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Ukraine / Situation Remains ‘Serious’ As IAEA’s Grossi Heads For Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Plant

By Kamen Kraev
14 June 2023

UN agency team wants to assess water levels and reactor status

Situation Remains ‘Serious’ As IAEA’s Grossi Heads For Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Plant
An IAEA team led by director-general Rafael Grossi travelled to Ukraine on Monday to meet officials and visit the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant later. Image courtesy Dean Calma / IAEA.

The overall situation at the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant in Ukraine remains “serious” due to potential water supply shortages, but there is no cause for “immediate danger”, said Rafael Grossi, head of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).

Grossi, who met Ukraine’s president Volodymyr Zelenskyy in Kyiv yesterday and is scheduled to visit the Zaporizhzhia plant today, confirmed the need for an onsite assessment of cooling water reserves at the plant.

“I want to make my own assessment,” Grossi told journalists in Ukraine, and added: “I want to go there, discuss with the management about what measures they are taking, and then make a more definitive assessment of what kind of dangers we face.”

Grossi warned that after the destruction of the Nova Kakhovka dam, the levels of the Dnipro river and of the Kakhovka reservoir are falling down steadily and there is a limit to the ability to pump water into a local pond and canal inlets at Zaporizhzhia, which are used to cool down reactor systems and spent fuel onsite.

The IAEA said on Sunday that the levels of the Kakhovka reservoir near the Zaporizhzhia plant were sufficient to keep inlet water pumps operable, but said it would need access to the site to assess certain “discrepancies” in water height measurements.

All six VVER-1000 reactor units at Zaporizhzhia have been shut down since late 2022, meaning active cooling needs have decreased. Five of the units are in cold shutdown, requiring minimal cooling, while the sixth unit (Unit 5) is said to be still in hot shutdown despite calls by Ukraine’s regulator to transfer it to a cold state.

The cold shutdown of Unit 5 “is yet another issue that I need to discuss there”, Grossi said amid claims by Ukraine’s nuclear regulator that Russian forces do not allow operators to transfer the reactor unit to cold shutdown.

According to Ukraine’s nuclear power operator Energoatom, the water level of the Kakhaovka reservoir just outside of the Zaporizhzhia plant was nine metres at 14:00 local time today (Wednesday), the level of the local cooling pond was 16.67 metres, and the level at a canal inlet feeding water to the plant was 11.21 metres.

The measured level of 16.67 metres at the pond is enough to meet Zaporizhzhia’s needs, Energoatom said earlier this week.

Russia has been in control of the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant, the largest in Europe, since its troops captured it in March 2022. On 6 June 2023, an explosion shattered the wall of the Nova Kakhovka dam on the Dnipro river releasing a massive tidal wave over settlements located downstream.

The Ukrainian government and western allies have accused Russia of blowing up the Nova Kakhovka dam, while Moscow has returned the allegations.

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