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Christian Action Network
MOSCOW, Dec. 28 (UPI) -- The Russian nuclear
fuel company TVEL has given Iran key machinery to run its Bushehr
reactor core.
A TVEL spokesperson announced the equipment transfer in a statement
Friday, RIA Novosti reported.
RIA Novosti said the state-controlled Russian nuclear export
corporation Atomstroyexport constructed the controversial Bushehr
nuclear complex in southern Iran as part of a deal signed in a 1995
agreement.
"Along with the second shipment of nuclear fuel to the Bushehr NPP,
we have delivered some equipment necessary for the reactor core
operations, including control rods and shim rods," the TVEL
spokeswoman said.
The Russian news agency said Moscow had already sent two payloads of
nuclear fuel to the Bushehr reactor plant in December 2007 and that
it planned to send more shipments in January and February.
RIA Novosti noted that work on the $1 billion Bushehr project almost
stalled last February in a row between Moscow and Tehran. The
Russians complained that the Iranians were not paying for the
program on schedule. Tehran counter-charged that it was paying what
it owed promptly and it accused the Kremlin of deliberately trying
to slow down work on the nuclear complex to appease the United
States and its European allies.
However, RIA Novosti noted that later, Russian officials took a more
conciliatory line and said they were satisfied that the Bushehr
reactor program was being developed under the full supervision of
the U.N.-backed International Atomic Energy Agency, which is based
in Vienna, Austria.
Nuclear fuel that has been used in the Bushehr reactor is to be sent
out of Iran to undergo reprocessing and then to be kept elsewhere,
under a deal arranged between the two countries.
Atomstroyexport chief Sergei Shmatko has estimated that the Bushehr
reactor will not become operational until late in 2008, RIA Novosti
said.
© 2007 United Press International.