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Management reports that the external power line at Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Plant has been restored.

Management reports that the external power line at Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Plant has been restored.
Management reports that the external power line at Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Plant has been restored.

The Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Station in Ukraine, which is owned by Russia, has a restored external power connection after repairs were completed. This was announced on Monday by the Russian management of the plant. The statement stated that the line had been taken out of service by "fire from Ukrainian armed forces". The International Atomic Energy Agency, the U.N.'s nuclear watchdog was present to monitor the repairs. The International Atomic Energy Agency said that the situation was under control at the plant, and radiation levels were normal.

Two lines connect the station to the grid. The second line was still in operation during the repairs.

The plant relied on diesel generators for 30 days in September and October. This was until a damaged line could be reconnected during a local ceasefire that was arranged with IAEA help.

In the first weeks after Moscow invaded Ukraine, Russian forces took control of Europe's biggest nuclear power plant. Both sides accuse the other of actions that endanger safety in Ukraine.

The plant does not produce electricity, but it relies on outside power to maintain nuclear fuel at a cool temperature and prevent a meltdown.

In the talks to end the four-year conflict between Moscow and Kyiv, the future of the plant operations has been a sticking point.

The plant is run by a unit owned by Russia's Rosatom nuclear corporation.

Volodymyr Zelenskiy, the Ukrainian president, said that the U.S. proposed a joint trilateral operation with an American manager in December. Reporting by Chizu nomiyama; editing by Chizu Nomiyama

(source: Reuters)