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Russia-Ukraine War 2026
16JUN

Drone hits ZNPP reactor-6 turbine hall

3 min read
10:25UTC

A drone struck the turbine building adjacent to reactor 6 at Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant on 30-31 May, the first confirmed impact on a reactor-adjacent structure. IAEA inspectors confirmed debris and a damaged hatch; radiation levels remained normal. The plant also lost all communications for 12 hours on 27 May.

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Key takeaway

A drone hit ZNPP's reactor-6 turbine building as the plant's safety margins narrow across power, communications and attribution.

A drone struck the turbine building adjacent to reactor 6 at ZNPP on 30-31 May. IAEA inspectors on site confirmed debris and a damaged metal hatch; radiation levels remained normal. ZNPP's six reactors are in cold shutdown with fuel cooling pools stable, and the turbine building houses steam turbines rather than the reactor vessel or spent-fuel pools, so the strike does not threaten a radiological release under current conditions.

The risk calculus shifts if the single remaining 330 kV backup line fails. IAEA Update 352 does not report current diesel reserve levels, itself a data gap. The 12-hour communications blackout on 27 May meant inspectors lost real-time contact with Vienna during active hostilities around the plant, an operational vulnerability regardless of radiological status.

The main 750 kV Dniprovska line has now been disconnected for over 70 days, approaching the threshold at which the IAEA classifies the situation as a sustained safety event rather than a recurring incident. No sixth repair ceasefire has been brokered despite Rafael Grossi's continued negotiations.

Both sides deny responsibility. Ukraine's Foreign Ministry asked why it would strike its own plant, the standard response, but it does not advance attribution; IAEA policy is to document damage, not assign blame. The 750 kV line went down in mid-May , and Rosatom had already attacked IAEA credibility on 17 May as the outage hit 60 days ; the reactor-building strike is the next step in that deteriorating pattern.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

A drone hit a building at Europe's largest nuclear power plant on 30-31 May. The building it hit is next to one of the six reactor buildings and houses the steam turbines, not the nuclear fuel or waste pools. Radiation levels stayed normal because the reactors have been shut down for over a year. ZNPP has been running on a single backup 330 kV power line for more than 70 days. All communications with the outside world went down for 12 hours on 27 May, meaning inspectors briefly lost contact with their monitoring headquarters in Vienna. Neither Russia nor Ukraine has admitted firing the drone. The international nuclear watchdog, called the IAEA, confirmed the damage but said it cannot say who is responsible.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    If the single remaining 330 kV backup line fails, ZNPP would rely entirely on diesel generators, with unknown reserve levels not reported in IAEA Update 352.

  • Consequence

    Grid instability in southern Ukraine continues through summer as the main line remains disconnected with no repair ceasefire agreed.

First Reported In

Update #18 · Oreshnik doubles as Russia's front collapses

The Moscow Times· 1 Jun 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
Turkey
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IAEA
IAEA
The IAEA's sixth brokered repair ceasefire at ZNPP collapsed within days of enabling initial work on the 750 kV Dniprovska line, leaving Europe's largest nuclear plant on a single 330 kV backup with 19 total blackouts recorded since the Russian occupation began.
European Union
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United States
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Ukraine
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