
The Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant (ZNPP) in Ukraine could face a safety emergency if not quickly reconnected to the power grid, explains Perry Chiaramonte in The New York Sun. He writes:
Europe’s largest nuclear power plant, currently located in Ukraine and controlled by Russian forces, is facing the prospect of a Chernobyl-style meltdown if it is not reconnected to the power grid in the coming days, according to the head of the International Atomic Energy Agency.
The Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant is currently in the middle of its longest power outage since the war began, with heavy military activity in the area preventing its repair and reconnection to power lines.
The facility has been reliant on emergency generators running on diesel fuel to keep operating essential safety and security functions, including the cooling of its six shutdown reactors, according to European Union officials. They say it is vital that control of the plant be returned to Ukraine.
“Returning the ZNPP to the full control of the competent and legitimate Ukrainian authorities is the only lasting solution to minimise the risk of a nuclear accident with global implications,” the EU official say.
The International Atomic Energy Agency is working with military officials from both Russia and Ukraine in an attempt to get offsite power restored to the plant as soon as possible.
“While the plant is currently coping thanks to its emergency diesel generators — the last line of defense — and there is no immediate danger as long as they keep working, it is clearly not a sustainable situation in terms of nuclear safety,” the IAEA’s director general, Rafael Mariano Grossi, said in a statement. “Neither side would benefit from a nuclear accident.”
The reactors at ZNPP have been shut down for more than three years and the nuclear fuel inside it has cooled, reducing the amount of radioactive material, but it could still suffer a meltdown if off-site power is not restored in the near term.
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