25
years to the day and they are still working to somehow contain this.
I wonder what the headlines will read about Fukushima 25 years from
now? Will we even have headlines? -- MCR
Ukraine
struggles to complete Chernobyl containment shelter
RT,
26
April, 2012
Twenty-five
years on, the dangers of Chernobyl have in no way been confined to
the past. On the eve of the tragic anniversary, Ukraine is
desperately seeking money to complete a new containment shelter over
the remains of the destroyed reactor.
International
donors have pledged more than half-a-billion euros, but that is still
short of what is needed to make the site of the worst nuclear
accident in history secure for a century.
Japan’s
ongoing struggle to contain the Fukushima disaster is fuelling a
growing anxiety over nuclear energy safety. The last time the world
was this scared was in the shadow of the Chernobyl reactor explosion
in 1986.
“This
latest accident demonstrates that despite the great progress made in
the last 25 years, more needs to be done to ensure that the 'safety
first' approach becomes fully entrenched among nuclear power plant
operators, governments and regulators," IAEA Director General
Yukiya Amano said at an international conference in Kiev.
Japan
hopes to seal the site within nine months. But back in the days of
Chernobyl, a quicker solution was needed.
Shutting
the gaping hole of the exploded reactor was the immediate solution
for a deadly mistake. Scientists were quick to react to the unfolding
catastrophe and managed to build a steel and concrete structure over
the devastated power station, protecting Europe from the further
spread of radiation.
The
sarcophagus was built in 1986, just months after the disaster. Back
then, experts said it would last for 20 years – until 2006. Now,
given numerous cracks in its walls, there are fears that the
structure could soon collapse. Experts say should this happen it may
cause serious danger and a major threat.
If
the sarcophagus did collapse, the whole of the European continent
could be contaminated by the radioactive fuel which is still thought
to lie under the sarcophagus.
A
new arch is being built by French company Navarco. Work has been in
progress for months, but it only recently became clear that this
billion-dollar project lacks financing. A week before the disaster’s
25th anniversary, Kiev managed to attract an additional
half-a-billion euros in aid from the international community at a
donor conference.
“We
have now been granted a real chance to complete the new shelter by
the year 2015,” Ukraine’s President Viktor Yanukovich has said.
Experts
are confident it could even happen quicker, in just two years. And
that the new protective layer will last for generations.
“The
lifetime of the new confinement would be 100 years. This is enough
time to develop new technology for storing radioactive materials and
disposing of radioactive waste,” says Yulia Marusich, a Chernobyl
NPP worker.
Whether
that means that Chernobyl could one day be dismantled under the new
dome is unclear. But as Japan’s nuclear crisis keeps the planet on
alert, there is now a new focus on ensuring Chernobyl’s dark past
can be kept where at bay.
Read
an eyewitness account about what happens near the ruins of the
Chernobyl power plant in Aleksey Yaroshevsky’s blog. He visited the
site recently to film a documentary about the catastrophe and its
consequences.
Twenty-five
years since the catastrophe, the 30km radius exclusion zone around
the Chernobyl plant is still unsuitable for living. The radiation
levels vary across the area. In the so-called “Red Forest” –
the area burnt by the radiation wave after the explosion – the
radiation level probes show 3,500 micro-roentgens per hour. Levels of
2,500 micro-roentgens per hour can be measured over the rooftop of
the tallest building in the town of Pripyat. These levels are so high
that it is not advisable for people to be there for more than 10-15
minutes, otherwise they might exhibit the first stages of radiation
sickness. At the same time, there are areas with radiation levels
even lower than in Kiev or Moscow.
Memorial
services for the victims of the Chernobyl disaster are being held
across the country. One is underway in Kiev, held by Patriarch Kirill
of Moscow.
President
Medvedev awards Chernobyl heroes
Russia’s
President Dmitry Medvedev awarded 16 Russians who worked at the
Chernobyl power plant after it was hit by the explosion, mitigating
the consequences of the blast. The ceremony took place in Kremlin
Palace on April 25.
In
his speech at the ceremony, Medvedev stressed that the state should
never cease providing social and healthcare support to the people who
eliminated the Chernobyl radiation threat. Moreover, he underlined
that widows whose husbands had died in the result of those attempts
should not be deprived of state’s support, Interfax news agency
reports.
President
Medvedev also criticized the Soviet government for providing too
little information to the community, when the Chernobyl disaster
occurred. "The state did not have enough courage to acknowledge
the event,” he said. “It looked very strange in the media
coverage: the newspaper Pravda had a tiny article in the small print
on the last page. It took a while to learn what exactly had
happened,” Medvedev said as cited by Itar-Tass news agency.
Russian
President Dmitry Medvedev will be attending to commemoration services
in Chernobyl on April 26. The patriarch of the Russian Orthodox
Church, Kirill, will hold service there in the night which will mark
the explosion.
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