Iran snubs West with nuke fuel rods
IRAN has successfully produced and tested fuel rods for use in its nuclear power plants, state television reported yesterday, in a snub to Western demands that it halt nuclear work.
The rods, which contain natural uranium, were made in Iran and have been inserted into the core of Tehran's research nuclear reactor, the television reported.
Nuclear fuel rods contain small pellets of fuel, usually low-enriched uranium, patterned to give out heat produced by nuclear reaction without melting down.
"This great achievement will perplex the West, because the Western countries had counted on a possible failure of Iran to produce nuclear fuel plates," the Tehran Times newspaper said.
The development was announced at a time of growing tension between Western powers and Iran after the UN nuclear agency reported in November that Tehran appeared to have worked on designing a nuclear weapon. Secret research to that end may be continuing, it added.
The US and its European allies have increased the sanctions pressure on Iran, one of the world's largest oil producers, to push Tehran to halt the nuclear enrichment work.
US President Barack Obama signed more sanctions against Iran into law on Saturday, shortly after Iran signalled it was ready for new negotiations with the West on its nuclear programme.
In April, Iran's Atomic Energy Organization announced that the installation of the machinery needed for producing nuclear fuel plates had started. The nuclear plant for converting enriched nuclear fuel into fuel rods was inaugurated in 2009.
"Currently, the rod is also undergoing rays at Tehran's Research Reactor to examine its long-term performance, according to Iran's English-language Press TV.
Iran says only a few countries are capable of making both the fuel "plates", used in the Tehran reactor, and nuclear fuel rods, which are used in power stations.
Enriched uranium can be used to fuel power plants and other types of reactors, which is Iran's stated aim, or to provide material for atomic bombs if processed much further, which the West suspects is the country's ultimate intention.
Tehran says it needs nuclear technology to generate electricity.
The rods, which contain natural uranium, were made in Iran and have been inserted into the core of Tehran's research nuclear reactor, the television reported.
Nuclear fuel rods contain small pellets of fuel, usually low-enriched uranium, patterned to give out heat produced by nuclear reaction without melting down.
"This great achievement will perplex the West, because the Western countries had counted on a possible failure of Iran to produce nuclear fuel plates," the Tehran Times newspaper said.
The development was announced at a time of growing tension between Western powers and Iran after the UN nuclear agency reported in November that Tehran appeared to have worked on designing a nuclear weapon. Secret research to that end may be continuing, it added.
The US and its European allies have increased the sanctions pressure on Iran, one of the world's largest oil producers, to push Tehran to halt the nuclear enrichment work.
US President Barack Obama signed more sanctions against Iran into law on Saturday, shortly after Iran signalled it was ready for new negotiations with the West on its nuclear programme.
In April, Iran's Atomic Energy Organization announced that the installation of the machinery needed for producing nuclear fuel plates had started. The nuclear plant for converting enriched nuclear fuel into fuel rods was inaugurated in 2009.
"Currently, the rod is also undergoing rays at Tehran's Research Reactor to examine its long-term performance, according to Iran's English-language Press TV.
Iran says only a few countries are capable of making both the fuel "plates", used in the Tehran reactor, and nuclear fuel rods, which are used in power stations.
Enriched uranium can be used to fuel power plants and other types of reactors, which is Iran's stated aim, or to provide material for atomic bombs if processed much further, which the West suspects is the country's ultimate intention.
Tehran says it needs nuclear technology to generate electricity.
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