After Chernobyl we said ‘never again.’ Then came the war.
A version of this op-ed was first published in The Moscow Times. For the past 40 years, the wastes of the Chernobyl site have stood as a monument ...
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Publish date: August 19, 2004
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“These incidents do not represent any threat to the public or to the environment,” state nuclear energy company Energoatom said in a statement. Energoatom confirmed incidents had occurred at Khmelnitsky but said it “saw no cause for concern”. “Certain media inflated the affair,” it said. The K2 Russian-designed VVER pressurised water reactor at Khmelnitsky, which has a capacity of 1,000 megawatts, was brought on stream on August 8th at a ceremony attended by Ukrainian President Leonid Kuchma. But it ground to a halt almost immediately.
An official at Ukraine’s governmental commission for atomic energy said that automatic security systems at the power plant had cut off the reactor from the electricity grid. The reactor was reconnected to the grid three hours later but had to be totally shut down later because of a failure in the cooling system caused by a power breakdown, the official added. The reactor was restarted on August 9th, only to be stopped again a day later, officially to test its shut-down system and cooling units, RIA-Novosti reported.
Energoatom said the incidents had been linked to tests conducted after the start up of the reactor. These tests were expected to continue until December. The nuclear power plants provide nearly 50 percent of Ukraine’s electrical power.
A version of this op-ed was first published in The Moscow Times. For the past 40 years, the wastes of the Chernobyl site have stood as a monument ...
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