Iran may prepare to boost nuclear work: diplomats
Iran may prepare to boost nuclear work: diplomats
A UN watchdog report is expected to show that Iran has installed more uranium enrichment centrifuges at an underground site.

Vienna: A UN watchdog report is expected to show that Iran has installed more uranium enrichment centrifuges at an underground site, potentially boosting output capacity of nuclear work major powers want it to stop, Western diplomatic sources say.

Two sources said the Islamic state may have placed in position nearly 350 machines since February - in addition to the almost 700 centrifuges already operating at the Fordow facility - but that they were not yet being used to refine uranium.

If confirmed in the next quarterly report on Iran's nuclear programme by the UN International Atomic Energy Agency, tentatively expected on Friday, it is likely to be seen as a sign of continued defiance by the Islamic state of international demands to suspend such activity.

Getting Tehran to halt its enrichment of uranium to a fissile concentration of 20 per cent - which it started in 2010 and has since sharply expanded - was a key priority for world powers in their talks with Iran in Baghdad on Wednesday.

Progress in Iran's nuclear programme is closely watched by the West and Israel as it could determine how much time it would need to build nuclear bombs, should it decide to do so.

Fordow, estimated to be buried beneath 80 meters (265 feet) of rock and soil, gives Iran better protection against any Israeli or US military strikes and the shift of nuclear work to the site is of particular concern for the West.

The last IAEA report, published in February, said Iran had trebled output of 20 per cent uranium since late 2011 after starting up production at Fordow near the Shi'ite Muslim holy city of Qom and later increasing it.

The new report is not expected to show Iran increasing production. But the installation of possibly hundreds more centrifuges could set the stage for that ahead. Such machines spin at supersonic speed to raise the concentration of the fissile isotope of uranium.

BREAKOUT CAPABILITY?

Typically 174 centrifuges are needed for one production unit, but Iran has for its 20 per cent enrichment work been using sets of two interconnected cascades, with each set containing 348 such machines, to increase efficiency.

It is operating two of those units at Fordow, as well as one at an above-ground site at Natanz in central Iran, and one more may now be nearing completion at Fordow, the sources said.

"Unless the Iranians feed it (with low-enriched uranium) at the last minute, it is installed but not yet fed, so maybe not quite ready yet," one diplomat said about the new unit.

Iran has earlier suggested it would close down the production of 20 per cent at Natanz - where the work started in 2010 - once Fordow was up and running. But it has yet to do so, Western diplomats say.

Iran's mission to the IAEA, the Vienna-based UN agency, was not immediately available for comment.

Nuclear bombs require uranium enriched to 90 per cent, but much of the effort required to get there is already achieved once it reaches 20 per cent concentration, shortening the time needed for any nuclear weapons "break-out".

Iran has steadily increased uranium enrichment since 2007 and now has enough of the 3.5 and 20 per cent material for some four bombs if refined further, experts say.

The lower-grade uranium is the usual level required for nuclear power plants. Iran says it is producing 20 per cent uranium to make fuel for a medical research reactor.

Tehran denies Western accusations of a nuclear weapons agenda and says it has a sovereign right to peaceful nuclear technology, repeatedly rejecting UN resolutions calling for a suspension of all uranium enrichment.

But it has at times appeared more flexible when it comes to the refinement of uranium to 20 per cent and experts say that initially getting Iran to stop this work could open a way to ease the deadlock.

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