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Russia lacks equipment to safely restart Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant, Ukraine says

The head of Ukraine's nuclear power company said that the largest nuclear plant in Europe, which was seized by Russian forces during the initial days of the invasion of Ukraine, could only be restarted safely if the facility is returned to Ukrainian control.

Since Russian forces seized the area, the six reactors of the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant were shut down. Moscow announced in 2013 that it aimed to restart one reactor. The plant's Russian appointed boss stated it could start producing energy as early as 2027.

Pavlo Kovtoniuk is the head of Ukrainian nuclear company Energoatom. He said that Russia lacks certain?equipment, spare parts and other components to operate this reactor and would risk a nuclear disaster if they tried.

"Russia won't be able launch the station. Kovtoniuk stated that the main equipment, control and protection systems and monitoring system are all Ukrainian.

This means it's a Ukrainian-funded project and spare parts are made by Ukrainian companies. The station cannot operate without spare parts or the project.

Talks on the fate of power stations and peace

One of the "key obstacles" in the peace talks between the warring nations under U.S. mediated mediation has been the fate of the station. It is capable of supplying a third the electricity needed by Ukraine when it's?fully operational.

Washington has proposed that all three parties share power and run the plant together. Moscow claims that the area where the nuclear station is located now belongs to Russia and that it is owned by Rosatom, the operator of the plant.

Rosatom has not responded to a request from the media for comment about Kovtoniuk’s remarks.

Kovtoniuk, however, said that the plant was not fully compatible with modern technology in Russia.

Rosatom will have to completely replace the American fuel in the reactors and the control system of the power units, which was designed to be used with this type of nuclear fuel. Rosatom said that it is ready to return American fuel to the United States.

Kovtoniuk cited the 40-year-old Chornobyl nuclear disaster as an example of the dangers that could arise if Russia attempted to restart the plant without Ukrainian equipment or expertise.

No one at the Chornobyl plant wanted to see a catastrophe happen. He said that this occurred because the equipment could not operate under the conditions it was in. "The situation is the same."

He said that after the Kakhovka Dam was destroyed in 2023, the Kakhovka Reservoir, a large man-made lake, along which the plant is located, had been drained, the water available to cool one reactor would not be enough. (Reporting and editing by Peter Graff.)

(source: Reuters)