World

Iran nuclear deal: Enriched uranium limit will be breached

06:41 am on 18 June 2019

Iran has announced it will breach on 27 June the limit on its stockpile of enriched uranium that was set under a 2015 nuclear deal with world powers.

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani (right) listening to head of Iran's nuclear technology organisation Ali Akbar Salehi (second from right) during the "nuclear technology day" in Tehran in April. Photo: HO / Iranian Presidency / AFP

Its atomic energy agency said it had quadrupled production of the material, which is used to make reactor fuel and potentially nuclear weapons.

But it added there was "still time" for European countries to act by protecting Iran from reinstated US sanctions.

The UK, France and Germany have warned Iran not to violate the deal.

They have previously said they will have no choice but to reimpose their own sanctions, which were lifted in return for limits on the Iranian nuclear programme.

Reuters news agency quoted a US National Security Council spokesman as saying the enrichment plans were "nuclear blackmail" and should be met with "increased international pressure".

"Iran's enrichment plans are only possible because the horrible nuclear deal left their capabilities intact," Garrett Marquis said.

"President Trump has made it clear that he will never allow Iran to develop nuclear weapons."

This latest development comes at a time of high tension in the Middle East, with the US accusing Iran of being behind suspected attacks that left two oil tankers ablaze in the Gulf of Oman on Thursday. Iran has denied any involvement.

What is enriched uranium?

Enriched uranium is produced by feeding uranium hexafluoride gas into centrifuges to separate out the most fissile isotope, U-235.

Under the nuclear deal, Iran is only permitted to produce low-enriched uranium, which has a 3-4 percent concentration of U-235 and can be used to produce fuel for nuclear power plants. "Weapons-grade" uranium is 90 percent enriched or more.

Why has Iran increased its enrichment rate?

US President Donald Trump Photo: AP

Iran has complained that European powers have failed to abide by their commitments to mitigate the effects on its economy of the sanctions that US President Donald Trump reinstated after abandoning the nuclear deal last year.

Mr Trump wants to force Iran to renegotiate the accord and agree to curb its ballistic missile programme and end its "malign" activities in the Middle East.

In early May, the US stepped up pressure on Iran by ending exemptions from secondary sanctions for countries still buying Iranian oil. The move was intended to deny the Iranian government its principal source of revenue.

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani subsequently announced that his country was scaling back its commitments under the nuclear deal.

This included no longer complying with caps on its stockpiles of low-enriched uranium and heavy water - set at 300kg and 130 tonnes respectively - and halting sales of surplus supplies overseas.

Mr Rouhani also gave the European powers 60 days to protect Iranian oil sales. If they failed, he said, Iran would suspend its restrictions on uranium enrichment and halt the redesign of its heavy-water reactor at Arak, whose spent fuel would contain plutonium suitable for a bomb.

On Monday, a spokesman for the Atomic Energy Organisation of Iran told a televised news conference at Arak that the "countdown to pass the 300kg reserve of enriched uranium has started".

"In 10 days' time ... we will pass this limit," Behrouz Kamalvandi said.

"There is still time for the Europeans ... but the Europeans have expressed indirectly their inability to act. They should not think that after 60 days, they will have another 60-day opportunity."

The Europeans have set up a "special purpose vehicle" that would essentially allow goods to be bartered between Iranian and foreign companies without direct financial transactions. But the mechanism - known as Instex - is not yet operational.

File photo of the reactor building at the Bushehr nuclear power plant in southern Iran, 1200km south of Tehran. Photo: AFP

Mr Kamalvandi also said Iran might start enriching uranium up to 5 percent concentration so that it could provide fuel for its Bushehr power plant, or even up to the 20 percent concentration required for the Tehran research reactor.

Experts say the technical leap required to get to 90 percent concentration from 20 percent is relatively straightforward, because it becomes easier at higher levels. Going from the natural state of 0.7 percent concentration to 20 percent takes 90 percent of the total energy required.

Iran maintains that its nuclear programme is for peaceful purposes.

What has been the reaction?

A spokesman for UK Prime Minister Theresa May said her government had been "clear about our concern at Iranian plans to reduce compliance" with the deal.

"Should Iran cease meeting its nuclear commitments, we would then look at all options available to us," the spokesman added.

The German foreign ministry urged Iran to abide by the deal.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who was a staunch opponent of the nuclear deal, called for international sanctions to be reimposed immediately "should Iran deliver on its current threats".

"In any event, Israel will not allow Iran to get nuclear weaponry," he warned.

- BBC