explanatio­ns that German officials have rejected as a cover for a political power play. Dismissing Gazprom’s latest rationale for the shutdown, Germany’s Siemens Energy — which manufactur­ed turbines the pipeline uses — said turbine leaks can be fixed while gas is flowing.

Von der Leyen blamed Russian President Vladimir Putin’s war for Europe’s energy crisis. Before the EU energy ministers’ meeting Friday, she said that electricit­y and natural gas prices should be decoupled and that she supports a price cap on Russian pipeline gas exported to Europe.

Natural gas is one of the main fuels used in electricit­y generation and is a major source of Russia’s income, along with oil exports.

On Ukraine’s battlefiel­d, Russian shelling hit the southern Ukraine port city of Mykolaiv during the night, damaging a medical treatment facility, the city’s mayor said Sunday.

Mykolaiv and its surroundin­g region have been hit daily for weeks. On Saturday, a child was killed and five people were wounded in rocket attacks in the region, Gov. Vitaliy Kim said.

In Kharkiv, Russian shelling late Saturday set a restaurant complex on fire, according to the region’s emergency service. One person was killed and two others were wounded in shelling in the region, Gov. Oleh Sinegubov said.

Pavlo Kyrylenko, governor of the Donetsk region, said four people were killed in shelling Saturday.

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