Cracks
in Iran’s nuclear reactor facility following quakes – diplomats
Iran’s
only power producing nuclear reactor in Bushehr was damaged by
earthquakes which struck Iran over April and May, diplomats told AP.
Cracks have reportedly appeared in at least one section of the
structure.
4
June, 2013
Cracks
of several meters long have appeared in one concrete section of the
facility, claimed diplomats from countries monitoring Iran’s
nuclear program. Cracks however were not visible around the
highly-radioactive reactor core, they said.
Tehran
did not deny or confirm the report with Iran’s chief delegate to
the IAEA, Ali Asghar Soltanieh, telling AP: “I know nothing about
Bushehr.”
The
safety of the plant was thrown into question following the April
quakes, one of which was 7.7, and a subsequent moderate quake in
early May. Their severity caused concerns that protective vessels
which contain the radioactive material inside the reactors could be
cracked. Intense earthquakes can also knock out power and disable
cooling systems that prevent overheating and possible meltdown.
Following
the tremors, Iran stated that the plant is technically sound and was
built to withstand quakes up to magnitude 8.
Russian
nuclear specialists examined the facility after the April quake that
caused much damage in the neighboring Pakistan killing around 40 and
wounded hundreds.
"The
earthquake in no way affected the normal situation at the reactor,
personnel continue to work in the normal regime and radiation levels
are fully within the norm," an official with Atomstroyexport,
the Russian company which built the facility, told RIA Novosti.
A
doll lies on the rubble of a destroyed house as Iranian residents
inspect the damage in the town of Shonbeh, southeast of Bushehr, on
April 10, 2013.(AFP Photo / STR)
The
UN's International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) also said at the time
that Iran reported that earthquake caused no damage to the facility.
“Iran
has informed [the IAEA's Incident and Emergency Center] of the event,
reporting that there has been no damage to the Bushehr Nuclear Power
Plant and no radioactive release from the installation,” the agency
said in a statement, according to Reuters.
May’s
quake was 6.2 on the Richter scale, and was followed by a 5.6 tremor
the following morning. Its epicenter was 85 kilometers (52 miles)
southeast of the town of Minab, located in the southern Hormuzgan
Province off the Strait of Hormuz.
“What
I can say about this is that the center of the earthquake was away
from the Bushehr reactor which was designed and built in the 1970s
... in a way that qualifies it to withstand an earthquake of that
magnitude,” General Director of International Atomic Energy Agency
Yukiya Amano told the Bahrain News Agency after the quake.
Iran's
environmental protection chief also indicated that the country's
nuclear facilities were well protected.
Construction
of the plant began in 1975 by German companies, work stopped in 1979.
Iran and the Russian Ministry for Atomic Energy signed a contract for
its completion in 1995, when Atomstroyexport was named as the main
contractor, which was tasked with incorporating a pressurized water
reactor into the existing Bushehr building.
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