Monthly Highlights from the Russian Arctic, October 2024
In this news digest, we monitor events that impact the environment in the Russian Arctic. Our focus lies in identifying the factors that contribute to pollution and climate change.
News
Publish date: February 10, 2007
Written by: Anna Kireeva
Translated by: Maria Kaminskaya
News
The seminar late last month, entitled “Problems of decommissioning of nuclear service vessels and the creation of a regional industrial decommissioning centre,” included participants from the Russian Federal Atomic Energy Agency (Rosatom), design and engineering institutes, the government of the Murmansk Region, ship repairing yards and non-governmental organizations.
“This is a very useful practice,” said Viktor Akhunov, head of Rosatom’s department responsible for decommissioning of Russia’s nuclear sites, referring to the Bellona seminar.
“It is very interesting and important to hear all kinds of opinions. This gives us an opportunity to make the correct choice out of best options available,” Akhunov said in an interview with Bellona Web.
Akhunov’s apparent openness to hearing NGO opinion on matters like decommissioning nuclear service ships represent a departure from his historically sceptical stance toward civil society organizations.
According to Andrei Zolotkov, head of Bellona-Murmansk, the seminar is the “beginning of a route that might take decades to complete.”
Laid up or still in operation in Russia’s Northwest are 72 nuclear service vessels, of which 28 are in dilapidated condition. Many are partly or completely waterlogged. These 28 ships include seven floating spent nuclear fuel (SNF) storage facilities, five specialised tankers, one floating radiation monitoring station and 15 floating storage facilities for liquid radioactive waste (LRW).
“The problem is not just the SNF storage ship Lepse, which keeps in its holds defective nuclear fuel; from Lepse, we will have to move on to Lotta, Imandra and other vessels,” said Zolotkov in reference to other problematic nuclear waste storage and service ships languishing at the Murmank’s nuclear icebreaker base, Atomflot.
SNF storage ships Lepse, Lotta and Imandra are operated by the Murmansk Shipping Company, which also runs Atomflot and its icebreaker fleet.
“Few people have an idea of what a nuclear service vessel is like. Its decommissioning can be much more dangerous than decommissioning a nuclear submarine,” Zolotkov said.
Zolotkov is confident that the most important step for now is to determine the site for the construction of a future radioactive waste repository.
“Without such a burial site, no works on decommissioning nuclear service vessels will ever start,” he said.
Photo: Bellona-Murmansk
by the law. Our agency intends to do it,” said Akhunov.In this news digest, we monitor events that impact the environment in the Russian Arctic. Our focus lies in identifying the factors that contribute to pollution and climate change.
A survey of events in the field of nuclear and radiation safety relating to Russia and Ukraine.
A visit last week by Vladimir Putin and a Kremlin entourage to Astana, Kazakhstan sought in part to put Rosatom, Russia’s state nuclear corporation, on good footing with local officials.
Russia is formally withdrawing from a landmark environmental agreement that channeled billions in international funding to secure the Soviet nuclear legacy, leaving undone some of the most radioactively dangerous projects and burning one more bridge of potential cooperation with the West.