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Political Worries Stall Bushehr Project

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  • Political Worries Stall Bushehr Project

    Moscow News, Russia
    21/09/2007 |

    Political Worries Stall Bushehr Project

    Last weekend Russia and Iran yet again exchanged accusations over the
    Iranian nuclear power plant in Bushehr.

    Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki said on Saturday that fuel
    for the plant, being built by Russia's Atomstroyexport in south Iran,
    was "ready, with the security seal of the International Atomic Energy
    Agency [IAEA]."

    A Russian delegate in the agency quoted by the RIA-Novosti news agency
    immediately dismissed the report and said that though the fuel is
    ready, the containers did not have the IAEA seal on them and thus
    still cannot be shipped to the power plant.


    The Moscow News talked to one of the Russian specialists working on
    the project and asked what was really going on at the station from a
    technical point of view.What we learned presents the situation from a
    different angle.

    Work in Bushehr started in 1975; initially the nuclear power plant was
    built by the German (back then - West German) Siemens concern.But
    immediately after the Islamic revolution of 1979, the Germans
    terminated construction and withdrew from Iran, leaving the unfinished
    work and taking all documents with them. Some time later the
    unfinished construction suffered several air strikes from Iraq and was
    in a rather sorry state when in 1995 Russia signed a contract to
    complete the project.

    According to our source, who wished to remain anonymous, this task was
    exceptionally difficult.Russian and German nuclear equipment did not
    match and Germans did not provide the documents for what they had left
    behind. The war damage to the buildings had to be assessed and
    repaired and there were no proper testing facilities in Iran. The
    major reason why Russian State Corporation Atomstroyexport agreed to
    do the job was the desperate need of cash - in 1995 the nuclear
    industry was recovering from a collapse caused by the sorry situation
    of the state financial system and lack of internal order after the
    Chernobyl disaster.

    Our source said that Iranian claims that the plant was 95 percent
    ready are basically correct, but it still needs tests which are
    complicated, time-consuming and expensive. Iranians are pressing for
    the fuel delivery and delaying payments, making testing even harder.
    What is more important, the source said, is that the Bushehr NPP
    suffers from a severe lack of qualified personnel. When work on the
    project started, Russian contractors realized that they were short of
    trained people to work at the site, especially engineers and
    assemblers. After the crisis of the Russian nuclear industry in the
    early 90s many Russian organizations in the sphere collapsed and the
    specialists that remained were old and unwilling to leave there secure
    places. Also, climate conditions in Bushehr are severe and many
    elderly people declined the offer for health reasons.

    Atomstroyexport then hired many men from other countries of the former
    Soviet Union, in particular Ukraine and Armenia, but they are not as
    good as Russian specialists and running the station still requires
    better trained staff, the Russian specialist said.

    AT POLITICAL LOGGERHEADS

    The nuclear fuel dispute is in reality a reflection of a more general
    discussion - whether there will be a Russianbuilt nuclear power plant
    in Iran at all. The most important part of the nuclear fuel assemblies
    is not the enriched uranium itself, but the containers in which it is
    kept, transported and loaded into the reactor. These containers are
    Russian know-how and the Russian reactor will only work with them.

    At the same time, when the fuel is delivered to the station, the cycle
    starts and the reactor must start working in six months after the
    delivery - otherwise the expensive batch of fuel will become useless
    waste. Therefore, when Russia finally delivers the fuel it will be a
    sure sign that the reactor will start six months later. Until then -
    the project remains suspended.

    According to our source, the reasons of such situation were purely
    political. Atomstroyexport is interested in completing the project as
    soon as possible. For Russians it is the only way to receive the
    delayed payments and, more importantly, to start working on several
    new reactors - the Iranian program is very extensive and they have the
    money for it. But the Russian authorities are under pressure from the
    international community, as many countries share the U.S. and Israel's
    fears that the working reactor in Bushehr would speed up the Iranian
    project to build its own nuclear weapons.

    Our source did not deny that Iran is now working on such a
    project. But he added that all works were secret and were not
    connected with the Bushehr reactor."We do not ask them about the bomb
    project and they obviously tell us nothing about it," the specialist
    said. At the same time, he added that the reactor in Bushehr can not
    be used for military purposes "even in theory."The fuel for it is only
    about 3.5 percent enriched and the level of enrichment for
    weapons-grade uranium must be over 90 percent. The used fuel is
    returned to Russia under IAEA control and if Iranians violate this
    agreement they simply would not receive new batches of fuel that they
    cannot produce themselves. "They may be claiming such intentions, but
    it is pure demagogy," our source said.


    On the other hand, if the nuclear energy program in Iran starts
    working it will give a major boost to the economy of the
    fundamentalist country and this is not what Iran's neighbors and the
    Western powers want. The program can also lead to the situation when
    20 working reactors will be spread over the country's territory. A
    major military operation in such condition becomes complicated as the
    fallout from destroyed reactors will cover the neighboring countries
    and the invading force will have to take the blame for it.

    The Russian expert told us that even these fears were possibly
    exaggerated. Iran is now facing international sanctions and has no
    materials or testing facilities for building these 20 blocks. New
    power plants can only be built by foreign firms and so far only
    Russians agree to do it and only under IAEA control.

    In recent statements Russian nuclear officials gave the earliest date
    for the start-up of the Bushehr reactor as fall 2008. Under the
    contract, Russia will run it for two years after the start, providing
    the operators and training Iranian specialists for the work. The first
    used fuel will be removed about six months after the start of the
    reactor and for safety reasons it will remain on the premises for two
    years - the used fuel cannot be used or even moved before that.

    But with time Iran receives more warnings over its nuclear
    projects. As Russia and Iran were exchanging accusations, France
    threatened Iran with sanctions and warned of a possible war. French
    Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner said in a radio interview that war
    could break out if Iran obtains nuclear weapons and said European
    leaders were considering their own economic sanctions against the
    Islamic country.

    Iranians reacted sharply, calling the statement hard and illogical and
    French Prime Minister Francois Fillon attempted to play down
    Kouchner's words on Monday. Fillon said that his country would do
    anything to avoid war, but did not mention sanctions.

    By Kirill Bessonov
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