Iran has begun curbing uranium enrichment under a deal which will also see international sanctions eased, the UN nuclear watchdog (IAEA) says.
Earlier, centrifuges used for enrichment were disconnected at the Nantaz plant, Iranian TV reported.
The move is part of a nuclear deal reached with the US, Russia, China and European powers last November.
By the end of the day, Iran should be able to resume petrochemical and other exports, worth billions to its economy.
'Melting'"The IAEA inspectors in the Natanz plant are disconnecting cascades," the head of Iran's Atomic Energy Organisation, Ali Akbar Salehi, said. "The sanctions iceberg against Iran is melting."
What Iran will do:
- Halt enrichment of uranium above 5% purity
- "Neutralise" its stockpile of near-20%-enriched uranium
- Not install any more centrifuges (the machines used to enrich uranium)
What world powers will do:
- Not impose further nuclear-related sanctions
- Suspend certain sanctions on trade
- Transfer $4.2bn (£2.6bn) to Iran in instalments from sales of its oil
The IAEA confirmed that, as of Monday, Iran had ceased enriching uranium above 5% purity at the Nantaz and Fordo facilities, according to a confidential report by its inspectors obtained by the BBC.
Iran has also begun diluting its stockpile of uranium enriched to 20%, and agreed the details of how UN inspectors will have increased access to Natanz and Fordo, the report adds.
The nuclear deal is designed to prevent Teheran developing atomic weapons, though it denies trying to do so, saying its nuclear programme is solely for peaceful purposes.
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Baroness Catherine Ashton: "This is an important day"
Once happy that Iran is halting uranium enrichment, European Union foreign ministers in Brussels are likely to vote in favour of the partial lifting of the sanctions by the end of Monday. The sanctions have been in place against Iran since 2006.
"This is an important day in our pursuit of ensuring that Iran has an exclusively peaceful nuclear programme," EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton told reporters outside the meeting venue.
Estimates suggest the sanctions relief could be worth some $7bn (£4bn) to the Iranian economy.
The terms of November's deal were hammered out between Iran and the five permanent members of the UN Security Council - the US, Russia, China, Britain and France - plus Germany, in Geneva.
The agreement followed months of secret talks between Iranian and US officials.
In return for Iran's actions to restrict uranium enrichment, US President Barack Obama has said the US and the other five powers over the next six months will begin to implement "modest relief" so long as Iran fulfils its obligations.
"Meanwhile, we will continue to vigorously enforce the broader sanctions regime, and if Iran fails to meet its commitments we will move to increase our sanctions," he said.
The current six-month agreement is designed to provide breathing space while a more permanent deal can be reached.
Sounding a note of caution, former IAEA deputy director Olli Heinonen said that if Iran decided to renege on the deal, it would only need two to three weeks to produce enough highly enriched uranium for a nuclear weapon.
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