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Russia-Ukraine War 2026
24APR

ZNPP blacks out for 13th time; diesel runs 90 minutes

3 min read
11:21UTC

Europe's largest nuclear plant lost all external power on 14 April when its sole remaining backup line disconnected. The main 750 kV feeder has been down for 23 days with no repair ceasefire agreed.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

The nuclear safety metric is now a calendar, not a count.

Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant (ZNPP) lost all external power for the thirteenth time in the war on 14 April when the sole remaining 330 kV Ferosplavna-1 backup line disconnected. Emergency diesel generators carried the site for approximately 90 minutes before Ferosplavna-1 was reconnected. The main 750 kV Dniprovska feeder has been out since 24 March, now 23 days, with no sixth repair ceasefire brokered.

IAEA (International Atomic Energy Agency) Update 346 on 10 April had recorded the main line disconnection at 18 days . The 14 April 13th total loss extends that to 23 days, longer than any previous outage covered in these briefings. IAEA Director General Rafael Grossi said the recurring disconnections "demonstrate the risks a live battlefield poses to nuclear safety," and that the agency is still negotiating a local ceasefire to repair the main feeder. Wire services have not led on the 23-day figure; coverage tends to spike only when diesel runs out, not when the primary cable stays down.

ZNPP is in shutdown condition and its fuel is cooled, which materially reduces the consequences of a total station blackout compared with an operating Fukushima-class plant. That floor is the argument against panic. The argument against complacency is duration: every additional day on one cable narrows the margin between a controlled 90-minute diesel run and an uncontrolled one. Rosatom has said the reactors cannot restart during fighting; Rostekhnadzor separately issued decade-horizon operating certificates for the plant earlier in April (see event 11), signalling long-term Russian administration regardless of any negotiated settlement.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant in southern Ukraine is Europe's largest nuclear facility. Russia has occupied and controlled it since early in the war. The plant is not currently generating electricity, all six reactors are shut down, but the spent nuclear fuel and reactor systems still need cooling to prevent overheating. That cooling requires constant electricity. On 14 April, the plant's last working power line briefly disconnected, meaning the only electricity available came from diesel emergency generators. These ran for about 90 minutes before the line was reconnected. This was the 13th time the plant has lost all external power during the war. Each time it happens, the generators have to take the load. If the generators failed during an outage, the plant could face a serious nuclear safety incident. The main high-voltage power line has now been broken for over three weeks with no repair agreed.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The main 750 kV Dniprovska line has been disconnected for 23 days with no sixth local ceasefire brokered. The five previous IAEA-brokered ceasefires each lasted approximately 48-72 hours, enough to repair immediate damage but not to address the structural vulnerability of running a six-reactor site off a single 330 kV backup. The ceasefire mechanism requires tacit Russian military cooperation; since late March, that cooperation has not materialised.

Rostekhnadzor's issuance of 10-year operating licences for units 1 and 2 in early April signals that Russia has no intention of facilitating a repair environment that might advance Ukrainian access or IAEA inspection rights. The licensing creates a legal framework for Russian administration through 2036 that is incompatible with any return to Ukrainian operational control.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    Cumulative diesel generator stress across 13 total power loss events increases the probability of generator failure during a future outage, a risk IAEA has flagged but cannot publicly quantify.

    Short term · 0.74
  • Consequence

    Rostekhnadzor's 10-year operating licences effectively foreclose any negotiated settlement that returns ZNPP to Ukrainian operational control before 2036.

    Long term · 0.81
  • Risk

    Prolonged main line disconnection means ZNPP has no power redundancy if Ferosplavna-1 fails; the site would be entirely dependent on diesel reserves whose duration in a sustained outage is not publicly confirmed.

    Immediate · 0.79
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