Bellona nuclear digest. March 2024
A survey of events in the field of nuclear and radiation safety relating to Russia and Ukraine.
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Publish date: September 22, 2005
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The Chernobyl Forum includes eight UN agencies, the World Bank, Russia, Belarus, and Ukraine.
However, the press service of the Ukrainian Emergencies Ministry said the current casing will remain safe long enough for a new “arch” to be built over the sarcophagus. The new shelter will be in the form of an arch, 100 meters high and 250 meters wide. It will be assembled at a safe place near the reactor, and then mounted over the old casing. A tender will be held for the construction of the shelter at the end of November, the press service said. Work will then begin work on the shelter’s construction, involving 3,000 specialists.
The Chernobyl Shelter Fund, run by the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, hopes to raise more than $1 billion for the project. Some 28 foreign governments have already pledged to contribute more than $750m.
Chernobyl’s number-four reactor, in what was then the Soviet Union and is now Ukraine, exploded on April 26, 1986, sending a radioactive cloud across Europe. Following the disaster, a concrete sarcophagus was built over the stricken reactor but the new 20,000-tonne steel case will cover the whole plant. EBRD officials hope that construction of the gigantic steel shelter will be completed by 2008/2009.
A survey of events in the field of nuclear and radiation safety relating to Russia and Ukraine.
Russian president Vladimir Putin has told the United Nations atomic energy watchdog that Russia plans to restart Ukraine’s embattled Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant, currently occupied by Russian troops and technicians, fueling worries about a serious nuclear accident on the front lines of a grinding military conflict.
Wednesday, April 10, 2024 | Brussels, Belgium – Today, the European Parliament approved the newly revised Construction Products regulation (CPR)...
Recent attacks on Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant "mark the beginning of a new and gravely dangerous front of the war," the UN atomic agency's director general said last week.