THE 20th ANNIVERSARY OF THE CHORNOBYL NUCLEAR DISASTER
Building a new sarcophagus
by Julie A. Corwin
RFE/RL Newsline
On the occasion of the 20th anniversary of the Chornobyl nuclear disaster, top U.S. and Ukrainian officials focused on present and future threats that the plant still poses. Speaking at a hearing of the U.S. Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe on April 25, U.S. and Ukrainian officials drew attention to the deteriorating condition of the sarcophagus, the steel-and-concrete shell built after the accident to contain the radiation from the ill-fated Reactor No. 4.
Ukrainian Ambassador to the United States Oleh Shamshur told the commission that the legacy of Chornobyl consists not only in the health problems of the survivors, but also in the form of "200 tons of highly radioactive and melting substances."
According to Dr. Shamshur, only the rapidly constructed sarcophagus separates these "substances" from the rest of the world. He called for the quick replacement of a more solid and safer construction.
"Let me remind you that only 3 percent of the reactor fuel was released into [the] atmosphere 20 years ago," he said. "The rest of it still represents the most horrible explosive device undermining the safety of the whole of Europe."
Warren Stern, senior coordinator for nuclear safety at the U.S. State Department, echoed Ambassador Shamshur's anxiety.
"The greatest concern over the years has been and will continue to be that the structure could collapse," Mr. Stern said. "It was built very hastily and many components weren't actually formally attached together."
Mr. Stern's boss, acting Assistant Secretary of State for International Security and Non-proliferation Stephen Rademaker, said the United States and the Group of Seven remain engaged in increasing safety at the Chornobyl site and pledged that a new sturdier shelter will be in place before the end of the decade.
"Key elements of the SIP (Shelter Implementation Plan), including construction of auxiliary systems and preparatory works and stabilization of the sarcophagus, are complete or nearing completion," Mr. Rademaker said. "The SIP has entered its final and most important stage - construction of the shelter itself. Review of bids for executing this complex task is in the final stages. Construction of the new safe confinement or shelter is expected to be complete by 2009."
In the meantime, the existing structure will be reinforced, according to Mr. Stern. "Over the past several years and in the coming years, we have been and will be implementing structural upgrades at the existing shelter to help prevent any possibility or any significant possibility of collapse - that at the same time as we are building the new shelter," he said.
U.S. Rep. Christopher Smith (R-N.J.), the co-chairman of the commission, and Ambassador Shamshur emphasized that the full extent of the damage caused by the Chornobyl accident will only be revealed in the future.
"While numerous studies have furthered our knowledge of Chornobyl's consequences, there is still much we don't know including its long-term impact on human health and on the environment," Rep. Smith said. "There is a need for further study and action."
But Ambassador Shamshur said that full knowledge of the damage caused by Chornobyl will not come for another 70 years.
"I'd like also to stress the fact that is sometimes neglected and we should be aware that the period of the so-called half-life of radioactive strontium, for example, released in [the] atmosphere in 1986 is 90 years," he said. "Therefore, however scary it might sound, the full story has not been told yet. The gravest implications of the catastrophe might be still ahead for Ukraine and other nations."
Copyright © The Ukrainian Weekly, May 7, 2006, No. 19, Vol. LXXIV
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