Saturday, 21 August 2010

Iran begins loading Bushehr nuclear reactor

We are enjoy now Iran begins loading Bushehr nuclear reactor

Iran has begun loading fuel into its first nuclear power station in a ceremony attended by Russian officials.

Russia will operate the Bushehr plant in southern Iran, supplying its nuclear fuel and taking away the nuclear waste.

Iran has been subject to four rounds of UN sanctions because of its separate, uranium enrichment programme.

Experts say that as long as the plant is Russian-operated, there is little immediate threat of its fuel being diverted to make bombs.

The West fears Tehran wants to build a nuclear weapon, but Iran insists its plans are for peaceful energy production.

Continue reading the main story
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UN sanctions against Iran
The Bushehr facility has taken 35 years to build and has been plagued by delays.

"Despite all pressure, sanctions and hardships imposed by western nations, we are now witnessing the startup of the largest symbol of Iran's peaceful nuclear activities," Iranian nuclear chief Ali Akbar Salehi told journalists at the plant.

The BBC's Jon Leyne says Iranian officials have promoted Saturday's launch as a victory for the Islamic republic against its enemies. Nationwide celebrations are planned to mark the event.

But Professor Ali Ansari, an Iran expert at the University of St Andrews, in Scotland, said Tehran was likely to exaggerate the importance of the start-up at Bushehr.

"It will obviously have a very theatrical opening but the delays have meant that the power plant is a very old model and the contribution to the national grid is very small," he said.
'Russian-US deal'
The Bushehr plant should begin producing electricity in about a month, experts say.


t is not seen by analysts as posing a significant proliferation risk.

The uranium fuel it will use is well below the enrichment level needed for a nuclear weapon. Weapons-grade uranium must be enriched by more than 90%. In contrast, the uranium at Bushehr is enriched by 3.5%.

The Bushehr fuel has been supplied by Russia, although Iran is already producing its own uranium enriched to fuel grade.

It has also begun a pilot program to enrich uranium to 20% which it says is needed for a medical research reactor.

It is that programme that has alarmed the West and Israel.

Reports in Washington suggested that the US lifted its objections to the completion of the plant at Bushehr as the price for Russia's vote in the latest round of sanctions against Iran.

Western officials have been changing their tune recently, our correspondent says, describing Bushehr as an example of the peaceful benefits of nuclear energy, to which Iran is entitled.

In a defiant statement on Friday, the head of Iran's Atomic Energy Organisation Ali Akbar Salehi said the country would continue uranium enrichment, the official Iranian news agency IRNA reported.

Referring to the Bushehr plant, he said: "Suppose we receive the required nuclear fuel for the plant from the Russians for the next 10 years, what are we going to do for the next 30 to 50 years?"

He said Iran could produce up to 30 tons of enriched uranium at its Natanz plant once the necessary centrifuges are installed at the site.

coppied by http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-11045537

Australia count begins after tight election race

Watch Australia count begins after tight election race

Prime Minister Julia Gillard is facing a strong challenge from Mr Abbott
Counting is under way in Australia in a general election seen as the tightest in the country for decades.
With over half of votes counted, projections by Australia's ABC put PM Julia Gillard's Labor party slightly ahead of the opposition coalition.

But the results also suggested a swing against Labor in parts of the country, and talk of a hung parliament.

The vote takes place two months after Ms Gillard ousted Kevin Rudd in a controversial leadership challenge.

Unofficial figures by ABC, based on 52.7% of votes counted, Ms Gillard has more seats but only 38.1% of votes, compared with 43.7% garnered by conservative coalition leader Tony Abbott.

Analysts say Australia could be heading for a hung parliament, a situation which would arise if neither contender gains 76 or more seats. The country's last hung parliament was in 1940.

As results come in, party officials have said it is becoming "more and more likely".

Early results indicated Labor suffered heavy swings against it in key states of Queensland and New South Wales.

'Marginal seats'
Fourteen million registered voters began casting their ballots at 0800 (2200 GMT). Voting is compulsory in Australia.

While first early exit polls put Ms Gillard ahead of Mr Abbott by a slim margin, analysts warned that the swing in key marginal seats would determine the final vote.

A Channel Nine exit poll suggested an expected Labor win of 52% compared to 48% for Mr Abbott's coalition.

A second exit poll by Sky News indicated Ms Gillard would garner 51% of the votes to Mr Abbott's 49%.

"It all depends on the uniformity of the vote across the country," David Briggs of the Galaxy polling company told AFP news agency.

Speaking on Australia's ABC television channel, Foreign Minister Stephen Smith said the election would be decided by "30 or more marginal seats throughout the country".

Earlier, Mr Abbott declared that it was "a day when we can vote out a bad government".
Coppied by http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-pacific-11037486