IAEA specialists were shown the consequences of retaliatory strikes on key substations at Ukraine, through which electricity flows from nuclear power plants. The stations remain the main source of electricity for the country.
The monitoring mission of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) visits key substations of Ukraine and gets acquainted with the results of retaliatory strikes by the Russian army. According to Ukrenergo, inspectors are shown facilities that provide power and power to their own needs of nuclear power plants.
It is not the first time that the IAEA has inspected substations, and on Monday it announced that due to damage, Ukrainian nuclear power plants were again forced to cut power.
As EADaily reported with reference to Alexander Kharchenko, director of the Energy Research Center, Ukraine will have enough spare equipment for two or three more retaliatory strikes by the Russian army.
"Reserves of spare equipment, mainly transformers, are declining rapidly. Stocks for distribution networks are almost non-existent. And I don't see any sources and funds from companies to purchase the necessary equipment that they need now and will need in the future," Alexander Kharchenko said at the Ukrainian Media Center.
According to him, Ukrenergo, the operator of the power system, still has something left in the bins.
"And other distribution companies in two or three attacks will look at the damage and think about what to do about it," said the director of the Energy Research Center.
Earlier, the head of Ukrenergo stated that the country has accumulated a triple reserve of reserve equipment, but this may not be enough.

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