"We have done nearly 50 percent of the verification work of the facilities that have been declared to us," Malik Ellahi, a political advisor on Syria for the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, told journalists in The Hague.
Despite the progress towards destroying Syria's arsenal by mid-2014, Ellahi said security remained a concern for the unprecedented mission in a war zone.
Several car bombs exploded near the inspectors' Damascus hotel on Saturday, and mortars fell as recently as Wednesday night, giving "some cause for concern", said Ellahi, who advises OPCW Director-General Ahmet Uzumcu.
Nevertheless, the "security situation has not impeded any of their work," he said.
"Naturally it is a matter of concern to us, but the team remains determined and the morale is high," he said.
The OPCW said on Wednesday that its inspectors had checked 11 out of 20 sites identified by Damascus and destroyed chemical weapons equipment at six sites.
Inspectors are making "good progress" in making chemical sites inoperable, he said, although "a few" sites remain inaccessible for security reasons.
The organization, which last week was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, and the United Nations currently have about 60 experts working in Syria to eradicate chemical weapons, around a month after the OPCW accepted President Bashar al-Assad's application to join the Chemical Weapons Convention, in a bid to stave off a possible Western military strike.
Syria formally joined the convention on Monday.
So far Syria has won praises for its cooperation with the inspectors, but the UN has stressed that key deadlines in the destruction of Syria's chemical weapons should be met.
This included verifying Syria's disclosed chemical weapons, identifying key equipment, destroying production facilities and starting the destruction of Category 3 chemical weapons by November 1.
"If some sites remain inaccessible by the time some of the timelines are upon us, this will be reported in a very objective manner to the (OPCW's) Executive Council," Ellahi said.
Inspectors have until June 30 next year to complete the destruction of Syria's chemical arsenal.
NJF/NJF