The Fukushima nuclear plant’s operator asserts that the seawater in the vicinity of the facility poses no danger.
Tepco, the company in Japan, announced their testing results one day after they let out treated contaminated water. This water comes from a plant that got destroyed by a tsunami in 2011.
The waste released into the Pacific Ocean has caused people to protest and angered Beijing.
Japan advised its people residing in China to behave inconspicuously on Friday, which includes speaking softly in public.
“When you go out, try to be careful and avoid speaking Japanese loudly when it’s not necessary,” advised the Japanese embassy in Beijing. It also advised people to be careful and aware of the area around the embassy if they are planning to visit.
Japan’s consulate in Hong Kong, which is under Chinese rule, has issued a notice about upcoming protests regarding the water release. This comes after around 100 people expressed their objections by protesting on the streets last Thursday.
Chinese officials criticized Japan’s choice to release the water, calling it very selfish and irresponsible, even though the United Nations’ nuclear watchdog has given the plan its approval.
Beijing, which buys a lot of seafood from Japan, stopped importing seafood from Japan after the water was released.
People are buying a lot of sea salt because they’re afraid it might become unsafe to use in the future.
China’s largest salt producer, the government-owned National Salt Industry Group, announced that it was increasing the amount of salt available because some people in certain areas of the country were rushing to buy more salt after the water was released.
However, Tepco stated that the levels of radioactivity in samples of seawater taken on Thursday afternoon were not causing harm and were considered safe.
“We have verified that the measured amount is the same as the calculated concentration and it is less than 1,500 bq/L,” said Tepco spokesperson Keisuke Matsuo during a press conference.
Becquerels per litre, also known as bq/L, is a way of measuring how radioactive something is. The safety standard for the country is 60,000.
Mr Matsuo said that the results were like our previous simulation and below the safety limit.
He said Tepco will keep analyzing every day for the next month and even after that, they will continue to analyze.
Japan’s environment ministry collected samples of seawater from 11 places on Friday. They will share the results on Sunday.
Over the next 30 years, more than a million tonnes of water stored at Fukushima will be released or let out.
Since 2011, Tepco has been adding water to cool down the parts that are left from three reactors. The dirty water is cleaned and kept in over 1,000 big tanks.
The person in charge of the plant said that the water has been cleaned to remove all radioactive substances except for tritium, and it is now considered safe.
The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) said on Thursday that the samples taken from the first amount of water that was made less strong to be discharged showed that the tritium levels were very safe.
Many scientists agree, but a group called Greenpeace, which focuses on the environment, says that the filtration process (called ALPS) does not work. They believe that a large amount of harmful radiation will be released into the ocean.
Tag: International Atomic Energy Agency
-
Discharge from nuclear facility in Japan safe – Test
-
Mines discovered at Ukrainian nuclear power station owned by Russia
Inspectors from the United Nations’ nuclear watchdog have discovered explosives at the occupied Zaporizhzhia site.
Volodymyr Zelensky warned earlier this month that Russian forces had there placed items “resembling explosives” on the roofs of houses to “simulate an attack,” citing Ukrainian intelligence.
Shortly after the conflict began, the largest nuclear plant in Europe was captured by the enemy. Since then, Kiev and Moscow have accused one another of plotting a false flag operation at the plant.
Rafael Grossy, chief of the International Atomic Energy Agency, confirmed experts ‘saw some mines located in a buffer zone between the site’s internal and external perimeter barriers’.
In a statement on Monday, he added: ‘The IAEA has been aware of the placement of mines outside the site perimeter and also at particular places inside.
‘Our team has raised this specific finding with the plant and they have been told it is a military decision, and in an area controlled by military.
‘Having such explosives on the site is inconsistent with the IAEA safety standards and nuclear security guidance and creates additional psychological pressure on plant staff…’
‘The team will continue its interactions with the plant.’
His statement did not detail how many mines were found or the precise positions, but stressed they were located at the periphery of the site.
IAEA experts said these were anti-personnel mines, which are normally placed under, on or near the ground.
They are ‘victim-activated’ and designed to detonate when someone steps on, handles or comes near them.
But the agency’s initial assessment was that any detonation ‘should not affect the site’s nuclear safety and security systems’.
Grossi has visited the plant three times since it was taken over but has been unable to clinch an agreement with Russian and Ukrainian authorities to set up a safety regime to prevent accidents.
-
Scientists growing seeds in space to aid Earth’s adaptation to climate change
Natural adaptations enable plants to flourish in difficult conditions. New features, such as drought tolerance and disease resistance, are produced through spontaneous natural mutations and can aid the plant in thriving. However, the rate of climate change on Earth is accelerating beyond the capacity of plants to adapt organically, putting many of the food-producing plants in danger.
A growing season may be extended or new crops may be cultivated due to changes in temperature, precipitation patterns, and frost, but agriculture is very vulnerable to the effects of changing climate conditions. Climate change also poses significant obstacles to farming.
Now, scientists are turning to the vastness of space for solutions.
In 2022, the joint laboratories of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) and the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) sent seeds on a trip to the International Space Station (ISS). The objective: to induce genetic mutations in the seeds through exposure to cosmic radiation and microgravity, that could help develop resilient crops capable of thriving in the face of the escalating climate crisis.
Seeds of a cereal grain called sorghum, and a type of cress called Arabidopsis, spent several months on the ISS before they were returned to Earth this April for analysis. Now screening will begin to identify favorable traits in the mutated seeds.
Shoba Sivasankar, head of Plant Breeding and Genetics for the joint FAO and IAEA Center of Nuclear Techniques in Food and Agriculture, explains that scientists are able to artificially induce plant mutations on Earth using gamma rays and X-rays.
However, the space environment, which offers a broader spectrum of radiation and additional extremes like microgravity and temperature fluctuations, has the potential to induce genetic alterations that differ from, or are induced much quicker than, those typically observed using terrestrial radiation sources.
“In space, the stress that will be encountered by an organism would be at the highest level and beyond anything that we can actually simulate on Earth,” explains Sivasankar. She adds that the radiation outside the ISS could be “more than a hundredfold higher” than the natural radiation possible on Earth.
By selectively breeding plants grown from the mutated seeds, Sivasankar and her team hope to create new crop strains.
“Firstly, we are working on improving crop yields and productivity of crops such as grains, legumes, roots and tubers – for example, cassava and sweet potato,” she says. “And then there is climate change resilience – for example resistance to increasing incidence of diseases, tolerance of climate phenomenon such as drought, or high heat, and increasing salinity of the soil because of saltwater intrusion or irrigation and evaporation.”
For decades scientists have been sending seeds to space. China has been using space radiation to induce genetic mutation in crops since the 1980s, exposing seeds to cosmic radiation via satellites and high-altitude balloons, which reportedly facilitated the production of giant sweet peppers and improvements in wheat and rice.
Many different varieties of seed have been aboard the International Space Station, while researchers at Michigan State University (MSU) are currently experimenting with the cultivation of seeds that were sent on a journey around the moon as part of NASA’s Artemis program.
The MSU scientists are exploring the effect of extraterrestrial conditions on plant amino acids – the building block of proteins – and evaluating how that impacts plant growth and development. The research could offer insights into the adaptive capabilities of plants in extreme environments, and help us understand how crops could potentially be grown off-Earth for long-duration space missions.
The private sector has also taken an interest in the impact of spaceflight on plant seeds. In the United Arab Emirates, StarLab Oasis, an Abu Dhabi-based startup, has announced plans to send quinoa seeds into space in the hopes of enhancing the genetic potential of a crop that holds promise for its nutritional value and adaptability in arid regions.
Sending seeds to space will help “sustainability, climate change, and food security on Earth,” StarLab Oasis’ co-founder Allen Herbert told CNN in 2022. “Space is a place where you have limited resources, limited energy, limited space. It’s the perfect place to do research and that same technology can be brought right back down to Earth.”
It’s that same hope of finding solutions for Earthbound agriculture that’s driving Sivasankar, and the IAEA says initial results from its research could be available later this year.
“I do feel hopeful for the future of food security, because technology is coming to the fore,” she says. “But food security is not just about genetics – we need a combination of all technologies, and everybody needs to come together and work together.”
-
Belarus has ‘already determined’ to use nuclear weapons against the West – Lukashenko
The West has received a nuclear warning from Alexander Lukashenko weeks after his nation began receiving Russian tactical nuclear weapons.
Targets for strikes in the event of aggression have already been decided, according to the president of Belarus.
He declared: “We are not going to attack anyone with nuclear weapons” at a meeting with foreign reporters at his Minsk mansion.
You can forget about using nuclear weapons as long as you don’t hit us. However, the reaction will be immediate if you act aggressively. The goals have been selected.
His stark warning comes as Ukraine is still grappling with the ‘serious threat’ at the Russian-occupied Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant.
The International Atomic Energy Agency has called for ‘full and immediate’ access to the site to examine for ‘explosives’.
Lukashenko, a close ally of Russian president Vladimir Putin, also gave an update about the whereabouts of Yevgeny Prigozhin.
‘As for Prigozhin, he is in St Petersburg. He is not on the territory of Belarus,’ he said.
Live Feed
Russia will hold illegal ‘elections’ in the occupied areas of Kherson Oblastin September, regional governer Yurii Sobolevskyi has confirmed.
The Ukrainian official cited the formation of a ‘Kherson Oblast election commission,’ set up by the Russian occupation authorities and urged locals not to take part in the process.
‘The occupiers set the dates of elections in the Kherson region — September 8, 9, 10. This was officially announced by the “head of the Kherson Region Election Commission” from the occupation authorities,’ he wrote on Telegram.
‘These actions have nothing to do with the election process and are absolutely illegal. Considering the way they already conducted the “referendum”, you can’t call it anything other than a circus and theater of the absurd.
‘I want to remind everyone that there will be responsibility for participating in the organization of this show. Each person will be held accountable.’
Russia’s central election commission also confirmed plans to hold illegal votes in the four partially-occupied Ukrainian oblasts of Kherson, Zaporizhzhia, Donetsk, and Luhansk.
The sham vote, which is expected to take place on the same day as elections in Russian regions, shows the Kremlin’s desire to present the areas as integral parts of Russia, according to the U.K. Defense Ministry.
The UK government has named Martin Harris as its next ambassador to Ukraine, starting in September.
A longstanding diplomat, Harris previously served as the British ambassador to Romania between 2010-14 and has worked closely with HM goverment on diplomatic missions in both Moscow and Kyiv.
He was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire in 2010, and a Companion of the Order of St. Michael and St. George in 2023.
Outgoing ambassador to Kyiv, Melinda Simmons, who was appointed to the role in 2019, will take another diplomatic service appointment, the government said in a statement.
Ukraine plans to abandon conscription and move to a professional army after the war with Russia to bring Kyiv closer to NATO standards, Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal said on Thursday.
After a meeting with top defence and security officials at which reforms known as ‘the Ukrainian shield’ were discussed, Shmyhal said the government would also continue to focus on supporting a further increase in domestic weapons production.
‘The primary task is to complete the transition of the Security and Defence Forces of Ukraine to NATO standards. In all aspects: from equipment and weapons to planning and analysis,’ Shmyhal said on the Telegram messaging app.
‘After the end of the war, Ukraine will abandon the draft as it existed before the war. The foundation of our defence will be a professional army.’
The United States is expected to announce it will give cluster munitions to Ukraine for its fight against Russia’s invasion, the New York Times has reported, citing an unidentified senior Biden administration official.
Ukraine says it wants to use the explosives to clkear minefields andstrike at dug-in Russians, but Human Rights groups have criticised the move and say the unexploded bomblets are a threat to civilians.
Cluster munitions, banned by more than 120 countries, normally release large numbers of smaller bomblets that can kill indiscriminately over a wide area, threatening civilians.
-
Japan to unleash radioactive water from Fukushima into the ocean
Following clearance from the United Nations‘ nuclear inspector for a contentious plan that comes 12 years after the Fukushima nuclear catastrophe, Japan will soon start discharging treated radioactive water into the ocean.
The environment minister stated in 2019 that there were “no other options” because to the limited amount of space available to store the hazardous material. The proposal to release wastewater has been in development for years.
The head of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), Rafael Grossi, came in Japan on Tuesday to tour Fukushima and provide Prime Minister Fumio Kishida the IAEA’s safety assessment.
But the UN’s approval has done little to reassure rattled residents in neighboring countries, and local fishermen who still feel the impact of the 2011 disaster.
Some have cast doubt on the IAEA’s findings, with China recently arguing that the group’s assessment “is not proof of the legality and legitimacy” of Fukushima’s wastewater release.
Here’s what you need to know.
The devastating 2011 earthquake and tsunami damaged the Fukushima nuclear plant’s power supply and cooling systems – causing the reactor cores to overheat and contaminate water within the plant with highly radioactive material.
Since then, new water has been pumped in to cool fuel debris in the reactors. At the same time, ground and rainwater have leaked in, creating more radioactive wastewater that now needs to be stored and treated.
The state-owned electricity firm Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO) has built over 1,000 massive tanks to contain what is now 1.32 million metric tons of wastewater – enough to fill more than 500 Olympic pools.
But space is quickly dwindling. The company says building more tanks isn’t an option, and it needs to free up space in order to safely decommission the plant – a process that involves decontaminating facilities, dismantling structures and fully shutting things down.
Radioactive wastewater contains some dangerous elements, but the majority of these can be removed from the water, said TEPCO.
The real issue is a hydrogen isotope called radioactive tritium, which cannot be taken away. There is currently no technology available to do so.
But Japan’s government and the IAEA say the contaminated water will be highly diluted and released slowly over decades.
That means the concentration of tritium being released would be on par or lower than the amount other countries allow, and meet international safety and environmental regulations, they say.
TEPCO, Japan’s government, and the IAEA also argue that tritium occurs naturally in the environment, from rain to sea water to tap water, and even in the human body – so releasing small amounts into the sea should be safe.
In the IAEA report, Grossi said discharging treated water into the sea would have a “negligible radiological impact on people and the environment.”
But experts are divided on the risk this poses.
The Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission says tritium itself is too weak to penetrate the skin – but can increase the risk of cancer if consumed in “extremely large quantities.” Meanwhile, the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission acknowledged that “any exposure to radiation could pose some health risk” – but added that “everyone is exposed to small amounts of tritium every day.”
Robert H. Richmond, director of the Kewalo Marine Laboratory at the University of Hawaii at Manoa, is among a group of international scientists working with the Pacific Island Forum to assess the wastewater release plan – including visits to the Fukushima site, and meetings with TEPCO, Japanese authorities and the IAEA. After reviewing the details of the plan, Richmond called it “ill-advised” and premature.
One concern is that diluting the wastewater might not be enough to reduce its impact on marine life. Pollutants like tritium can pass through various levels of the food chain – including plants, animals, and bacteria – and be “bioaccumulated,” meaning they will build up in the marine ecosystem, he said.
He added that the world’s oceans are already under stress from climate change, ocean acidification, overfishing and pollution. The last thing it needs is to be treated like a “dumping ground,” he said.
And the potential risks won’t just affect the Asia-Pacific region. One 2012 study found evidence that bluefin tuna had transported radionuclides – radioactive isotopes like the ones in nuclear wastewater – from Fukushima across the Pacific to California.
First, the wastewater will be treated to filter out all the removable harmful elements. The water is then stored in tanks and analyzed to measure how radioactive it still is; much of it will be treated a second time, according to TEPCO.
The wastewater will then be diluted to 1,500 becquerels of tritium – a unit of radioactivity – per liter of clean water.
For comparison, Japan’s regulatory limit allows a maximum of 60,000 becquerels per liter. The World Health Organization allows 10,000, while the US has a more conservative limit of 740 becquerel per liter.
The diluted water will then be released through an undersea tunnel off the coast, into the Pacific Ocean. Third parties including the IAEA will monitor the discharge during and after its release.
“This will ensure the relevant international safety standards continue to be applied throughout the decades-long process laid out by the government of Japan and TEPCO,” Grossi said in the report.
Fukushima 10 years later: Struggles to rebuild continue (2021)
The plan has met a mixed reaction, with support from some corners and skepticism from others.
The US has backed Japan, with the State Department saying in a 2021 statement that Japan had been “transparent about its decision” and seems to be following “globally accepted nuclear safety standards.”
Taiwan’s Atomic Energy Council said the amount of tritium being released is estimated to be “below the detection limit, and the impact on Taiwan will be minimal.” The island is located southwest of Japan.
But there is more resistance from Japan’s closer neighbors.
In March, a prominent Chinese official warned the wastewater could cause “unpredictable harm to the marine environment and human health,” adding: “The Pacific Ocean is not Japan’s sewer for discharging its nuclear contaminated water.”
The Secretary General of the Pacific Islands Forum, an inter-governmental group of Pacific islands including Australia and New Zealand, also published an op-ed in January voicing “grave concerns.”
“More data is needed before any ocean release should be permitted,” he wrote. “We owe it to our children and grandchildren to work toward ensuring that their futures are secured and safe.”
South Korean Prime Minister Han Duck-soo showed support for the plan in June, saying he could drink the wastewater after it had been treated to meet international standards, according to Yonhap – a statement ridiculed by the country’s opposition leader.
Many bodies, including the IAEA, point out that nuclear plants around the world routinely and safely release treated wastewater containing low levels of tritium.
A spokesperson from the US’ Nuclear Regulatory Commission, a government body, confirmed to CNN that “virtually all nuclear plants in the US discharge water containing low levels of radioactivity to the waterway on which they are located.”
“Tritium cannot be filtered out, but a member of the public would have to ingest a significant amount of it for there to be even the possibility of a health concern and radioactive water released is greatly diluted by the flows in the waterway,” the spokesperson added.
Many scientists aren’t reassured. Tim Mousseau, a biological sciences professor at the University of South Carolina, pointed out that even if this is common practice among nuclear plants, there just isn’t enough research into the impact of tritium on the environment and on our food items.
Richmond, from the University of Hawaii, added that “other people’s bad behavior” was not an excuse to continue releasing wastewater into the ocean. “This is an ultimate opportunity for (Japan and the IAEA) to change the way in which business is being done for the better,” he said.
There has been much more skepticism from residents in the region – prompting some shoppers to stock up on seafood and sea salt, for fear these products may be impacted by the wastewater release.
In South Korea, sea salt prices have jumped, with store owners saying their sales had doubled recently, Reuters reported. It cited a viral tweet in Korean that claimed to have bought three years’ worth of seaweed, anchovies and salt.
The Korean fisheries authority also said it would ramp up efforts to monitor salt farms for radioactivity, and maintain a ban on seafood from waters near Fukushima, Reuters reported.
Members of the Korean public have also staged protests against the plan, with some donning gas masks outside the Japanese embassy in Seoul.
Opinion is mixed among the Japanese public, too. A survey by Asahi Shimbun in March found that 51% of 1,304 respondents supported the wastewater release, while 41% opposed it. Earlier this year, residents in the capital Tokyo took to the streets to protest the plan.
In Fukushima, the prefecture where the disaster occurred, local fishermen have been vocal against the plan from day one. For many years after the meltdown, authorities suspended their fishing operations and other countries introduced import restrictions.
Even after the surrounding water and fish returned to safe levels, consumer confidence was never fully restored, and Fukushima’s fishing industry is now worth just a fraction of what it once was.
The release of wastewater could further damage Fukushima’s global and regional reputation – once again hurting fishermen’s livelihoods, many argue. Earlier this year, one told CNN: “It really feels like they made this decision without our full consent.”
-
‘Mad panic’ as Russian soldiers flee the nuclear power plant’s frontlines
Growing nuclear disaster worries are being expressed about the Russian-run facility in the Zaporizhzhia region.
Before Ukraine’s anticipated counteroffensive, officials deployed by Moscow have started removing residents from the adjacent town of Enerhodar, triggering warnings from the UN nuclear watchdog.
The largest nuclear reactor in Europe must operate safely, according to Rafael Grossi, director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).
He stressed that the general situation in the area near the site is now ‘increasingly unpredictable and potentially dangerous’.
‘I am extremely concerned about the real nuclear safety and security risks facing the plant,’ Mr Grossi said in a statement on the IAEA website. ‘We must act now to prevent the threat of a severe nuclear accident and associated consequences for the population and the environment.’
Mr Grossi said that while the operating staff remain at the site, the conditions for the personnel and their families are ‘increasingly tense, stressful, and challenging’.
The Russian-installed governor of the Moscow-controlled part of the Zaporizhzhia region said on Friday that he had ordered the evacuation of villages close to the frontline.
This order has led to ‘a mad panic and no less mad queues’ at the checkpoint into Crimea, said Ivan Fedorov, the mayor of Melitopol.
He wrote on Telegram: ‘Residents of Pologiv, Tokmak and Molochansk report that the occupiers are urgently organising the evacuation of the population to Berdyansk, calling it “aggravation of the fighting line”.
‘It is alarming that once again they want to forcibly evacuate, including children.’
It is thought the Ukrainian army will try to retake the Zaporizhzhia region, around 80% of which is held by Moscow, as part of its counter-offensive.
The IAEA has issued warnings previously about safety at the nuclear plant, which Russia captured in the opening days of its invasion last year.
Site director Yuri Chernichuk was reported by the watchdog as saying operating staff are not being evacuated and are doing all that is necessary to ensure nuclear safety.
-
UN watchdog: Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant is a Ukrainian facility
The Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant is considered to be a Ukrainian facility, the head of the International Atomic Energy Agency said tonight.
Moscow seized control of the plant in southern Ukraine in March, shortly after invading Ukraine, but Ukrainian staff continues to operate it.
Shelling and damage near the site, which both Ukraine and Russia have blamed each other for, have caused concerns over the safety of the plant.
On Wednesday, Vladimir Putin signed a decree declaring that Russia was taking over the plant. However, Ukraine’s foreign ministry said it considered Mr Putin’s decree “null and void”.
Rafael Grossi today visited Kyiv, the Ukrainian capital.
He said: “This is a matter that has to do with international law … we want the war to stop immediately, and of course, the position of the IAEA is that this facility is a Ukrainian facility.”
He was due to travel to Moscow for talks to meet Russian officials following his talks in the Ukrainian capital.
-
Physical integrity of plant ‘violated several times’, – Grossi
It is obvious that the “physical integrity” of the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant has been “violated several times”, the head of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) has said
Speaking to reporters after he returned to Ukrainian controlled territory on Monday, Rafael Grossi said that he continues to be worried “until we have a more stable situation” at the plant and explained inspectors were not assess whether the damage was deliberate or accidental.
“But this is a reality that we have to recognise and this is something that cannot continue to happen,” he added.
Both Russia and Ukraine have accused each other of attacking the plant and the area around it for weeks.
Grossi also talked about the conversations inspectors conducted with the Ukrainian workers at the facility, who he said were “calm” despite working military occupation, noting their “incredible degree of professionalism”.
He also repeated that the IAEA were seeking to have “continued presence” at the plant to continue their analysis of the “more technical aspects of what we saw”.
Source:BBC
-
Zelensky urges IAEA to call for Zaporizhzhia demilitarisation
Let’s hear from Ukraine‘s President Volodymyr Zelensky who, in his nightly address, welcomed the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)’s arrival at Zaporizhzhia – but called for swifter action from the agency.
Zelensky said it was “good” UN experts had made their first inspection of the nuclear power plant – “despite provocations by the Russian military” – before countering it was “bad that we have not yet heard the appropriate calls from the IAEA”.
Referring to a meeting he’d had with agency chief Rafael Grossi in Kyiv beforehand, the Ukrainian leader said the pair “clearly” agreed a need for “demilitarisation and full control by Ukrainian nuclear specialists” of Zaporizhzhia.
In the address, posted to Telegram, he also called out the agency for failing to allow “independent journalists” to accompany and document the mission – something he claimed was also pre-agreed.
Despite this, he said Ukraine was “hopeful” the mission would draw “objective” conclusions, adding:
Quote Message: When the Russian military finally… take away their weapons, ammunition, when they stop shelling neighbouring areas and cease their provocations, the Zaporizhzhia plant will be able to return to a completely safe functioning, which has always been the case under the control of Ukraine.” from Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky
-
UN nuclear chief warns Europe’s largest nuclear power plant is ‘completely out of control
Rafael Grossi, director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency, has issued a dire warning over the Zaporizhzhia plant in southeastern Ukraine.
The situation there is getting more perilous every day, he said, urging Russia and Ukraine to allow experts to visit the complex to prevent a nuclear accident.
“Every principle of nuclear safety has been violated,” he said. “What is at stake is extremely serious and extremely grave and dangerous.”
He pointed to shelling near the plant at the beginning of the war and continued accusations from Russia and Ukraine of attacks at Zaporizhzhia.
The plant is currently controlled by Russia but has retained its Ukrainian staff, leading to moments of friction and alleged violence.
The IAEA has some contact with staff but it is “faulty” and “patchy”, Mr. Grossi said.
He also said the supply chain of equipment and spare parts to the plant has been interrupted so “we are not sure the plant is getting all it needs”.
“When you put this together, you have a catalog of things that should never be happening in any nuclear facility,” he said.
Source: skynews.com