Iran intends to start enriching uranium to 20% purity, the UN's atomic watchdog says - its most significant breach of an international nuclear deal so far.
This remains short of the 90% required to make a nuclear bomb. But under the 2015 agreement Iran was supposed to keep enrichment below 4%, reports BBC.
Iran began breaching the deal after President Trump took the US out of it and re-imposed crippling sanctions.
However the UK, France, Germany, Russia and China all hope it can be revived.
What is Iran planning?
The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) said Iran had informed it of its plans to enrich to a purity of up to 20% at its Fordow Fuel Enrichment Plant, a facility built deep inside a mountain.
But the agency added: "Iran's letter to the agency ... did not say when this enrichment activity would take place."
Iran breached the 3.67% purity cap imposed by the nuclear deal in 2019 but the enrichment level had remained steady at up to 4.5% since then.
However the increase to 20% was mandated in a law passed by Iran's parliament last month in response to the assassination of the country's top nuclear scientist, Mohsen Fakhrizadeh.
The bill required the Iranian government to resume enriching uranium to 20% if sanctions on the country's oil and financial sectors were not eased in two months.
It also mandated the blocking of UN inspectors from Iran's nuclear facilities at Natanz and Fordow.
What is enriched uranium?
Enriched uranium is produced by feeding uranium hexafluoride gas into centrifuges to separate out the most suitable isotope for nuclear fission, called U-235.
Low-enriched uranium, which typically has a 3-5% concentration of U-235, can be used to produce fuel for commercial nuclear power plants.
Highly enriched uranium has a concentration of 20% or more and is used in research reactors. Weapons-grade uranium is 90% enriched or more.
Why do limits on uranium enrichment matter?
Observers say increasing enrichment could shorten Iran's "break-out time" - the time it would theoretically take to develop a nuclear bomb.
Iran insists its nuclear programme is exclusively for peaceful purposes.
But suspicions that Iran was developing a nuclear bomb prompted the EU, the US and the UN to impose sanctions in 2010.
The 2015 deal - signed with China, France, Germany, Russia, the UK and the US - was designed to constrain the programme in a verifiable way in return for sanctions relief.
What are the prospects for reviving the deal?
President Trump pulled out of the agreement in May 2018, calling it "decaying and rotten".
But President-elect Joe Biden has said he would return the US to the agreement - negotiated under President Obama - and would lift sanctions if Iran returned to "strict compliance with the nuclear deal".
Mr Biden, who is due to be sworn in as US president on 20 January, told the New York Times last year that "it's going to be hard", but that "the last goddamn thing we need in that part of the world is a build-up of nuclear capability".
For its part, Iran has expressed interest in once again complying with the agreement should there be a return to full implementation by the US.
If Mr Biden "returns to the situation as it was in 2017, then so will we," said Iranian President Hassan Rouhani in December.