By Yeganeh Torbati
DUBAI (Reuters)
- For the Iranian government, the Bushehr nuclear power plant is proof to a
world worried about Tehran's intentions that its atomic program is aimed only
at securing a modern, clean energy source for its people.
But for villagers
living next to the facility, as well as Arab capitals nearby, the plant poses a
potential danger that is less geopolitical and more immediate: the risk of
contamination.
"We are
extremely worried about our health and the health of our families,"
residents of the coastal villages of Heleylah and Bandargah wrote in a
statement published on a blog in 2010.
"According to
international standards, the distance between a nuclear power plant and the
nearest residence must be at least one kilometer ... but the distance between
the village of Heleylah and this power plant is just six meters!"
Thousands of people
live in the two villages 18 km (11 miles) south of the Gulf city of Bushehr,
many of them making their living as service workers at the plant.
Residents living
near Iran's nuclear-related sites told Reuters in interviews by phone and over
the Internet that the government stifles debate on the pros and cons of the
program and where its sites should be located, and has not addressed their
questions about what would happen in an emergency.
Iran's Arab
neighbors are also nervous. Kuwait, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Iraq and the
United Arab Emirates all occupy coastline across from Bushehr, and the plant is
closer to five Arab Gulf capitals than it is to Tehran.
Kuwaiti emir Sheikh
Sabah al-Ahmed al-Sabah said at a December meeting of the Gulf Cooperation
Council that Iran should cooperate with the International Atomic Energy Agency
to "ensure the safety of the region's states and its people from any
effect of radioactivity".
Iran has repeatedly
maintained there are no grounds for concern, a position backed up by Russian
state nuclear corporation Rosatom, whose subsidiary Atomstroyexport built the
plant and plans its formal handover to Iran this year.
But a few recent
incidents, as well as a lack of transparency, continue to worry both neighbors
and experts in global nuclear safety, particularly after the disaster at the
Fukushima power plant in Japan, which was caused by an earthquake and tsunami.
Like Japan, Iran is
on an earthquake fault line, although the risk of a tsunami in the Gulf is seen
as slim.
"It is
difficult to have confidence that Bushehr will meet the very high safety
standards that should apply to every nuclear power plant in the world in the
post-Fukushima era," Edwin Lyman, of the Union of Concerned Scientists,
said in an e-mail to Reuters.
NO CONVENTION
Iran is the only
country operating a nuclear power plant that does not belong to the 75-nation
Convention on Nuclear Safety, negotiated after the 1986 nuclear disaster in
Chernobyl which contaminated wide areas and forced about 160,000 Ukrainians
from their homes.
Inspectors from the
IAEA, the U.N. nuclear watchdog, visit the Bushehr plant occasionally to check
the nuclear material kept there, but not to conduct safety inspections. The
U.N. agency has wider powers when it comes to preventing the spread of nuclear
arms than it has to ensure reactor safety in member states.
Western officials
and the United Nations have urged Iran to join the safety forum, designed to
boost safety through peer review and mutual oversight.
There are some
indications of progress.
Iran's ambassador to
the United Nations, Mohammad Khazaee, wrote in a letter to the New York Times
on January 15 that Iran has "started the internal legal procedures to
accede to the Convention on Nuclear Safety".
In another step that
could help allay concerns, Iran has officially requested the IAEA to send an
international expert mission to review operational safety at Bushehr, according
to a schedule posted on the UN agency's website. Such missions are voluntary
for IAEA member states.
One problem is that
Iran's nuclear regulatory authority, INRA, is not considered independent by the
IAEA because it is contained within the Atomic Energy Organisation of Iran,
Iran's nuclear agency, Lyman said.
"Given the
overheated political context of Iran's nuclear facilities, the lack of a
regulator independent of the agency for development and promotion of nuclear
energy raises questions about its effectiveness," he said.
The United States
and some other Western countries believe Iran is trying to develop nuclear
weapons and have imposed harsh financial and trade sanctions to try to stop it.
Iran denies that is its intent.
But Bushehr is not
considered a major weapons proliferation risk by Western states, who are
focused on sites where Iran has enriched uranium beyond levels needed to fuel
power plants.
An IAEA mission
conducted a review of safety regulations at Bushehr in 2010 and recommended
that Iran establish INRA as an independent authority, hire more expert
technical staff and replace its current ad hoc regulations with a comprehensive
national system.
LONG DELAYS
The 1,000-megawatt
Bushehr plant, which was connected to the national grid only in September 2011,
has had a long and chequered history.
Germany's Siemens
started construction in 1975 during the reign of the U.S.-backed Shah, but work
stopped after the 1979 Islamic Revolution and it was damaged by air raids in
the Iran-Iraq war of the 1980s.
After Russian
engineers took over the project in the 1990s, the launch was further delayed by
disagreements between Tehran and Moscow as well as technical problems. For
example in February 2011, concerns that metal particles from the aging parts
used in the reactor core may have contaminated the fuel prompted the fuel's
removal.
In October 2012,
fuel had to be unloaded again and the plant shut down. A Russian nuclear
industry source told Reuters in November the shutdown was due to the discovery
of stray bolts beneath the fuel cells. Experts said such debris can cause
problems by damaging fuel rods, blocking coolant channels and causing
overheating, or clogging pipes and pumps.
The plant is now
back to 100 percent capacity, Iran said in January.
Iran, as well as
officials of Rosatom and its subsidiaries, have repeatedly said the delays at
Bushehr were in part due to the need to ensure safety.
"We have always
taken every step to ensure safety and are prepared to continue to work with the
operator to do everything that is necessary to ensure safety," Rosatom
spokesman Sergei Novikov told Reuters.
IAEA chief Yukiya
Amano said in December the procedure was not of particular concern.
"They are
taking necessary measures," he said on a visit to Washington.
"Removing the fuel is already a measure to remedy the situation, and we
have good communication on this issue."
INFORMATION BLACKOUT
Malcolm Grimston, a
nuclear energy expert at Imperial College, London, agreed the Bushehr plant
should not be a safety concern as long as proper inspections have been carried
out.
But it was important
that for any new plant, authorities "put quite a lot of effort into
building communication links with local people and letting them understand the
context in which the plant operates," he told Reuters.
The nuclear
programme is highly politicized in Iran and few officials publicly question its
validity.
When emergency
official Gholamreza Masoumi spoke to the Mehr news agency in November about
health problems among people near Isfahan's Uranium Conversion Facility and the
importance of preparing agencies for a nuclear accident, his comments were
taken down from the agency's website and denied by other officials.
"It's not
totally clear (to us) if the plant has started or not. No one knows what's
going on," said Saeed, 22, a college student from Heleylah who, like other
Iranians interviewed, did not want his last name used so he could speak freely.
The Bushehr plant
has brought some good to the people of Heleylah, Saeed said. Locals can find
work as janitors, cooks and other service workers at the plant, and they have
access to the hospital built on site.
But many residents
feel stuck, said Hassan, 62, who was raised in Heleylah and now lives in the
city of Bushehr.
The government has
drawn up plans to move residents, but compensation has still not been agreed.
"The villagers
want to go to a place where they won't have trouble finding work, and near the
center of the province," he said. "But because there is no
appropriate place for them to go, and the government hasn't provided enough
money for them to move, people are in limbo."
Saeed said although
many in Heleylah would like to leave the area, only about 10 percent have done
so.
"Those who
could afford to leave, have left."
(Additional
reporting by Fredrik Dahl in Vienna and Steve Gutterman in Moscow; Editing by
Sonya Hepinstall)
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