TEHRAN // Iran is conducting final tests at its first nuclear power plant and it is expected to start generating electricity in the next two months, Iranian media reported yesterday.
The Russian-built Bushehr complex, meant to be the first of a network of nuclear power stations Iran says it is planning, has missed deadline after deadline. Most recently fuel had to be removed and checked for technical problems.
The Fars news agency reported Bushehr would start injecting power into the national electricity grid in the next two months.
"Right now, after the fuel rods that were unloaded from the reactor core were washed, they are being loaded again and final tests are under way," Gholamali Miglinejad, a member of a parliamentary committee monitoring Bushehr, was quoted as saying by the student news agency ISNA.
Iran began loading fuel into Bushehr last August in front of foreign and domestic media, touting it as a symbol of resistance to international sanctions imposed by countries that suspect the Islamic state is seeking nuclear weapons, something it denies.
At that time, Iranian officials said it would take two to three months for Bushehr to start producing power, and that it would generate 1,000 megawatts, about 2.5 per cent of Iran's electricity use. Russia is providing the fuel for Bushehr.
But the start-up of the plant has been hit by several delays since then, with some analysts blaming the mysterious Stuxnet computer virus. Tehran said Stuxnet had affected staff computers at Bushehr but not major systems.
Security experts say the computer worm may have been a state-sponsored attack on Iran's nuclear programme and have originated in the United States or Israel. Neither country has mentioned any link with Stuxnet.
Diplomats and security sources say Western governments and Israel view sabotage as one way of slowing Iran's nuclear work.
Some analysts believe Iran may be suffering wider sabotage aimed at slowing its nuclear advances, pointing to a series of unexplained technical glitches that have cut the number of working centrifuges at its Natanz uranium enrichment plant.
Natanz is at the core of Western concerns about Iran's nuclear intentions since the country, without any nuclear power plants other than Bushehr, has no civilian use for enriched uranium. Western leaders believe Iran, one of the world's biggest oil and gas producers, secretly aims to refine uranium to the high degree suitable for atom bombs.
Earlier this month, an Iranian official said his country had been hit by a new malware called "Stars". But foreign experts have voiced doubt that this represented a second cyber attack.
The Bushehr plant was begun by German electronics giant Siemens in the 1970s but the project was halted by Iran's Islamic Revolution in 1979.
Russia later completed the plant and will supply its fuel.
To ease concerns abroad that Iran might reprocess spent fuel rods from Bushehr into bomb-grade plutonium, Russia will repatriate the used fuel. The plant will also be regularly monitored by inspectors of the UN nuclear watchdog agency.
Western officials have urged Iran to join the 1996 Convention on Nuclear Safety, saying the country would be the only one operating a nuclear reactor which is not part of the international pact once Bushehr is launched.
The convention, with 72 signatory states, was designed to boost global nuclear safety through a system of peer review and mutual oversight.
"The plant's location on the coast makes the safety of Iran's nuclear programme a regional security concern," the International Institute for Strategic Studies, a think-tank, said in a report last month.
Bushehr, like the Japanese nuclear plant Fukushima, is in an earthquake zone. But Iran does not need to fear a tsunami of the size that knocked out the electricity and backup cooling systems at Fukushima, as Bushehr is not near the ocean.