Disaster avoided as Ukraine nuclear plant regains power link

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Russia’s attack on a train station during Ukraine’s Independence Day killed 25 civilians, Kyiv says. (AP PHOTO)
Russia’s attack on a train station during Ukraine’s Independence Day killed 25 civilians, Kyiv says. (AP PHOTO)

By Tom Balmforth and Natalia Zinets in KYIV

The last regular line supplying electricity to Ukraine’s Russian-held Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant was restored hours after being cut, with President Volodymyr Zelenskiy saying the world narrowly avoided a radiation disaster.

Zelenskiy blamed shelling by Russia’s military for fires in the ash pits of a nearby coal power station that disconnected the reactor complex, Europe’s largest such facility, from the power grid.

He said back-up diesel generators had started to ensure power supply and keep the plant safe.

“If our station staff had not reacted after the blackout, then we would have already been forced to overcome the consequences of a radiation accident,” he said in an evening address on Thursday. 

“Russia has put Ukraine and all Europeans in a situation one step away from a radiation disaster.”

International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) officials should be given access to the site within days, he said, “before the occupiers take the situation to the point of no return”.

Ukrainian state nuclear company Energoatom said it had been the first complete disconnection in the plant’s history.

Electricity is used for cooling and safety systems.

Russia, which invaded Ukraine in February, captured the plant in March and has controlled it since, although Ukrainian technicians still operate it.

The fighting in the area around the plant, which supplies more than 20 per cent of Ukraine’s electricity needs, has been a source of concern for weeks.

Russia and Ukraine have accused each other of shelling the site, fuelling fears of a nuclear disaster.

Nuclear experts have warned of the risk of damage to the plant’s spent nuclear fuel pools or its reactors. Cuts in power needed to cool the pools could cause a disastrous meltdown.

The United Nations is seeking access to the plant and has called for the area to be demilitarised. 

IAEA officials are “very, very close” to being able to visit Zaporizhzhia, agency director-general Rafael Grossi said on Thursday.

Ukraine’s energy minister said agency officials could travel to the plant in the coming days.

As the war entered its seventh month, Russia said its forces had struck a railway station in eastern Ukraine on Wednesday, confirming an attack that Kyiv says killed dozens of civilians as the nation marked its Independence Day.

The Russian defence ministry said an Iskander missile hit a military train at Chaplyne station that was to deliver arms to Ukrainian forces in the eastern Donbas region.

Ukrainian officials said 25 people were killed when the station was hit and five train carriages went up in flames, and that a boy died when a missile struck his home nearby. 

The Russian defence ministry said 200 Ukrainian military personnel were killed in the attack. 

Reuters was unable independently to verify the reports.

Russia’s ground campaign has stalled in recent months after its troops were repelled from the capital Kyiv in the early weeks of the invasion.

Russian forces control a swathe of territory in the south along Ukraine’s Black Sea and Sea of Azov coasts, while the conflict has settled into a war of attrition in the Donbas.

In its daily briefing, Russia’s defence ministry said it had destroyed eight Ukrainian warplanes in strikes at air bases in Ukraine’s Poltava and Dnipropetrovsk regions.

That would be one of the heaviest losses for Ukraine’s air force in recent weeks.

Kyiv has repeatedly called for more, high-grade Western military hardware it says it needs to repel Russian attacks.

Zelenskiy spoke on Thursday by phone with US President Joe Biden, who reiterated US support for Ukraine against Russia, the White House said.

In a move that might bolster Western estimates of heavy Russian losses during the war, President Vladimir Putin signed a decree on Thursday increasing the size of Russia’s armed forces to 2.04 million from 1.9 million.

The Kremlin says its aim is to “denazify” and demilitarise Ukraine and remove perceived security threats to Russia.

That is dismissed by Ukraine and the West as a baseless pretext for a war of conquest.