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European bank expresses concern about Chornobyl amid Ukrainian warnings

Click to play video: 'Concerns rise about Ukraine’s Chornobyl, Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plants'
Concerns rise about Ukraine’s Chornobyl, Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plants
There are fresh fears about Ukraine's nuclear power plants in Chornobyl and Zaporizhzhia. Mike Armstrong explains what could happen now that the power lines to the Chornobyl facility have been cut, and the new worries for the well-being of workers at the Zaporizhzhia plant. – Mar 9, 2022

The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development expressed concern about the situation at Ukraine’s Chornobyl nuclear power plant on Friday following its takeover by Russian forces and a problem with its power supply.

Ukraine said on Wednesday there was an increased risk of a radiation leak at Chornobyl, which suffered the world’s worst nuclear accident in 1986, after a high-voltage cable was severed during fighting and electricity to the plant was cut off.

Russia’s energy ministry said on Thursday Belarusian specialists had restored the electricity supply and Russia’s defense ministry said it had agreed to allow a Ukrainian repair
team to access power lines in the area around the plant.

But Ukraine has told the U.N. nuclear watchdog it has lost contact with the plant and Ukrainian military intelligence has warned that Russia could deliberately cause a “catastrophe” at the decommissioned plant and blame it on Ukraine.

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“The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development is extremely concerned by recent developments at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant (ChNPP) in Ukraine,” the EBRD said in a statement.

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“The EBRD, which has been managing over 2.5 billion euros in international funds to transform Chernobyl since 1995, believes that recent events are putting in jeopardy the achievements of decades of successful international collaboration to secure the site.”

The EBRD said an uninterrupted power supply to Chernobyl must be maintained. It also said it was important to have monitoring and control systems operating, normal shift rotations should be resumed after their disruption during fighting, and supplies must be maintained to staff operating the plant.

Any military action on the site itself was “extremely dangerous” to a storage facility for spent nuclear fuel and inspections by the Ukrainian regulator and the International
Atomic Energy Agency were needed, it said.

Ukrainian military intelligence said on Friday, without presenting clear evidence, that it was “possible” Russia was preparing an attack on the Chernobyl plant “for which the occupiers will try to shift responsibility to Ukraine.”

Moscow calls its actions in Ukraine a “special military operation” designed to disarm and “de-Nazify” Ukraine. It denies targeting civilians.

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($1 = 0.9081 euros) (Reporting by Timothy Heritage Editing by Mark Heinrich)

Click to play video: 'No radiation detected after Russian troops take Europe’s largest nuclear power plant in Ukraine'
No radiation detected after Russian troops take Europe’s largest nuclear power plant in Ukraine

 

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