team of inspectors said. "I wouldn`t mind living at Mochovce, although in the interest of future generations I would expend a lot of energy in order to get all the information out into the open and to improve the safety standards," Wolfgang Kromp, an Austrian nuclear expert, said. Mochovce has been the subject of heated exchanges between Slovakia and anti-nuclear Austria, whose border lies 120 km from the plant. Austria argued that the plant was potentially unsafe and dispatched an international team of experts to inspect Mochovce. The report presented on Wednesday summarised the team`s findings from its visit in May. The report stressed that a complete assessment of the plant had not been possible as access to important safety-related information had been denied by the plant`s operator Slovenske Elektarne. But the inspection suggested that considerable progress had been made in many areas affecting the safety of Mochovce. "With two important exceptions - reactor vessel integrity and confinement - we found that Mochovce can achieve a level of safety similar to pressurised water reactors licensed in western countries," said Harold Denton, one of the experts.