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Inside Bushehr, Iran's First Nuclear Plant
Thanks to Russian nuclear fuel and technology, Iran's first nuclear power plant -- under construction for 36 years -- held an official launch ceremony Aug. 21, and is expected to go online in the next few months. As Iran prepares, the world watches ... and worries.
- Begun by German electronics giant Siemens in 1975, Bushehr took 36 years to complete. Following 1979's Islamic Revolution, Siemens and subsidiary Kraftwerke halted construction, and the site languished. Iraq bombed Iran's two reactors six times during the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq war, severely damaging the plant and obliterating the entire core area of both reactors. In January, Russia said it would finish the plant this year, and it announced completion of construction in early July.read moreReutersShare
- Iranian technicians work with foreign colleagues inside the plant as launch day grows near. The Bushehr plant will have a maximum 1,000-megawatt (MW) capacity, according to the IAEA, with a net capacity of 915 MW. This places it on the small end of the scale. For comparison, the Indian Point Energy Facility in upstate New York has a 2,000-megawatt capacity -- enough electricity to power about 2 million homes. Russia has said Bushehr is purely civilian and cannot be used for weapons, since it will come under International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) supervision.read moreAPShare
- Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad waves during a tour of the country's main fuel manufacturing plant in 2009. The Isfahan Uranium Conversion Facility -- 273 miles south of Tehran -- is said to be the primary location of the Iranian nuclear weapons program. It is Iran’s largest nuclear research center and allegedly employs as many as 3,000 scientists. But fuel for Bushehr comes from Russia: The 64 tons of low-enriched uranium that Russia has supplied greatly exceeds the 5,300 pounds the Iranians have produced for themselves, according to the IAEA's estimates.read moreReutersShare
- Published8 Images
Inside Bushehr, Iran's First Nuclear Plant
Thanks to Russian nuclear fuel and technology, Iran's first nuclear power plant -- under construction for 36 years -- held an official launch ceremony Aug. 21, and is expected to go online in the next few months. As Iran prepares, the world watches ... and worries.
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- Inside Bushehr, Iran's First Nuclear Plant
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