UN agency warns of rising combat near Ukraine nuclear plant

In this photo provided by the IAEA Press Office, U.N. atomic energy chief Rafael Mariano Grossi stands on a road next to a UN vehicle on his way to the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant, in southeastern Ukraine, Wednesday March 29, 2023. (IAEA Press Office via AP)

DNIPRO, Ukraine (AP) 鈥 The head of the U.N.鈥檚 atomic energy watchdog crossed the front line in the war in Ukraine to visit Europe's largest nuclear power plant Wednesday, and warned that it was easy to see evidence of intensified fighting in the area that poses a threat to the facility's safety.

The increasing combat makes it urgent to find a way to prevent a potentially catastrophic nuclear accident at the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant, said Rafael Mariano Grossi, director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency.

鈥淚t is obvious that this area is facing perhaps a more dangerous phase,鈥 he said of the facility, which is in a partially Russian-occupied part of Ukraine. 鈥淲e have to step up our efforts to get to some agreement of the protection of the plant.鈥

Grossi has struggled to agree with Russian and Ukrainian authorities on a deal to secure the plant, which has been hit several times during the Ukraine war. The site has also suffered several losses of external power needed to cool its six shut-down reactors, forcing it to rely on emergency back-up generators.

Wednesday鈥檚 visit to the plant was Grossi鈥檚 second since the start of the war. He tried for months to negotiate on securing the whole zone around the complex, but he said at a news conference during his visit that the concept 鈥渋s evolving鈥 to focus more on protecting the plant itself.

Grossi said he was working on 鈥渞ealistic measures鈥 and had narrowed the scope in the hopes of reaching agreement on a mutually acceptable plan.

鈥淚nitially we were focusing on the possibility of the establishment of a well determined zone around the plant,鈥 he told reporters during his visit. 鈥淣ow the concept is evolving. It鈥檚 refocusing more on the protection itself, and the things that should be avoided, for example, in order to protect the plant, rather than on territorial aspects, which pose certain problems.鈥

The IAEA, based in Vienna, Austria, has been rotating inspection teams at the power plant since Grossi's visit in September. Grossi told The Associated Press that it is his duty to ramp up talks between Kyiv and Moscow aimed at safeguarding the facility and avoiding a catastrophic accident. He said a deal was 鈥渃lose.鈥

Grossi met Monday with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and said he would 鈥渕ost probably鈥 head to Moscow in the coming days.

However, Zelenskyy said in a separate that he was less optimistic a deal was near. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 feel it today,鈥 he said.

Speaking in the central Ukrainian city of Dnipro after his visit, Grossi said he saw clear signs of increased military activity in the area and assessed damage the plant sustained in shelling last November, which he described as 鈥渜uite severe.鈥

Buildings near two of the reactors were hit 鈥渨ittingly or unwittingly, ... so this is very serious,鈥 he said, adding that his visit allowed him to confirm 鈥渢he gravity ... of the situation and the need for us to get to results as soon as possible.鈥

He didn鈥檛 give details of the evolving security plan, but said that 鈥渘ot using the plant as a military platform is very important鈥 as stationing heavy military equipment there can become a target.

Equally, he said, there should be 鈥渙f course no attacks, no targeting. And we saw that at least until November, there were attacks. So I hope there won鈥檛 be another one. But the reality and the facts prove that there have been.鈥

The Kremlin鈥檚 forces took over the plant after Russia鈥檚 full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. Zelenskyy opposes any proposal that would legitimize Russia鈥檚 control.

Interruptions to the outside electricity supply due to the fighting required plant personnel to switch to emergency diesel generators six times during the 13-month war. When backup power supplies might be needed again is unpredictable, Grossi told AP. ___

Follow AP鈥檚 coverage of the war in Ukraine at

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