UN nuclear watchdog says Russia has sent nuclear specialists to captured plant in Zaporizhzhya Six power units generate 40-42 billion kWh of electricity, making the Zaporizhzhya Nuclear Power Plant. (Dmytro Smolyenko/Ukrinform/Zuma Press/TNS)
This article was originally published by Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty and is reprinted with permission.
The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) has said that it has been informed by Kyiv that Russia has sent nuclear specialists to help monitor the Zaporizhzhya power plant in Ukraine’s southeast.
The nuclear plant, which is under Russian control but still operated by Ukrainian staff amid heavy fighting between Russian and Ukrainian forces, has been a source of concern for the UN’s nuclear watchdog.
IAEA chief Rafael Mariano Grossi said in an April 29 statement that Ukrainian staffers at the plant, which was captured by Russian forces on March 4, are working “under incredible pressure.” Citing Ukrainian officials, the IAEA said that eight representatives of the Russian state nuclear concern Rosenergoatom had been sent to the Zaporizhzhya facility.
Russian forces were accused by Kyiv of deliberately attacking the plant’s six nuclear reactors, causing a fire and raising fears that the action against Ukraine’s largest nuclear facility could lead to a global catastrophe akin to Soviet Ukraine’s infamous Chernobyl disaster.
Shortly after Moscow’s February 24 invasion of Ukraine, Russian forces captured the Chernobyl nuclear facility north of Kyiv. The plant was fired upon during the military action and led to reports that Russian soldiers had stirred up contaminated soil and may have suffered radiation damage.
Russian forces evacuated the Chernobyl plant in late March.
Ukraine has four nuclear power plants, which altogether have 15 reactors in operation.