Iran
has told the UN nuclear agency it plans to upgrade uranium enrichment
centrifuges at its Natanz plant, reports citing diplomats say.
Iran insists its nuclear programme is peaceful in purpose. The US and its allies fear it seeks nuclear weapons.
The plan was set out in a letter to the IAEA dated 23 January, reports said.
The letter is said to mention a model of centrifuge, called IR2m, which can enrich two or three times faster than the present equipment being used by Tehran, according to the Associated Press.
The International Atomic Energy Agency sent a letter to member states saying Iran had informed the agency of its plans to use the improved machines at its fuel enrichment plant in Natanz, according to a document seen by Reuters.
"The Secretariat of the Agency received a letter from the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran (AEOI) dated 23 January 2013 informing the Agency that 'centrifuge machines type IR2m will be used in Unit A-22' at the Fuel Enrichment Plant (FEP) at Natanz," the IAEA communication is reported to say.
The Natanz facility, in central Iran, is at the heart of the country's dispute with the United Nations Security Council.
Meanwhile, on Thursday, the European Union's top foreign policy official said she believed that negotiations on the country's nuclear programme would resume shortly.
Catherine Ashton said she was "confident" that there would be a meeting soon.
Iran nuclear crisis
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Far apart
Failure to achieve a breakthrough in latest round of nuclear talks exposes the wide gaps remaining between Iran and world powers, James Reynolds reports.
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Western 'sabotage'
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Ongoing stand-off
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UK mulls options
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Q&A: Nuclear issue
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Key nuclear sites
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'Last chance'
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Breakthrough or breakdown?
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Iran attack response
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Israel strike options
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Mixed press on US-Israeli talks
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Oil embargo impact
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Q&A: Sanctions
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Fears of Dubai Iranians
Labels: Controversy, Iran, Islamism, Nuclear Technology, United Nations
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