Home News IAEA reports second Ukraine nuclear facility damaged

IAEA reports second Ukraine nuclear facility damaged

Published on 08/03/2022

The International Atomic Energy Agency said Monday it has received reports of artillery shells damaging a nuclear research facility in Ukraine’s besieged second city Kharkiv, but there was no “radiological consequence”.

he International Atomic Energy Agency said Monday it has received reports of artillery shells damaging a nuclear research facility in Ukraine’s besieged second city Kharkiv, but there was no “radiological consequence”.
he Vienna-based UN body said Ukrainian authorities reported an attack took place on Sunday, adding that no increase in radiation levels had been reported at the site.

Because the site’s “inventory of radioactive material is very low” and kept at a “subcritical” state, the IAEA said “the damage reported to it would not have had any radiological consequence.”
he facility is part of the Kharkiv Institute of Physics and Technology, a research institute that produces radioactive material for medical and industrial applications.

Kharkiv has come under intense Russian shelling and missile attacks in recent days, as Moscow tries to step up pressure on Ukraine to surrender.
he nuclear institute itself has been at the centre of online conspiracy theories and unsubstantiated claims in Russian media that Ukraine is attempting to develop a “dirty bomb” — a crude nuclear weapon capable of causing mass casualties.
he IAEA said this was just the latest instance of a nuclear facility becoming caught up in Russia’s war on Ukraine.

“We have already had several episodes compromising safety at Ukraine’s nuclear sites,” said IAEA director general Rafael Mariano Grossi.
here have been reports of damage to radioactive waste disposal facilities near Kyiv and Kharkiv and Russian forces have hit the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant, causing a fire that had to be contained.
he IAEA said the Zaporizhzhia — Europe’s largest nuclear power plant — was now under the control of Russian forces, blocking the delivery of spare parts and medicine.

Only two of the facility’s six reactors are operating.

Communications have also been cut with small nuclear facilities in the southern city of Mariupol — which is surrounded by Russian forces, leaving residents without electricity or running water.
he IAEA has urged Moscow and Kyiv to agree on a plan to safeguard nuclear facilities.

Grossi has offered to travel to the infamous Chernobyl nuclear power plant — site of a 1986 disaster — where 200-plus staff have been on-site for 12 days straight.