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Chernobyl
Brian
Trumbore
President/Editor, StocksandNews.com
This past March I was in Kiev, Ukraine,
and went to the Chernobyl museum there. I meant to
write of the 20th anniversary of the world's worst
nuclear accident closer to the April 26 date but another
series, and my trip to Asia, got in the way. So here
we go.
On
the evening of April 25, 1986, workers were shutting
down one of four reactors at the Chornobyl (the correct
spelling, but from here on I'll employ the more commonly
used 'Chernobyl') nuclear power plant for regular
maintenance. But they decided to use the exercise
to conduct a safety test; to see if, in the event
of a shutdown, enough electricity remained in the
grid to power the systems that cooled the reactor
core, so they turned off the emergency cooling system?.a
totally unauthorized action.
For
various reasons, including a design flaw in this particular
model of reactor, a chain reaction of events was then
set in motion and at 1:23 am on April 26, there was
a power surge, and then a series of chemical explosions
that were so powerful they blew the 1,000 ton cover
off the top of the reactor.
A
phone call woke Lyudmilla Shashenok in the middle
of the night. Her husband had been involved in an
accident at Chernobyl. At first she thought it was
nothing serious, but when she went to the hospital
she realized it was far worse.
"It
was not my husband at all, it was a swollen blister,"
she told the Associated Press. He was connected to
a breathing apparatus and Lyudmilla, a nurse, told
her husband, Volodymyr, "This is the end." He died
a few hours later.
Volodymyr
and 30 others, 29 of whom were firefighters, died
either that day or within two months from radiation
poisoning. All were buried in lead-shelled coffins.
They were heroes.
You
have to picture that the firemen from both the plant
and the nearby city of Pripyat were sent into a raging,
radiation-filled inferno but somehow put out the main
blaze. At the museum in Kiev (70 miles from Chernobyl),
they have some of the uniforms worn by those first
firefighters and it was truly pitiful; basically nothing
more than a poncho and a gas mask.
But
then in the first hours and days, few realized just
how bad the situation was. More radioactivity was
spewed into the air than the Hiroshima and Nagasaki
atomic bombs combined.
April
26 was a Saturday and while the fire at Unit Four
was put out, the people of Pripyat, a model town built
to house power station staff and their families and
just one mile from the plant, celebrated in the unusually
warm spring weather. Sixteen weddings took place.
But
the radiation was spreading, unevenly, across much
of Ukraine and Belarus, though it wasn't until early
on Monday morning, April 28, that Swedish authorities
sounded the alarm, having detected fallout twice the
normal levels found in the atmosphere in their own
country. When confronted, Soviet authorities refused
to admit that anything out of the ordinary had occurred.
Swedish diplomats threatened to file an alert with
the International Atomic Energy Authority and, finally,
at 9 pm, Moscow issued a terse, five-sentence statement:
"An
accident has occurred at Chernobyl nuclear power station.
One of the atomic reactors has been damaged. Measures
are being taken to eliminate the consequences of the
accident. Aid is being given to the victims. A government
commission has been set up."
It
took two weeks for Soviet officials to begin to really
come clean.
"Until
now the possibility of a catastrophe really did exist:
A great quantity of fuel and graphite of the reactor
was in an incandescent state," said nuclear physicist
Yevgeny Velikhov.
Incredibly,
it took 36 hours before authorities decided to evacuate
Pripyat, while the evacuation of nearby villages took
several more days. Meanwhile, in Kiev, five days after
the accident citizens went ahead with May Day celebrations.
Outside
the Soviet Union, where information was more free-
flowing, it was nonetheless difficult separating fact
from fiction. On April 30, for example, CBS News anchor
Dan Rather spoke of "enhanced eye-in-the-sky views
that U.S. intelligence says is a reactor-gone-wild
still in progress and a second reactor possibly melting
down." Death tolls of up to 2,000 were being reported
by UPI and parroted on the networks.
As
it turns out there was little chance of the initial
fire spreading after day one, but in the first week
of May radiation releases began rising again, and
there was a very real fear the molten reactor core
"would either burn its way through the base of the
reactor, or that the base would collapse, bringing
the molten nuclear fuel into explosive contact with
a reservoir of water beneath." [BBC News]
The
concern was not just that the second explosion could
be worse than the first, but that the water supply
for Kiev could be contaminated.
Yevgeny
Velikhov told Pravda on May 13, "The reactor is damaged.
Its heart is the white hot core. It is as though in
suspension?Down below, in a special reservoir, there
might be water.
"How
would the white-hot core of the reactor behave? Would
we manage to keep it intact or would it go down into
the earth? No one in the world has ever been in such
a complex position."
But
despite all the heroic measures taken on the ground,
including the fighting of the fire and the erecting
of a vast concrete and steel sarcophagus above the
reactor that summer, a danger still exists to this
day and a new sarcophagus is being built to cover
the damaged reactor. In addition, an 18-mile exclusion
zone is still in place and Chernobyl remains one of
the most radioactive spots on Earth.
Mikhail
Gorbachev had been in power for only about a year
when Chernobyl was struck by disaster. It took two
weeks before he came before the Soviet people and
the world.
"Good
evening, comrades. All of you know that there has
been an incredible misfortune - the accident at the
Chernobyl nuclear plant. It has painfully affected
the Soviet people, and shocked the international community.
For the first time, we confront the real force of
nuclear energy, out of control."
This
year, to mark the 20-year anniversary, Gorbachev wrote
an opinion piece that I first saw in the Daily Star.
Following are a few excerpts.
"The
nuclear meltdown at Chernobyl?even more than my launch
of perestroika, was perhaps the real cause of the
collapse of the Soviet Union five years later. Indeed,
the Chernobyl catastrophe was a historic turning point:
there was the era before the disaster, and there is
the very different era that has followed.
"The
morning of the explosion at the Chernobyl nuclear
station on April 26, 1986, the Politburo met to discuss
the situation, and then organized a government commission
to deal with the consequences. The commission was
to control the situation, and to ensure that serious
measures were taken, particularly in regard to people's
health in the disaster zone. Moreover, the Academy
of Science established a group of leading scientists,
who were immediately dispatched to the Chernobyl region.
"The
Politburo did not immediately have appropriate information
that accurately reflected the situation after the
explosion. Nevertheless, it was the general consensus
of the Politburo that we should openly deliver the
information upon receiving it. This would be in the
spirit of the glasnost policy that was by then already
established in the Soviet Union.
"Thus,
claims that the Politburo engaged in concealment of
information about the disaster is far from the truth?.
"In
fact, nobody knew the truth, and that is why all our
attempts to receive full information about the extent
of the catastrophe were in vain. We initially believed
that the main impact of the explosion would be in
Ukraine, but Belarus, to the northwest, was hit even
worse, and then Poland and Sweden suffered the consequences.
"Of
course, the world first learned of the Chernobyl disaster
from Swedish scientists, creating the impression that
we were hiding something. But in truth we had nothing
to hide, as we simply had no information for a day
and a half. Only a few days later, we learned that
what happened was not a simple accident, but a genuine
nuclear catastrophe - an explosion of Chernobyl's
fourth reactor.
"Although
the first report on Chernobyl appeared in Pravda on
April 28, the situation was far from clear. For example,
when the reactor blew up, the fire was immediately
put out with water, which only worsened the situation
as nuclear particles began spreading through the atmosphere?.
"(Chernobyl)
opened my eyes like nothing else: it showed the horrible
consequences of nuclear power, even when it is used
for non-military purposes. One could now imagine much
more clearly what might happen if a nuclear bomb exploded.
According to scientific experts, one SS-18 rocket
could contain a hundred Chernobyls."
Now
some of the above is a bit disingenuous on the part
of Mr. Gorbachev and part damage control as well as
legacy building. The Soviet Union handled the situation
miserably, but at least Gorbachev began to see the
light.
As
for Chernobyl's lasting impact, coupled with Three
Mile Island it has certainly been far-lasting on the
nuclear power industry, particularly in the United
States. Proponents of this power source are paying
the price for incredible incompetence and, in the
case of Chernobyl, a poorly designed model of which
about 11 still exist in Eastern Europe today.
The
human toll is less certain. Estimates on deaths directly
related to April 26, 1986, vary from 4,000 to up to
90,000. The former is probably closer to the truth
when one looks at the prevalence of thyroid cancer
in the contaminated areas. The estimate of the economic
cost ranges into the $hundreds of millions.
Wall
Street History will return next week.
Brian
Trumbore
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