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Russian airstrikes on Ukraine threaten ‘catastrophic power failure’
Targeting of
substations connected to three working nuclear plants risks nuclear catastrophe
in Europe, says Greenpeace
Dan Sabbagh
in Kyiv
Wed 20 Nov
2024 05.00 GMT
Ukraine’s
power network is at “heightened risk of catastrophic failure” after Russia’s
missile and drone attack on Sunday, Greenpeace has warned, raising fears about
the safety of the country’s three operational nuclear power stations.
The strikes
by Moscow were aimed at electricity substations “critical to the operation of
Ukraine’s nuclear plants” and there is a possibility that the reactors could
lose power and become unsafe, according to a briefing note prepared for the
Guardian.
Shaun
Burnie, nuclear expert at Greenpeace Ukraine, said: “It is clear that Russia is
using the threat of a nuclear disaster as a major military lever to defeat
Ukraine. But by undertaking the attacks Russia is risking a nuclear catastrophe
in Europe, which is comparable to Fukushima in 2011, Chornobyl in 1986 or even
worse.”
The pressure
group called on Russia to immediately halt its attacks on Ukraine’s energy grid
and for the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) to deploy permanent
monitors in substations critical to the country’s nuclear plants. The IAEA
conducted one inspection in late October, but has not committed to return.
Though
Greenpeace is an independent organisation, it maintains contact with Ukraine’s
government. Official Ukrainian sources contacted by the Guardian acknowledged
Greenpeace’s technical analysis of the crisis.
In 1986,
Ukraine was the location of the world’s worst nuclear disaster, when a faulty
design led to an explosion and destruction of a reactor at Chornobyl. Thirty
people died within a month, and radioactive material spread into Ukraine,
Belarus and Russia and to a lesser extent into Scandinavia and Europe.
On Sunday
night and early morning, Russia unleashed a barrage of more than 210 missiles
and drones aimed at electricity generation and transmission targets around the
country. Hours later, Ukrenergo, the country’s main electricity provider,
announced nationwide rationing to help the system recover.
Explosions
were heard in the cities of Kyiv, in Odesa and Mykolaiv in the south, in Kryvyi
Rih, Pavlohrad, Vinnytsia in central Ukraine and Rivne and Ivano-Frankivsk in
the west. Explosions were also heard near Ukraine’s border with Moldova where
Ukraine’s grid connects with its neighbour and into the rest of Europe.
Though the
attacks are not thought to have directly targeted Ukraine’s three remaining
operational nuclear power plants, at Rivne and Khmelnytskyi in the west, and
the South Ukraine plant, Greenpeace says Russia was deliberately trying to
increase the stress they are under by targeting substations that they are
linked to.
On Sunday,
the IAEA reported that main power lines from four substations to three nuclear
power stations were cut, and that at the Khmelnytsky plant monitors on site
“heard a loud explosion”. Two power lines into Rivne became unavailable and
output was reduced in six of the nine operational nuclear reactors at the three
sites.
The three
sites account for about two-thirds of Ukraine’s electricity because previous
attacks by Russia have destroyed most of the country’s coal and oil-fired
plants, while some of the country’s hydro facilities have also been damaged.
A particular
concern is that “severe damage to Ukraine’s electricity system, including
substations, is causing major instability”, Greenpeace said, which could mean
the extended loss of external power to the reactors. Cooling of reactor and
spent fuel requires power, whose stable supply is at risk, the environmental
group added.
In the event
of a loss of supply, Ukraine’s reactors have on-site diesel generators and
batteries to provide essential electricity supply with enough fuel for seven to
10 days, but if fuel cannot be maintained or power be restored the consequences
could lead to a nuclear disaster, Greenpeace said.
“Loss of
cooling function at one or more reactors would inevitably lead to nuclear fuel
melt and large-scale radiological release,” Greenpeace said in its brief. “Most
at risk are the people and the environment of Ukraine, but there is the
potential for much of Europe and beyond to be severely impacted,” it added,
depending on the wind direction at the time.
Prior to
Sunday’s bombing, Britain had already accused Russia of engaging in nuclear
blackmail at a meeting of the OSCE a fortnight ago. Its 57 members include
Russia, so it is one of the few international forums where western countries
can engage with Moscow.
“We have
also heard Russia threaten Ukraine in this room that it could turn off 75% of
its remaining electricity by hitting just five targets,” the UK said in a
statement delivered at a meeting in Vienna on 7 November.
“This could
only be a reference to Ukraine’s nuclear power plants. Such threats are
unacceptable. As is the risk to Ukraine’s nuclear power plants of an unreliable
power supply due to Russia’s sustained attacks against Ukraine’s grid.”
British
sources indicated they believed that Ukraine’s energy generation had been
reduced to about one-third of its pre-war capacity in the spring, though
repairs over the summer had improved that figure back to 50%.
The impact
of the latest bombing on generation remains unclear, though Ukraine’s energy
ministry said on Tuesday that 9GW of power had been lost in 2024, equal to “the
peak consumption of countries such as the Netherlands or Finland”.
At the
beginning of the war, Russian forces captured Ukraine’s fourth nuclear power
plant, the Zaporizhzhia facility, which houses six reactors. The site, on the
frontline on the Dnipro river, remains occupied though the reactors are in cold
shutdown.
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