Vienna, Sept 6, 2019 (AFP) -
The acting head of the UN's nuclear watchdog will meet officials in Iran this weekend, the organization said Friday, as Tehran prepares to detail its latest scale-back to commitments under a 2015 deal to curb its nuclear program.
The International Atomic Energy Agency said in a statement that its Acting Director General Cornel Feruta "will travel to Tehran on Saturday for meetings with high-level Iranian officials on Sunday, 8 September".
"The visit is part of ongoing interactions between the IAEA and Iran," the statement said.
These also included "the IAEA's verification and monitoring in Iran under the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA)," the name for the 2015 deal with world powers over Iran's nuclear activities.
On Saturday, Iranian officials are expected to announce details of the third round of cuts in nuclear commitments under the JCPOA, which Iranian President Hassan Rouhani has said will affect "the field of research and development".
Tehran has already twice breached limits laid down in the deal in response to the US withdrawal from the accord in May 2018.
On July 1, Iran said it had increased its stockpile of enriched uranium to beyond the limit set by the agreement.
A week later, it announced it had exceeded the deal's uranium enrichment limit of 3.67 percent.
Earlier on Friday, the European Commission in Brussels emphasized its reliance on the UN's nuclear watchdog being able to monitor Iran's activities as it voiced "great concern" at Tehran's shrinking back from the nuclear accord.
The IAEA had a "key role... in monitoring and verifying the implementation by Iran of the nuclear commitments", Commission spokeswoman Maja Kocijancic told a media briefing.
"Our commitment to the nuclear deal depends on full compliance by Iran," she said, adding that the EU based its assessment of that "on the reports done by the International Atomic Energy Agency".
European Union members France, Germany and the United Kingdom have been scrambling to find ways to save the deal in recent months by offsetting the effects of US sanctions, but so far without success.