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Offline Lord of the Rings

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Re: Iran Nuclear Energy
« Reply #575 on: June 07, 2012, 05:06:07 PM »
0
In my opinion we should just destroy this facility and concentrate making another new one.
this facility has been in the making for 30 years now and it is mixed with russian and old germany stuff.

it is no safe...I know it is had but we need to design and make one IN IRAN. without help from anyone.

Offline Maverickk004

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Iran Nuclear Energy
« Reply #576 on: June 10, 2012, 04:15:02 AM »
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Maverickk004,

Please repost you last article here in sanctions thread!

Thanks,


Catsoo

Roger that...
You can't let other people tell you who you are...it's something you have to decide for yourself.

Offline Catsoo

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Iran Nuclear Energy
« Reply #577 on: June 21, 2012, 03:44:09 AM »
+2
Iran producing enriched uranium at faster pace: experts

(AFP) – 5 hours ago

WASHINGTON — Iran's uranium enrichment effort has picked up speed and Tehran could produce enough fissile material needed for a nuclear weapon within four months, experts told US lawmakers on Wednesday.

The rate of Iran's uranium enrichment has accelerated despite cyber sabotage from the Stuxnet virus in 2009, the experts said.

Based on the findings of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), "it's clear that Iran could produce a nuclear weapon very quickly should it wish to do so," said Stephen Rademaker of the Bipartisan Policy Center in Washington.

Iran has produced 3,345 kilos of uranium enriched to 3.5 percent, according to the IAEA, which if it was enriched further would provide enough uranium for at least two atomic bombs, Rademaker told the House Armed Services Committee.

If the Iran leadership decided to go forward, "it would take them 35 to 106 days to actually have the fissile material for a weapon," he said.

David Albright, president of the Institute for Science and International Security (ISIS), told the same hearing that "it would take Iran at least four months in order to have sufficient weapon grade uranium ... for a nuclear explosive device."

Uranium 235 must be enriched close to 90 percent for use in an atomic bomb. US Defense Secretary Leon Panetta has said that the Iranians are about a year away from producing enough highly-enriched uranium needed for a nuclear weapon, a threshold that Washington views as a "red line."

More than 9,000 Iranian centrifuges are churning out 158 kilograms of 3.5 percent enriched uranium a month, three times the production rate compared to mid-2009, when the Stuxnet virus struck the program, Rademaker said.

The enrichment rate is "three times the rate of production prior to the Stuxnet virus, which many people have suggested somehow crippled their program."

"So Stuxnet may have set them back, but not by very much, at least not sufficiently," he added.

According to the New York Times, President Barack Obama, and his predecessor in the White House, George W. Bush, approved the use of the Stuxnet virus to disrupt Iran's nuclear program, in the first known sustained US cyber attack.

Stuxnet -- a complex virus developed jointly with Israel -- sowed confusion at Iran's Natanz nuclear plant, the Times reported, but the virus later accidentally spread outside of Iran, appearing in computer systems other countries.

http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5hXBSi91Eh1nTaXfqooBfHyjkLFYQ?docId=CNG.780c4bf9e65b341af8332455cba1b2e0.6b1

Offline Catsoo

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Iran is capable of exporting nuclear reactors: Salehi
« Reply #578 on: June 26, 2012, 04:29:53 PM »
+2
Iran is capable of exporting nuclear reactors: Salehi



Iran's Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi says the country is a pioneer in various scientific fields and is capable of exporting research nuclear reactors to other countries.


Addressing Iranians living in Cyprus during a luncheon on Tuesday, the minister who is currently in Nicosia noted that in addition to exporting nuclear reactors, Iran is also producing 20-percent enriched uranium as fuel for those reactors.

“Iran is currently a pioneer country in the field of biotechnology, and in space science, it is the sole country in the Islamic world and among developing countries which has sent three satellites into the orbit,” he said.

The minister stated that Iran attaches great importance to the European Union and developing EU relations is a priority for the Iranian foreign policy.

“We hope good relations with Cyprus [as the next EU president] will provide an opportunity to do away with some misunderstandings [between Iran and the EU] which are due to insignificant reasons,” Salehi added.

Earlier on Tuesday, Salehi met with Cypriot President Dimitris Christofias, noting that Cyprus will be the next president of the EU and this will be a good opportunity to remove misunderstandings between Iran and the EU.

He is also scheduled to meet with Cyprus’ minister of economic affairs and acting foreign minister, Vassos Shiarly, during his one-day visit to the Eastern Mediterranean country.

http://www.presstv.com/detail/2012/06/26/248091/iran-able-to-export-nuclear-reactors/

Offline Ich

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Iran is capable of exporting nuclear reactors: Salehi
« Reply #579 on: June 26, 2012, 06:25:18 PM »
0
Yes, sell one to ksa for 20 billion  :P

Offline Maverickk004

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Iran Nuclear Energy
« Reply #580 on: June 29, 2012, 05:02:53 PM »
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Iran nuclear standoff nears precipice



THE trouble with brinkmanship of the type now being played out over Iran's nuclear program is that it is so easy to fall over the cliff.

At the first two rounds of new talks between Iran and the P5+1 (the five permanent UN Security Council members plus Germany), in Istanbul in April and Baghdad in May, both sides still at least stumbled along the edge of the precipice. Now, after the third round in Moscow, they are holding on by not much more than their fingernails.

Neither side has been prepared to compromise on any substantive issue. They did agree barely to hold a low-level experts meeting in early July, but no one expects this to lead to a breakthrough. By then, new European and US sanctions on Iranian oil exports will be in force, and the US Congress is pushing to apply more, with influential voices there arguing that the negotiation game is over.


War talk is still close to the surface in Israel, and anxiety is mounting that, in the highly charged political climate of a US election year, escalation might not be containable.

Although the two sides' negotiating positions throughout the current series of talks have not been as far apart as in the past, their core demands have so far proved irreconcilable.

The six world powers are currently insisting on three things. First, Iran must halt all enrichment of uranium to 20 per cent purity (a level required for research reactors, but only a short step away, in practical terms, from weapons-grade uranium). Second, Iran must swap its existing 20 per cent stockpile for fuel capable of use only in the Tehran Research Reactor or for some other manifestly peaceful purpose. The final demand is that Iran shut down its highly protected underground enrichment facility at Fordow, near Qom.

In return for all of this, no new sanctions would be imposed, and access to aircraft spare parts would be eased. But Iran wants more: at a minimum, formal recognition of its "inalienable right to enrich" uranium, no shutdown of any existing facility, and the removal, in significant part, of the many sanctions that have been imposed upon it (for refusing to comply with Security Council resolutions requiring it to suspend all enrichment activity).

There are several sub-texts underlying the current stand-off, analysed in a report this month from the International Crisis Group. On the P5+1 side, certainly in the minds of US officials and their European partners, there has been a perception that Iran is reeling under the sanctions unable to cope with more and desperate for relief and deeply fearful of an imminent Israeli military strike.

But Iran sees the West in the context of the economic turmoil in Europe, and US President Barack Obama's effort to win re-election as desperate to avoid a conflict that would send oil prices rocketing. Its leaders feel their own bargaining position strengthened by the country's new facilities and stockpiles, and, while hurt by sanctions, too much pride is at stake ever to surrender in the face of them.

The reality is that each side is exaggerating its own strengths and the other's weaknesses. In particular, the global powers are underestimating Iran's resilience, and Iran is overestimating the ability of the US, in an election year, to curb possible Israeli military adventurism. Some modification of their respective positions is necessary.

There is no doubt that Iran, with its long history of secrecy and dissimulation, deserves the intense hostility and distrust that its nuclear program continues to engender. But the most common view of security and intelligence experts worldwide is that, while Iran may want the technical breakout capability to build a nuclear weapon that Japan now has, it is still a long way from building a usable atomic weapon, and has made no decision to do so. Indeed, Iran's leaders, weighing the costs and benefits, have plenty of good reasons not to cross that red line.

But those assessments will prove to be naive unless Iran, at the very least, verifiably suspends any enrichment beyond 5 per cent, renders its 20 per cent stockpile incapable of military application, and meets the concern about Fordow by modifying its role and opening it to intrusive monitoring.

In return, the P5+1 must be prepared to modify significantly its own current bottom-line demands, regardless of the political difficulties that this will entail, not least for Obama in an election year. The global powers should openly acknowledge that whether one likes it or not, and whether it is good policy or not, the legally correct position under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty is that Iran does have a right to enrich uranium for purely civilian purposes. And, even more important, the P5+1 must be prepared not only to disavow new sanctions, but to wind back existing ones as Iran takes each of the reasonable steps required of it.

That way lies not accommodation with the devil, but recognition that the current situation is unsustainable; inflammatory confrontation is closer than we think; and catastrophe can be averted only by cool, level-headed diplomacy of the kind that, until now, has been in unhappily short supply.


http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/iran-nuclear-evans/story-e6frg6n6-1226412627640

Offline Catsoo

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Iran Nuclear Energy
« Reply #581 on: July 17, 2012, 03:29:55 PM »
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UN agency slammed after refusing US request for probe into Iran, N. Korea shipments

Published July 17, 2012

FoxNews.com

A United Nations agency under fire for shipments of computers and other sophisticated equipment to North Korea and Iran has apparently rejected a request by the U.S. State Department to conduct an independent probe into the controversy, drawing a pointed bipartisan rebuke from top lawmakers on Capitol Hill.

In a letter being released Tuesday, the leaders of the House Foreign Affairs Committee complained to World Intellectual Property Organization Director General Francis Gurry about his agency's refusal to cooperate. They accused the agency of locking down key documents while trying to root out the whistle-blowers who alerted others to the scandal -- and then rebuffing the State Department's request for an outside investigation.

"We are outraged by your recent refusal on the basis of 'confidentiality,' of a request by the U.S. Department of State to conduct an independent, external investigation into how and why these transactions happened," wrote Reps. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, R-Fla., and Howard Berman, D-Calif., chairwoman and ranking member of the committee, respectively. "There is no rational basis for this refusal. ...  On the face of it, the documentary record, coupled with your public statements, shows a shocking and intolerable lack of judgment, together with an inclination to disregard the legitimate concerns of Member States and to retaliate against staff who are simply trying to tell the truth.

"However, if you truly believe that your actions have been entirely proper, then surely you would have nothing to hide and no reason to block the requested independent investigation," they wrote.

The lawmakers continued to call for an independent probe. And they described an agency pledge to have future shipments to Iran and North Korea reviewed by the U.N. Sanctions Committee "not sufficient."

The House Foreign Affairs Committee had already announced earlier this month it was moving forward with its own investigation into the shipments. In their letter, Ros-Lehtinen and Berman called on Gurry to provide their committee with "unfettered access" to documents.

The U.N.'s World Intellectual Property Organization claims it was just shipping "standard IT equipment" and did not violate sanctions.

But the inquiries, including one by the State Department, raise questions about the ways in which U.N. agencies have managed to sidestep restrictions that the world body expects the rest of the world to obey in halting the spread of sensitive technologies to nuclear-ambitious pariah regimes.

It also calls into question how much U.N. member states know about the activities of agencies they supposedly approve and supervise.

The State Department probe came in the wake of Fox News revelations in April about the actions by WIPO in sending such sensitive equipment to North Korea by a complicated method that seemed designed to bypass U.N. Security Council sanctions against the country.

The shipments took place in late 2011 or early 2012, and were financed through the Beijing offices of the United Nations Development Program (UNDP).

The WIPO actions also violated the sweeping restrictions of the equipment manufacturer, Hewlett-Packard, which forbids any HP equipment from being sent to such regimes.

The U.S. is a member of WIPO, yet apparently knew little or nothing about the controversial delivery of computers and sophisticated services. And within a month, the State Department discovered the problem went beyond North Korea, a spokesman said in response to questions from Fox News.

In the case of Iran, the WIPO computer shipment included 20 Hewlett-Packard Compaq desktop computers, now outmoded in the U.S. but which nonetheless still gave Iran's Industrial Property Office significant computing power. In the case of North Korea, the equipment included more sophisticated computers and data-storage servers.

As was the case in North Korea, WIPO experts made technical visits to Iran in advance of the shipments to scope out the project, help orchestrate financing and payment by the local office of UNDP in Tehran, and OK the deliveries, according to WIPO's documentation.

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2012/07/17/un-agency-slammed-after-refusing-us-request-for-probe-into-iran-n-korea/#ixzz20tUO0AE7

Online impera

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Re: Iran Nuclear Energy
« Reply #582 on: July 20, 2012, 06:46:56 PM »
+1
Bushehr Nuclear Plant to Run at Full Capacity in August
The Bushehr Nuclear Power Plant, Iran’s first, is scheduled to run at full capacity in August, the chief of the main contractor said on Thursday.
“Bushehr is planned to reach 100 percent capacity this August,” said Valery Limarenko, director of NIAEP, the management company of Atomstroyexport.
http://en.rian.ru/world/20120719/174683900.html


Offline Catsoo

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Iran Nuclear Energy
« Reply #583 on: July 22, 2012, 01:32:56 PM »
0
Iran says more fuel supplied to Tehran research reactor

By Associated Press,

TEHRAN, Iran — Iran’s nuclear chief says more domestically produced nuclear fuel has been supplied to a medical research reactor.

The 20 percent enriched uranium used in the reactor has been a key issue in talks between Iran and world powers over Tehran’s nuclear ambitions. The West wants Iran to halt production of the 20 percent fuel, which is much closer to weapons grade than the level needed for energy-producing reactors.


Nuclear chief Fereidoun Abbasi says more nuclear fuel was provided Sunday to the Tehran reactor, which produces radioisotopes to treat cancer patients.

Iran inserted the first domestically produced nuclear fuel into the reactor in February.

The U.S. and its allies accuse Iran of seeking to develop nuclear weapons, a charge Tehran denies.

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/middle_east/iran-says-more-fuel-supplied-to-tehran-research-reactor/2012/07/22/gJQAVBP41W_story.html
« Last Edit: July 23, 2012, 06:48:43 PM by Catsoo »

Offline sciri21

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Iran Nuclear Energy I
« Reply #584 on: July 23, 2012, 06:38:29 PM »
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Iran can produce N-fuel for vessels, subs

Head of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran (AEOI) Fereydoun Abbasi says the country has the know-how to produce nuclear fuel for submarines and commercial ships.

According to Press TV, Abbasi said on the sidelines of a ceremony in Tehran on Sunday “We have the capability to design nuclear fuel for ships and submarines, but currently no plan to enrich uranium beyond 20 percent is on our agenda.”
 
The remarks come as several Iranian lawmakers said recently that they had prepared a draft bill urging the government to equip commercial vessels with nuclear propulsion systems in order to avert the US-engineered sanctions that ban other countries from refueling Iranian ships.
 
Abbasi noted the AEOI has no difficulty to move towards such systems and technologies, once it becomes a matter of basic necessity and the government makes a decision on it.

The United States, Zionist regime, and some of their allies accuse Tehran of pursuing military objectives in its nuclear program.
Iran has strongly refuted the US-led allegation, arguing that as a signatory to the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and a member of the International Atomic Energy Agency, it has every right to develop and acquire nuclear technology for peaceful purposes.

http://english.irib.ir/news/iran-a-iaea/item/95732-iran-can-produce-n-fuel-for-vessels,-subs

Offline Lord of the Rings

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Re: Iran Nuclear Energy
« Reply #585 on: July 26, 2012, 05:04:29 PM »
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11,000 centrifuges operational in Iran


TEHRAN, July 25 (MNA) – Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad announced on Tuesday that 11,000 centrifuges are currently operational in Iran’s uranium enrichment facilities.
In February Iran announced that it has started using new generation of domestically made centrifuges that enrich uranium at a faster pace.

Centrifuges are machines that spin at supersonic speed to raise the concentration of the fissile isotope of uranium.

As a signatory to the nuclear non-proliferation regime (NPT) Iran is legally entitled to enrich uranium for civilian purposes.

PA/PA
END
MNA
http://www.mehrnews.com/en/newsdetail.aspx?NewsID=1658564

Offline Catsoo

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Iran Nuclear Energy
« Reply #586 on: July 26, 2012, 05:40:38 PM »
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Ahmadinejad's target was 15000 operating centrifuges if I remember correctly! Imagine the output of enriched Uranium with more efficient  Iranian design centrifuges!  :)


catsoo

Offline Ich

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Iran Nuclear Energy
« Reply #587 on: July 27, 2012, 02:17:04 PM »
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Didnt he also announce Iran can enrich uran by laser?

Offline Lord of the Rings

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Re: Iran Nuclear Energy
« Reply #588 on: July 27, 2012, 02:40:39 PM »
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My friends, what does it mean to have 11,000 centifuges? I know what centirfuges are, but how much uranium can 11,000 enrich and how many bombs could we make?
we need to make more breedor reactors to make plutonium!
also where is our laser enrichment?

Offline Catsoo

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Iran Nuclear Energy
« Reply #589 on: July 27, 2012, 03:26:06 PM »
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Farbod,

Iran is not building the bomb everything about will be ready just in case. Iran is using a few different types of centrifuges with different capacities. I am sure IAEA webpage will give you a good estimate since USraelis want to know this and follow it up closely.

Catsoo

Offline Catsoo

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Iran Nuclear Energy
« Reply #590 on: July 30, 2012, 01:23:59 PM »
0
Iran speeds up pace of enrichment: Report

2012-07-30 15:01
 
Warning: The original source of this news is Zionist! 
   
This up-to-date guide to Israel and the Palestinian territories includes a history chapter by... Was R245.95 Now R228.73
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Jerusalem - Iran has significantly stepped up the pace at which it is enriching uranium, shortening the time it would take for it to reach a nuclear threshold, two Israeli newspapers reported on Monday.

"Iran has broken new records in terms of the pace at which it has been enriching uranium, and it has continued to race ahead so as to create as short a 'storming distance' as possible between it and the bomb," the Maariv daily said.

Sourcing the story to unspecified "intelligence reports", the paper said Iran had been able to up the pace of enrichment due to the fact that it was now operating "close to 10 000 centrifuges" including "a new type of centrifuge that is far more sophisticated".

Israel says a nuclear Iran would pose an existential threat to the Jewish state and officials believe Tehran may be on the cusp of "break out" capacity - the moment when it could quickly produce weapons-grade uranium.

A similar report on the Ynet news website, the online version of the Yediot Aharonot newspaper, had identical figures but did not cite a source.

"The data indicate that Iran has significantly increased the pace of its uranium enrichment over the past four months," it said, without giving details.

A matter of time

"Currently the Islamic republic produces 230kg (507 pounds) of LEU (low-enriched uranium) each month and 12 kg (about 26 pounds) of uranium enriched to a fissile concentration of 20 percent," it said.

It said Tehran currently held stocks of around 160kg of 20% enriched uranium, which was about 100kg less than the amount required to produce a bomb.

"Should the Iranians continue to enrich uranium at the current pace, they will have some 260kg (about 570 pounds) of uranium refined to a fissile concentration of 20% in January or February of 2013," the website said.

"With this amount, it would take Iran only about two months to produce weapons-grade uranium for a nuclear warhead or bomb - a 'nuclear threshold' situation."

In May, the International Atomic Energy Agency nuclear watchdog published figures showing Iran had already produced 146kg of 20%-enriched uranium since February, of which just under a third had been converted into fuel plates for the Tehran research reactor, rendering it unsuitable for further enrichment.

Israel, which is widely believed to have the Middle East's only, albeit undeclared, nuclear arsenal, has warned that a military option cannot be ruled out to prevent Iran from developing an atomic weapons capability. Tehran insists its nuclear programme is for peaceful purposes only.

http://www.news24.com/World/News/Iran-speeds-up-pace-of-enrichment-Report-20120730
« Last Edit: July 30, 2012, 01:27:18 PM by Catsoo »

Online mamdali

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Iran Nuclear Energy
« Reply #591 on: July 30, 2012, 01:47:00 PM »
+1
Hmmm, I guess throwing the Stuxnet pebble in front of the Iranian train didn't get anywhere. Maybe even sped it up a bit!
« Last Edit: July 30, 2012, 01:49:20 PM by mamdali »
(Note:  I hope I'm being redundant by saying that given the state of misinformation and factless and unsupported content that is rife on the 'internet' today, naturally, I cannot endorse, believe, support, or accept any of links posted by me or others.  I personally find them interesting, however, as they open new perspectives for me.  I leave it to the reader to glean what they can or want from them).

Offline Ich

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Iran Nuclear Energy
« Reply #592 on: July 30, 2012, 02:40:24 PM »
0
Hmmm, I guess throwing the Stuxnet pebble in front of the Iranian train didn't get anywhere. Maybe even sped it up a bit!

MUUUAHAHAHAHAHA  :lol: :lol: :lol:

Offline Catsoo

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Iran Nuclear Energy
« Reply #593 on: August 03, 2012, 03:44:40 PM »
+2
Iran increases uranium enrichment activities


Iran is defiantly forging on with its controversial nuclear activities by activating hundreds more uranium enrichment centrifuges, according to President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.



 
Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad  Photo: REUTERS
10:03AM BST 25 Jul 2012


"There are currently 11,000 centrifuges active in enrichment facilities" in Iran, he was quoted by state media as saying late on Tuesday in a meeting with supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and senior regime officials.

That was more than the 10,000 centrifuges Iran was last said to have had operating, according to a May 25 report by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).

Ahmadinejad's reported comments did not give a more precise figure nor detail how many centrifuges were now working at each of Iran's two enrichment sites: Natanz and the heavily fortified underground bunker of Fordo.

Fordo has emerged as one of the most contentious points in fruitless negotiations between Iran and the P5+1 group of nations, which comprises the top UN Security Council powers the United States, Britain, France, Russia, and China, plus Germany.

The Security Council has demanded Iran suspend all uranium enrichment and has imposed four sets of sanctions to pressure it to comply. The IAEA, the UN's nuclear watchdog, has said it suspects there is a military dimension to Iran's nuclear programme.


The United States and the European Union have added their own sanctions on Iran, but the Islamic republic has defiantly said it would continue with its nuclear activities.

The IAEA report in May said there were 9,330 installed centrifuges in Natanz, of which 8,818 were being fed uranium hexafluoride gas to produce enriched uranium.

The Fordo facility, near the holy city of Qom, had 696 working centrifuges, the report said.

The enrichment activities have produced stockpiles of uranium enriched to purities of 3.5 per cent and 19.75 per cent.

Iran says the former is to fuel its nuclear power reactor in the southern city of Bushehr, while the higher-grade uranium is to make medical isotopes for cancer patients in its Tehran research reactor.

Western powers, though, fear the 19.75-per cent enriched uranium could, in just a few technical steps more, be processed into bomb-grade, 90-percent uranium.

Iran insists its nuclear programme is entirely peaceful, but has rebuffed repeated attempts by the IAEA to expand its ongoing surveillance and inspections, notably to include a suspect sprawling military facility in Parchin, outside Tehran.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/middleeast/iran/9425580/Iran-increases-uranium-enrichment-activities.html

Offline mohsin

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Russia and Iran: Heading for divorce court?
« Reply #594 on: August 11, 2012, 05:38:05 AM »
0
http://rt.com/politics/russia-iran-s300-court-nuclear-weapons-349/

Quote
"We have already made it clear to Iran that lawsuits are not helping the development of our relations,” the newspaper quoted a Russian presidential administration source as saying. “But our requests to retract these documents from court went unnoticed."

Moscow is prepared to stop supporting Tehran over its nuclear program, he said.

"Prior to the next session of the six international mediators, we will try to make our position heard once again by sending a government delegation to Tehran,” the Kremlin official told Kommersant. “And if Iran once again refuses to do so, it will have to sort out its nuclear issues in the international arena on its own."


Quote
“We are showing to Iran that we have powers, that we have the leverage to control the situation and, in particular, to put pressure on Tehran,” he told RIA Novosti.

Demidenko believes the two sides will manage to resolve the dispute over the S-300 contract in an extrajudicial proceeding.
“Eventually, they will come to an agreement,” he said. “It’s not a key issue in our relations with Iran. Work in Bushehr (where Russian specialists helped in the construction of the nuclear power plant) is a lot more important, since there remains the prospect for Russia to be admitted into Iranian gas projects.”


Quote

According to Georgy Mirsky, a senior researcher at the Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow was concerned that if the Islamic Republic got the S-300 missile systems, President Ahmadinejad would have his hands untied to develop a nuclear bomb.
Russia’s refusal to ship the system to Tehran “was an absolutely correct and timely step,” Mirsky stressed, adding that the decision may have helped to halt a military conflict between Iran and Israel.

Offline Moso

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Iran Nuclear Energy
« Reply #595 on: August 11, 2012, 02:22:36 PM »
+1
Honestly I do hope Iran gets a nuclear weapon. Will make Iran even more powerful and any aggression against Iran will be pretty much out of the question. So then countries like Israel know that if they attack Iran they get a nuke dropped on them and vanish from existence.
Հայաստանի Հանրապետություն

Online kaman

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Iran Nuclear Energy
« Reply #596 on: August 11, 2012, 09:56:53 PM »
+2
The question is "how can Iran dissuade imperialist adventurers from attacking its territory and sovereignty in times when the so called international law has simply vanished"?

Offline Lord of the Rings

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Re: Iran Nuclear Energy
« Reply #597 on: August 16, 2012, 05:22:18 PM »
+2
Iran mulls building 4G nuclear plants


Iran mulls building fourth-generation nuclear power plants due to higher efficiency of such power plants, an Iranian lawmaker says.


“Considering the low output of the second-generation power plants, the Islamic Republic of Iran seeks to build fourth-generation plants with higher productivity and output,” Jalil Ja’afari, a member of Iran's Majlis Energy Committee said on Thursday.

Ja’afari pointed out that the efficiency of power plants which use light water as coolant (second-generation) is about 30-35 percent, while power plants whose coolant is helium (fourth-generation) have an output of over 45 percent.

The lawmaker alluded to restrictions caused for Iran by the West’s embargoes, which ban bunkering services to Iranian ships, and noted that Tehran seeks to provide its vessels with nuclear fuel in an attempt to offset the impact of the existing fuel shortages.

The Iranian legislator stated that the Islamic Republic does not want to make other countries sensitive [toward its nuclear energy program], but only seeks to solve its problems and considers 20-percent enriched nuclear fuel sufficient for activities in different industrial sectors.

Earlier in July, the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran (AEOI) Fereydoun Abbasi said the country has the know-how to produce nuclear fuel for submarines and commercial ships.

Iran’s first nuclear power plant in Bushehr was officially launched in September 2011 and began operations by generating electricity at 40 percent of its capacity.

The 1,000-megawatt plant reached 75 percent of its nominal capacity in March.
http://www.presstv.ir/detail/2012/08/16/256588/iran-mulls-building-4g-nplants/#.UC0rrqllS7g

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Iran Nuclear Energy
« Reply #598 on: August 30, 2012, 05:13:08 PM »
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Iran doubles underground nuclear capacity -UN agency


A section of the Parchin military facility in Iran is pictured in this August 22, 2012 DigitalGlobe handout satellite image. This part of the facility has had documented changes in the last year. REUTERS/Courtesy DigitalGlobe/Handout


By Fredrik Dahl

VIENNA | Thu Aug 30, 2012 12:59pm EDT

(Reuters) - Iran has doubled the number of uranium enrichment machines it has in an underground bunker, a U.N. report said on Thursday, showing Tehran continued to defy Western pressure to stop its atomic work and the threat of Israeli attack.

In the weeks and months when Israeli politicians increased their talk of air strikes on Iran's nuclear sites, the Islamic Republic was rapidly increasing the enrichment capacity of its Fordow site, buried deep underground to withstand any such hit.

The U.N. International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) said in its quarterly report on Iran that the number of centrifuges at Fordow, near the holy Shi'ite Muslim city of Qom, about 130 km (80 miles) from THE CAPITAL Tehran, had more than doubled to 2,140 from 1,064 in May.

The new machines were not yet operating, it said.

Iran's supreme leader repeated this week that Iran's nuclear program was entirely peaceful. "Our motto is nuclear energy for all and nuclear weapons for none," Ayatollah Ali Khamenei told a developing nations summit in Tehran.

But the expansion in enrichment infrastructure and the increasing in stockpiles of potent nuclear material revealed in the report will do nothing to allay fears or reduce the diplomatic and sanctions pressure on Iran.

The report showed that Iran had produced nearly 190 kg (418 pounds) of higher-grade enriched uranium since 2010, up from 145 kg in May.

Iran says it needs this material - which is much purer than fuel needed for electricity generation - for a medical research reactor, but it also takes it significantly closer to making potential bomb material.

The IAEA also expressed concerns about Parhcin, a military site south of the capital that it wants to inspect for evidence of past nuclear weapons development.

"Significant ground scraping and landscaping have been undertaken over an extensive area at and around the location," it said.

Five buildings had been demolished and power lines, fences and paved roads removed, the report said, "extensive activities" that would hamper its investigation if granted access.

"The activities observed ... further strengthen the agency's assessment that it is necessary to have access to the location at Parchin without further delay", the IAEA said.

Iran says Parchin is a conventional military facility and has dismissed the allegations about it as "ridiculous".

Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi, meeting U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon in Tehran on Thursday, was quoted by Iranian state TV as saying: "The West has put sanctions on Iran for years, however the Iranian nation continues to resist and make progress."

A Western diplomat said the doubling of enrichment capacity at Fordow was a "worrying trend" showing that Tehran continued to expand its program.

(Additional reporting by Zahra Hosseinian; Editing by Robin Pomeroy)

http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/08/30/us-nuclear-iran-iaea-idUSBRE87T0Y220120830

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« Reply #599 on: August 30, 2012, 06:31:22 PM »
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