Iran begins work at new uranium mines

Saeed Jalili, secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council poses for press in Almaty, largest Kazakhstan's city on Friday, April 5, 2013 at a start of high-level talks between world powers and Iranian officials. (AP Photo/ Shamil Zhumatov, pool)

Saeed Jalili, secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council poses for press in Almaty, largest Kazakhstan's city on Friday, April 5, 2013 at a start of high-level talks between world powers and Iranian officials. (AP Photo/ Shamil Zhumatov, pool)

Published Apr 9, 2013

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Tehran - Iran, under global sanctions for its nuclear enrichment programme, on Tuesday launched a new uranium production facility and began operations in two extraction mines, state television said.

The mines in the city of Saghand in central Iran operate 350m underground and are within 120km of the new yellowcake production facility in the city of Ardakan, in Yazd province, the television said.

The report gave few details of the Ardakan facility but said it had an estimated 60 tons output of yellowcake, which is an impure state of uranium oxide later used in enrichment processes.

Iran's enrichment activities, which it says are aimed at feeding a peaceful energy programme, are the focus of international concerns, with Western powers and Israel fearing Tehran is developing an atom bomb.

The announcements, on the occasion of Iran's national Atomic Energy Technology day, come shortly after talks between Iran and six world powers on Tehran's nuclear ambitions failed to achieve a breakthrough.

The six - five permanent members of the United Nations Security Council plus Germany known as the P5+1 - met with Iranian negotiators in the Kazakh city of Almaty from April 5-6 in a bid to coax Iran into curbing its programme in exchange for the easing of some sanctions.

Iran enriches uranium to both 3.5- and 20-percent levels in its Natanz and Fordo enrichment facilities.

Uranium purified at high levels can be used in a nuclear weapon. - AFP

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