Vienna Archive

Austrian develops first hybrid-powered horse carriage

Vienna, Oct 26 (DPA) An Austrian coachman says he has developed the world’s first hybrid horse carriage with an electrical motor – not to save carbon emissions, but to make the animals’ lives easier, Austrian broadcaster ORF reported.

While carmakers are racing to bring hybrid vehicles on the market, Mario Steiner thought about how he could improve the real horsepower on his vehicle that carries tourists through the Tyrolean mountains around his hometown of Matrei, according to the report Sunday.

After two years of tinkering with the help of colleagues, Steiner, 43, has come up with a motor that helps his two horses carry passengers up steep mountain roads. When the motor is switched off and the animals pull all the weight, the battery is being partly recharged.

‘Hikers and animal rights activists often complained that the animals work too much,’ Steiner told the regional weekly Osttiroler Bote. ‘Since I have had the batteries, I haven’t heard negative comments.’

The coachman says he researched the internet, but could not find any other electrical hybrid carriage. There are auxiliary petrol engines, but Steiner did not want to pollute the mountain air.

Come winter, Steiner’s horses have to make do without modern technology again, when they draw a sledge instead of a carriage with wheels.

IAEA inspectors in Iran for new nuclear inspection

Vienna/Tehran, Oct 25 (DPA) A team of International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) inspectors arrived in Tehran Saturday night to visit a new nuclear site south of the Iranian capital that has created new suspicions about Iran’s nuclear programme.

Flying from Vienna, where the IAEA is seated, the four experts were set to visit the unfinished uranium enrichment site near the village of Fordo for the first time since Iran informed the IAEA about it in late September, years after starting construction.

The inspection is one of the confidence-building steps agreed between Iran’s and the five permanent UN Security Council members plus Germany in Geneva Oct 1.

The underground Fordo site has been under construction for the past few years and is located 47 km south of the religious city of Qom in a compound protected by the Revolutionary Guards.

Diplomats and experts say there is likely no technical equipment installed yet in the facility that is Iran’s second nuclear enrichment plant besides the one already operating in Natanz.

The three men and one woman on the IAEA team headed by Herman Nackaerts are set to compare technical plans of Fordo with the actual layout of the plant, check for the presence of nuclear material and discuss the site’s role within Iran’s nuclear programme, according to ElBaradei and officials familiar with the IAEA.

But it was less the site itself than the late timing of Iran’s declaration to the IAEA that has Western countries worried.

Tehran argues it has the right to not implement an IAEA rule under which countries have to inform about new nuclear facilities as soon as they decide to build them. Instead, Iran only accepts an older rule that called for only six months advance notice.

But ElBaradei has said the Islamic state is ‘on the wrong side of the law’ with its stance.

The other question that experts and Western countries would like to see answered is why Iran needs a second enrichment plant that is too small to create enough fuel for Iran’s power plant being constructed in Bushehr.

Enrichment technology can be used for making nuclear fuel for power reactors, but also for nuclear weapons. Tehran denies it has any plan to build atomic bombs.

Iran’s IAEA ambassador Ali Asghar Soltanieh has argued that Fordo was a back-up plant in case the Natanz site was attacked by Israel.

‘Therefore we had to have a contingency plan in order to have a sustained enrichment programme,’ he told the BBC recently.

Israel’s policy is to keep open the option of attacking Iran over its contentious nuclear programme. Israel has launched attacks on Iraq and Syria in the past, in order to destroy nuclear facilities there.

The IAEA inspection that is to last until about next Wednesday comes just a few days before the permanent UN Security Council members Britain, China, France, Russia and the US, plus Germany, are set to meet Iranian representatives for another round of nuclear talks in Geneva in the second half of the coming week.

Although it is unlikely that the IAEA will be able to provide an analysis of its inspection by then, diplomats have told DPA that the outcome of the visit would influence the talks.

Russia, France, US to agree to Iran fuel deal

Vienna, Oct 23 (DPA) Diplomats from Russia, France and the US were set Friday afternoon to jointly submit their formal approvals of a deal to process Iran’s nuclear fuel abroad, a diplomat of one of the countries said.

It was not immediately clear when Iran would provide its answer to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) in Vienna, which has drafted the plan to ship most of Iran’s enriched uranium to Russia to turn it into fuel for a medical reactor in Tehran.

‘We agree to these proposals and hope that not only Iran, but also all other participants in the negotiations will confirm their readiness to implement the planned course of action,’ Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said in Moscow, according to the Interfax news agency.

He was referring to France and the US, which have already publicly expressed their agreement.

A French foreign ministry spokesman confirmed Thursday that his country stands ready to take the material processed in Russia and turn it into actual fuel elements for Iran.

France is one of the few countries with this technical capability.

The Western countries involved have described the possible agreement as an important confidence-building measure, because it would reduce the likelihood for Iran to use the uranium for nuclear weapons. Iran denies it has any such military intentions.

IAEA chief Mohamed ElBaradei set a Friday deadline to his draft agreement that was the product of two and a half days of talks among the four countries earlier this week in Vienna.

The permanent UN Security Council members Britain, China, France, Russia and the US, as well as Germany, are set to hold a new round of wider-ranging nuclear talks with Iran in Geneva next week.