An “accident” took place at an Iranian
nuclear facility on Sunday but caused no casualties or damage, the Fars news
agency reported, citing the spokesman of Iran’s nuclear agency.
Behrouz Kamalvandi said there had been “an
accident in part of the electrical circuit of the (uranium) enrichment
facility” at the Natanz complex, a day after Iran announced it had started up
advanced uranium enrichment centrifuges at the site in a breach of its undertakings
under a troubled 2015 nuclear deal.
There were “no casualties nor pollution”,
he said, adding that “the causes of the accident are under investigation and
more details will be released later”.
The accident follows an explosion at a
factory for advanced centrifuges at Natanz last July.
The authorities blamed that incident on
“sabotage” by “terrorists”, but have not released the results of their
investigation into it.
President Hassan Rouhani on Sunday
inaugurated a replacement factory at Natanz as well as a cascade of centrifuges
for enriching uranium and two test cascades, in a ceremony broadcast by state
television.
The new equipment enables Iran to enrich
uranium more quickly and in higher quantities, to levels that violate the 2015
nuclear deal.
The administration of then-US president
Donald Trump withdrew from the multilateral accord in 2018 and re-imposed
biting sanctions. Iran later responded by progressively rolling back its own
commitments under the agreement.
Parties to the deal opened talks in Vienna on Tuesday with the aim of bringing the US back to the deal, bringing Iran back into compliance and lifting sanctions.
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