I don't want to pour cold water over this report, which is likely to be true but I do wonder whether the same people might be among the first to deny the extent of damage wrought by Fukushima - or abrupt climate change for that matter.
And we all know (sic) that there has never been any radioactive releases from American testing.
Is Putin’s new nuclear systems source of mysterious radioactivity in the air?
If
it is true that Russia have tested its new nuclear-powered missiles,
some radioactive releases could occur, says Norwegian nuclear safety
expert.
3
March, 2016
Flexing
his nuclear muscles like never before, the Russian President in his
annual state-of-the-nation speech presented two new nuclear-powered
delivering systems for warheads.
Several
times over the last two years, tiny small traces of radioactive
iodine-131 have been measured in Europe, especially in the
Scandinavian countries. National radiation agencies have been unable
to direct the source of release, speculating in everything from
leakages at a medical isotope production facility to leakages from
operative nuclear reactors.
In
Norway and Finland, radioactive isotopes were discovered at
monitoring stations in January and March last year, as well as in
January and February this year. The first cloud of radioactivity last
year was first detected at Svanhovd air filter station on Norway’s
border to Russia in the north, but spread over most of Europe south
to France and Spain over the following two weeks.
Authorities
underline that the levels were nearly undetectable and are far from
presenting any health concern to population.
«Nobody
has anything like this»
Spending
much of speech to lawmakers in Moscow on Thursday talking about
nuclear weapons, Vladimir Putin sent a clear message to the United
States. Russia has developed new missiles and a underwater torpedo
that would be immune to ballistic missiles shields and other means to
stop an nuclear attack.
«Nobody
has anything like this,» Putin said simultaneously as a video
animation was displayed on big screens. Two of the screened weapons
Putin presented are new nuclear-powered delivery systems.
The
nuclear-powered underwater drone is known from before, although it is
highly unclear how far Russian weapons constructers have come in
regards towards deploying such massive drone.
Arctic test?
More
remarkable is the nuclear-powered cruise missile. Using nuclear power
for a missile has the advantage of extending the range significantly.
On Putin’s screen, the video animation showed the missile flying
southbound through the Atlantic, before turning north again on
the west coast of South America.
On
Thursday this week, Fox News reporter Lucas Tomlinson sent
a tweet where
he quoted U.S. officials saying «Russia’s nuke powered cruise
missile not operational yet, still in ‘R&D’ phase and has
crashed recently in testing in the Arctic, despite claims by Putin
today.»
If
this is true or not is difficult to check. According to a source in
Russia’s military-industrial complex speaking to Vedomosti,
the radiation safety during the testing of the missile was ensured.
«The nuclear installation on board was represented by an electric
power supply,» the source said.
That
could have been the case if the missile was tested on-ground, but
unlikely if it was a real flight test.
Talking
about the successful test, President Vladimir Putin said in
his speech that
the missile was launched with a nuclear installation. «At the end of
2017, a successful launch of the newest Russian cruise-missile with a
nuclear-power plant took place at Russia’s Central Range,» Putin
told the applauding audience.
Likely radioactive releases
Nils
Bøhmer, a nuclear physicist with the Bellona Foundation in Oslo says
to the Barents Observer that a test of a nuclear-powered cruise
missile would most likely have caused releases of detectable
isotopes.
«If
it is true that Russia has tested its new nuclear-powered missile,
some radioactive released could have occurred,” Bøhmer says and
points to the United States’ on-ground testing of reactors for a
nuclear-powered aircraft back in the late 1950s. «That project was
cancelled because of high releases of radioactivity behind the
engines at the test site in Idaho Falls,» Nils Bøhmer explains.
He
says there could be a connection between the mysterious iodine-131
detected and Russia’s new missile. «This could be explained by the
secret testing of Russia’s new nuclear-powered missile. Because of
short half-life of eight days of iodine-131, this isotope measured in
the air could only be explained by reactor operations. Other
isotopes, like Cecium-137 that has a half-life of 30 years is found
in nature long after the releases have happened. This could explain
why only iodine-131 is detected, because Cesium-137 is masked by the
releases from the Chernobyl accident,» Bøhmer tells.
A
nuclear-powered cruise-missile with a small reactor would most
likely have an partly open-air cooling system, where isotopes simply
would fly out as the missile speeds away.
Nuclear sniffer
The
United States’ so-called “nuclear sniffer” WC-135 plane has by
several occasions since early 2017 been deployed to the British air
base in Surrey. From the base, the plane has made take-offs for
flights to Norway and Baltic Sea area to monitor radioactivity
levels, the newspaper Independent reported
in February last year.
WC-135
can detect and identify radioactive isotopes from nuclear weapons
testing as well as releases from reactors or other sources.
Althoug
Nils Bøhmer agrees with radiation safety authorities in the Nordic
countries that the levels measured do not present any health risk to
population, he is concerned. «We know from history that when
military scientists are developing weapons involving nuclear
technology, safety is not always the number one priority.»
«The
releases of radioactivity could be quite high directly at the site
where the nuclear-powered cruise-missile is tested, which could lead
to potential health concerns for the local population,» Nils Bøhmer
says.
«It
is also said by Putin that Russia is developing a new underwater
nuclear-powered drone. Very little information is know about the
technology on-board this drone, but one could speculate that also
this nuclear-powered vehicle could lead to radioactive releases.»
Bøhmer
says such radioactive releases could contaminate the fishing ground
of the Barents Sea, if the testing takes parts in those areas.
The Barents
Observer reported
about the new underwater drone, known as STATUS-6, first time in
2016.
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