Iran’s First Power Reactor Goes Critical
After decades of setbacks,
Russian and Iranian officials said in May that it will take weeks for the reactor to reach full power and start generating electricity.
The reactor has undergone a long and complicated construction history with perennial delays.
In public statements, Russian officials have cited technical and financial reasons for the setbacks, but diplomats familiar with the process have said that
The latest delay occurred in February when one of the reactor’s cooling pumps was found damaged, leading to a last-minute unloading of the fuel. (See ACT, April 2011.)
The technical hurdle occurred just weeks before a series of natural disasters crippled a Japanese nuclear power plant and spread radiation from the reactors, raising broader fears about the safety of nuclear reactors, including the Bushehr plant.
Florence Mangin, the French permanent representative to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), raised such concerns May 5, citing
“
Iranian officials have defended the safety precautions taken regarding the reactor. Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi told reporters May 17, “
The startup of the reactor also may carry implications for the prospects of military action against
“Once the rods are in the reactor, an attack on the reactor risks spreading radiation in the air, and perhaps into the water of the Persian Gulf,”
Although Bolton expressed concern that
Under normal operations, light-water reactors such as the Bushehr unit do not produce plutonium of a quality appropriate for nuclear weapons. The reactor operations can be adjusted to produce better-quality plutonium, but such activities would be detectable by IAEA inspectors because they would entail shutting down the reactor very early in its operating cycle.
The Bushehr plant is the first nuclear power reactor in the
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