Emergency force source used at Ukrainian nuclear power plant to counter crises

KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — Europe’s largest nuclear power plant relied Thursday on emergency diesel turbines to operate its safety systems after the external power source to Ukraine’s force network was disrupted, Ukrainian and U. N. officials said.

The fighting in Ukraine has continuously broken the lines of force and substations that the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant needs to operate internal security systems, forcing personnel to resort to backup turbines to cool its six reactors until power is restored. All six reactors were shut down. The turbines have enough fuel for the plant in southeastern Ukraine for just 15 days, nuclear power company Energoatom said.

“The countdown has begun,” Energoatom said, noting that it has limited opportunities to “keep the ZNPP in mode. “

The United Nations’ International Atomic Energy Agency showed the transfer to backup diesel turbines and said it underscores “the incredibly precarious nuclear safety and security at the facility. “

Rafael Grossi, head of the U. N. nuclear watchdog, said relying on diesel turbines “is obviously not a sustainable way to operate in a primary nuclear facility” and suggested a coverage zone around the plant.

During the war, Russia and Ukraine exchanged tasks for bombing and around the plant. Energoatom said Thursday that Russian bombing destroyed the last two high-voltage transmission lines powering the Zaporizhzhia plant. Russia gave another version and blamed Ukraine.

Russian state news firm Tass quoted an official at Russia’s nuclear operator, Rosenergoatom, as saying Ukraine had cut off the two lines of force and denied that Russian bombing of the lines of force caused the problems. He said the move hurt the town of Energodar, where staff at the heating factory live.

Russian forces have occupied the factory since the beginning of the war. It is in the Zaporizhzhia region, one of the 4 regions that Russia has illegally annexed. to run the plant.

Energoatom said Russian officials were looking to connect the power plant to the Russian power grid so it can supply electricity to Crimea, which Russia annexed in 2014, and Ukraine’s Donbass region, annexed through Putin.

The death toll from past battles became evident Thursday when Ukrainian authorities said 868 civilian bodies, adding 24 children, had been recovered in liberated spaces in the Kharkiv, Donetsk and Kherson regions. National police chief Oleksii Serhieiev also told reporters that 34 torture sites were discovered after the withdrawal of Russian troops from those spaces, as well as from the Kyiv, Sumy and Chernihiv regions.

Elsewhere on the front lines, Russia used drones, missiles and heavy artillery to attack several Ukrainian cities, killing six civilians and wounding 16, according to the president’s office. or water

Further east, in the Donetsk region, fighting continued in the towns of Bakhmut and Avdiivka, where the government said people were under constant bombardment and living without electricity or heating. In the northeast, 3 Russian missiles hit Ukraine’s second largest city, Kharkiv, officials said.

Across the Dnieper from the power plant, the city of Nikopol was also shelled again, damaging residential buildings, a fuel station and several businesses, Zelenskyy’s workplace said on Thursday.

In a rare trail of an imaginable withdrawal that Ukrainians have treated with skepticism, a Moscow-appointed official in the occupied southern region of Kherson said it is “very likely” Russian troops will cross the Dnieper, far from the town of Kherson. Kirill Stremousov also told Russian state television that all Ukrainian attacks had been repulsed.

Tens of thousands of civilians have been evacuated from the town of Kherson in the face of a Ukrainian counteroffensive. The Russian government dumped its country’s flag from Kherson’s administrative building on Thursday, a week after the regional government moved in.

Southern Ukrainian army spokeswoman Natalia Humeniuk said the removal of the flag could simply be a provocation “and we are not rushing to rejoice. “He also said on Ukrainian television that some Russian servicemen disguised themselves as civilians.

The form of order sought by either party can be independently verified.

On the humanitarian front, seven ships carrying 290,000 tons of agricultural products left Ukraine’s seaports for Asia and Europe, a day after Russia agreed to resume its participation in a program to export Ukrainian grains. Putin said Moscow had obtained assurances that Ukraine would use humanitarian corridors to attack Russian forces.

Ukrainian Foreign Ministry spokesman Oleh Nikolenko denied that Kyiv had made any new commitments.

“Ukraine has used and planned to use the grain room for military purposes. The Ukrainian aspect obviously adheres to the provisions of the grain agreement,” Nikolenko wrote on Facebook.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov warned Thursday that Russia’s resolution meant the deal would be extended beyond its expiration on Nov. 19.

Russia suspended its participation in the grain deal last weekend, bringing to light an alleged Ukrainian drone attack on its Black Sea fleet in Crimea. In Ukraine, the Russians mishandled their own weapons.

In Oscow, Russia’s Foreign Ministry summoned British Ambassador Deborah Bronnert on Thursday to protest what she claimed was the assistance of British instructors in the Oct. 29 drone attack on the Black Sea fleet in Sevastopol, Crimea. Bronnert had no comment after the meeting.

Under the grain export deal, Russia intended to be able to resume fertilizer and grain exports, but Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said on Thursday he had not noticed any progress in that regard.

Since the agreement was concluded in July, 430 ships have exported 10 million tons of Ukrainian agricultural products to countries in Africa, Asia and Europe. Ukraine’s Infrastructure Ministry said export volumes in October “could have been 30 to 40 percent higher if Russia had not artificially blocked inspections. “

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres welcomed the 10 million tonne mark and all parties to renew the grain deal.

“I’m not optimistic, I’m not pessimistic. I am determined,” Guterres told reporters in New York, adding that it is about removing barriers to Russian food and fertilizer exports.

The two sides announced the prisoner swap on Thursday, bringing the total to 214 army personnel.

Elsewhere, a Ukrainian army officer said Russia was Belarusian territory to launch drone strikes. Hromov said Iranian drones were flying in Ukraine from a military base in the Belarusian town of Luninets, a hundred kilometers (62 miles) north of the border.

His tax-deductible donation to The Columbian’s community-funded journalism program will contribute to greater local coverage on key issues, such as homelessness, housing, transportation and the environment.

Local journalism wants your help. It is a component of a healthy network and a healthy democracy.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *