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Iran Will Not Exceed 60% Uranium Enrichment

Iran Will Not Exceed 60% Uranium Enrichment
Iran Will Not Exceed 60% Uranium Enrichment

Head of the Atomic Energy Organisation of Iran Mohammad Eslami said Tehran does not intend to exceed the 60% level of uranium enrichment even if the parties to the negotiations in Vienna do not come to an agreement and the United States does not lift its sanctions.
Eslami said “No” when asked in an interview with Sputnik whether Iran will exceed 60% uranium enrichment if the parties fail to return to the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action.
He stressed that Tehran’s nuclear program aims to support the country’s industrial production needs, as well as the needs of Iranian consumers for certain goods.
“All our nuclear activities are carried out according to the agreements, statutes and regulations of the International Atomic Energy Agency,” the AEOI chief noted.
The seventh round of Vienna talks on bringing Iran back to the nuclear deal and canceling US sanctions ended on December 17. The parties agreed on two drafts of the deal, which included provisions covering Iranian interests.

The nuclear chief also said Iran can produce nuclear fuel domestically and will soon start using it at the Bushehr Nuclear Power Plant.
“Iran can already produce nuclear fuel domestically. We had talks with Rosatom and we hope that as part of our cooperation, based on the plans and contracts we will sign with it, we will be able to do this and start using Iranian fuel in the reactor in Bushehr.”
Iran is expecting Russia’s state-owned nuclear company Rosatom to speed up the construction of the second and third power units at the Bushehr Nuclear Power Plant, which is almost two years behind schedule, Eslami added.
“The construction of the second and third power units is roughly 23 months behind schedule... We expect Rosatom to make it possible to speed up the project’s implementation with an agreed [upon] plan to compensate for all of the delays,” the AEOI chief said.
In addition, Moscow supplies Tehran with the nuclear fuel needed for the operation of the reactor of the first unit. The last supply of the Russian fuel was made in April 2020.


 

No Outstanding Debt 

Tehran has paid Russia in full for the construction of the first block of the Bushehr power plant and has no outstanding debts to Moscow, Eslami said.
“No. Not anymore. Iran paid off all its debts to the Russian Federation,” Eslami said in response to a question about financial issues between the two countries concerning the NPP project.
In August, Russian Ambassador to Iran Levan Dzhagaryan said that Moscow and Tehran had not settled the issue of Iranian debt for the Bushehr Nuclear Power Plant due to US sanctions which froze Tehran’s funds in Japanese and South Korean banks. Despite this, the NPP continued to operate normally.
The construction of power units at the Bushehr NPP is the largest joint Russian-Iranian project. The first block of the nuclear power plant, completed in cooperation with Russia, was connected to Iran’s national power grid in September 2011. The construction of the second block is underway, while a contract for the construction of a third power unit has been signed.
The critical infrastructure of Iran’s nuclear facilities is secure, and vulnerabilities are being constantly monitored for potential cyberattacks, Mohammad Eslami added.
“Every country pays great attention to ensuring the safety of its nuclear power plants... All our systems are secure, all their vulnerabilities are under control thanks to the measures we have taken. We hope that such heightened security measures in our nuclear infrastructure will disappoint those trying to compromise it.”
Iran’s state electronic systems have recently become a target for cyberattacks. In October, Iranian gas station networks came under attack. The authorities later said that the United States and Israel were behind the cyberattack.

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