News

Solving “all enviroproblems” in St. Petersburg

Publish date: November 12, 1997

Written by: Thomas Nilsen

The Krylov Shipbuilding Research Institute in St. Petersburg suggests placement of 70 small-scale nuclear reactors under the ground outside the city center. The scheme should allegedly solve both the energy and pollution problems of the city.

The plan, presented by Dr. Eduard Petrov of the Krylov Institute in an interview with the St. Petersburg Times, is a result of more than five years of research. According to Petrov, the plan calls for 70 small-scale reactors like the ones used on nuclear submarines. These devices would be placed 100 meters below ground-level on four locations off the west coast of St. Petersburg. Heated water would be pumped through subway-like tunnels running through St. Petersburg. The energy produced by the reactors would cover as much as half of the needs of St. Petersburg and the Leningrad County.

As an added bonus – still according to Mr. Petrov – the reactors could heat the Gulf of Finland, preventing the freezes that block St. Petersburg`s ports for six months a year. And, as a doubled bonus, the gamma rays from the reactors could be used to bombard the city sewage, purifying it before it is dumped into the Gulf of Finland.

Air pollution would be reduced as demand for electrical power and heating on the city’s 2,400 coal burners is reduced. The underground reactors would even reduce toxic fumes in car exhausts. By injecting hydrogen, produced in the nuclear reaction process, into automobile fuel, harmfull fumes would be drastically reduced.

The reactors themselves would be encased in concrete chambers with one meter thick walls.

Sounds like a mad scientist’s plan? Indeed. Still, Petrov hopes for support to the plan from local authorities.

–The authorities aren’t very excited about the plan yet. We’ve shown them blueprints, and done the maths for them. But I don’t think they are going to fund it right away. Eventually, they will see how good the plan is, said Petrov to the St. Petersburg Times. The total cost of the plan is four billion USD.