Iran confirmed on Wednesday that no radioactive material leaked following coordinated U.S.-Israeli airstrikes on two of its major uranium enrichment facilities, easing immediate fears of a nuclear incident. The strikes, conducted over the weekend, targeted centrifuge halls at the Natanz and Fordow sites, according to Iranian and Western officials cited by the Financial Times.
While Tehran downplayed the operational damage, with speculation that Washington exaggerated its efficacy, energy analysts are scrutinizing the longer-term implications for Iran’s civil nuclear program.
Iran’s energy ministry has aimed to derive at least 15% of national electricity from nuclear sources by 2030. Its flagship Bushehr reactor already supplies over 7 terawatt-hours annually, displacing an estimated 12 million barrels of oil equivalent critical to maintaining domestic energy balances and boosting export capacity.
Enrichment activities, though controversial due to dual-use concerns, also serve Iran’s energy infrastructure. Prior to the strikes, Iran was reportedly stockpiling uranium enriched up to 60%, far beyond the 3.67% limit under the defunct JCPOA but technically usable in fuel form if down-blended. No fuel-grade uranium was reported destroyed, with much of the stockpile allegedly relocated in anticipation of the strikes, according to European intelligence sources.
Markets reacted cautiously. Despite the severity of the operation, oil prices fell nearly 6% earlier this week, as the Iranian strike on Qatar’s LNG infrastructure failed to escalate into wider conflict and spared oil shipping lanes. However, geopolitical risk premiums remain, particularly if Iran chooses to retaliate through its nuclear posture or energy-linked assets.
With physical infrastructure intact but political volatility rising, the long-term future of Iran’s nuclear energy development remains highly uncertain.
By Charles Kennedy for Oilprice.com
More Top Reads From Oilprice.com