The system built to manage Russia’s nuclear legacy is crumbling, our new report shows
Our op-ed originally appeared in The Moscow Times. For more than three decades, Russia has been burdened with the remains of the Soviet ...
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Publish date: February 21, 2008
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The plan was announced during a meeting between Governor Yury Yevdokimov and the governor of Norway’s Finnmark county, Gunnar Kjonnoy, in Kirkenes, a Norwegian town near the Russian border.
The funds will be used to renovate the area around the Andreyeva bay nuclear storage facility – where much waste is stored in the open air – located 48 kilometres from the Norwegian border.
Europe’s largest nuclear waste storage facility holds some 21,000 spent nuclear fuel assemblies with 35 metric tons of radioactive materials, and 12,000 cubic meters of solid and liquid waste, mostly removed from nuclear powered submarines and icebreakers.
The storage facility was set up some 40 year ago as a provisional facility. Foreign partners, such as the United Kingdom, Norway and Sweden, were invited in the early 2000s to make preparations for the removal of nuclear waste from the site.
International experts have repeatedly raised concerns over environmental threats posed by the facility. Poor maintenance and the severe Arctic climate could cause severe leakage into the bay, which is located on a Barents Sea.
Our op-ed originally appeared in The Moscow Times. For more than three decades, Russia has been burdened with the remains of the Soviet ...
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