It is vital to reduce the risk of a nuclear incident at Zaporizhzhia and across Ukraine: UK statement at the UN Security Council
Statement by Ambassador Barbara Woodward at the UN Security Council meeting on Ukraine.
Thank you President, and I thank Director-General Grossi for his briefing. The Director-General’s 7 April report of drone strikes hitting the site of Zaporizhzhia was deeply concerning, as were reports from the IAEA team at the plant, of explosions and rifle fire on site and several rounds of outgoing artillery fire from nearby the plant.
Thankfully, the IAEA has since confirmed that the IAEA team on the ground were unharmed and there were no indications of damage to critical nuclear safety and security systems at the site. We thank the IAEA team for all of their efforts in monitoring the safety and security situation at the plant in extremely difficult circumstances.
This is, however, a stark reminder of the precarious safety and security situation at Europe’s largest nuclear power plant, caused by Russia’s unprovoked war against Ukraine.
There have been eight complete losses of power at Zaporizhzhia since August 2022. IAEA experts have not had complete access to all areas important for nuclear security and safety. And Russia continues to keep military equipment and personnel at the site, including vehicles in the Turbine Halls and defensive installations on the reactor roofs.
Other sites have also been affected. The Neutron Source installation in Kharkiv lost power twice in April and March due to shelling. The South Ukraine Nuclear Power Plant also lost connection to power lines. And the IAEA team at Khmelnytskyy Nuclear Power Plant was forced to take shelter four times in March due to air raids, putting the operating staff there under immense pressure.
Colleagues, it is vital to reduce the risk of a nuclear incident at Zaporizhzhia and across Ukraine. The UK echoes the Director-General Grossi’s appeal to abstain from any action which could violate the five concrete principles for upholding safety at ZNPP that he set out at the UN Security Council last May. We also call on Russia to allow the IAEA experts full and complete access to all areas of the plant.
One country, however, has a far greater ability to improve the nuclear safety and security situation in Ukraine than any other. Russia can hand back Zaporizhzhia to the Ukrainian authorities, end its war and remove all its troops from Ukraine’s sovereign territory.
I thank you.