Explosion hits power plant in Iran's Isfahan province
The facility has returned to normal working conditions after about two hours and Isfahan's power supply has been uninterrupted, says the managing director of Isfahan's electricity company.
An explosion has hit a power plant in the central Iranian province of Isfahan, state news agency IRNA reported, saying it was over faulty equipment and caused no casualties.
A "worn out transformer... at Isfahan's Islamabad thermal power plant exploded at around 5:00 am today," the managing director of Isfahan's electricity company Said Mohseni told the agency.
The facility returned to normal working conditions after about two hours and Isfahan's power supply was uninterrupted, he added.
String of explosions
The incident is the latest in a string of fires and explosions at military and civilian sites across Iran in recent weeks.
Two explosions rocked Tehran in late June, one near a military site and the other in a health centre, the latter killing 19 people.
Fires or blasts also hit a shipyard in southern Iran last week, a factory south of Tehran with two dead and the Natanz nuclear complex in central Iran earlier this month.
Iranian authorities called the Natanz fire an accident without elaborating and later said they would not reveal the cause, citing "security reasons".
The string of fires and explosions have prompted speculation in Iran that they may be the result of sabotage by arch-enemy Israel.
The Jewish state accuses the Islamic republic of seeking to acquire a nuclear bomb while Tehran insists its nuclear programme is entirely peaceful.
READ MORE: Israel faces tough questions over mysterious explosions in Iran