Arctic Radiation Levels From Chernobyl Declining 17
jangobongo writes "Nearly 20 years after the Chernobyl meltdown and much longer since Soviet nuclear weapons testing, radiation levels in the Arctic landmasses are finally declining. But nuclear disaster is still lurking on the horizon. The Kola Peninsula in northwest Russia is home to Russia's aging, decomissioned (and sinking) nuclear sub fleet as well as a depots of nuclear weapons and an old nuclear power plant. Estimated cost of clean up to prevent further toxic leakage is millions of euros."
Not exactly much (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Not exactly much (Score:2, Interesting)
Why isn't this being taken care of? (Score:4, Insightful)
While millions of Euros is nothing to scoff at, this is a clear problem and we need to fix it. In proper perspective, millions of euros is a small price to pay (the world can chip in if needed, but even cash-strapped Russia can pay the millions of Euros alone if necessary) to clean this mess up.
If we can spend hundreds of billions of dollars to "clean up" a country with no pending nuclear disaster, surely we can spend far less than 1 billion dollars on this.
Re:Why isn't this being taken care of? (Score:4, Informative)
"Strand said it will take billions of dollars (euros) to clean up."
Re:Why isn't this being taken care of? (Score:1)
Re:Why isn't this being taken care of? (Score:2)
Re:Why isn't this being taken care of? (Score:1)
Currently, there are long lines of vessels waiting to be dismantled at the three facilities that have been receiving Western (especially U.S.) technical assistance: Nerpa (Murmansk), Zvezdochka (Severodvinsk), and the Zvezda Far Eastern Shipyard (Bolshoy Kamen). Until the technical and social problems at these facilities are resolved, t
Mobile radation only (Score:2)
Since the Chernobyl plant exploded and burned for days, large amounts of radioactive material was spread over a broad surrounding area, borne aloft by wind currents. The highly contaminated radioactive smoke that poured out of the plant may have now settled out of the planet-wide atmosphere, but that
Re:Mobile radation only (Score:1)
Are you serious? So when the next shuttle explodes we can have the radioactive material distrubuted higher in the atmosphere? You have to accept that accidents will always happen. The problem with nuclear accidents is that they kill hundreds of people and cause extreme environmental damage for a hundred years. Nuclear energy isn't worth the risk. Your
Re:Mobile radation only (Score:2)
when the next shuttle explodes we can have the radioactive material distrubuted higher in the atmosphere?
I AGREE, THE SHUTTLE SUCKS. (go ScaledComposites!) I was speaking of space vehicles availble to my grandchildren (presuming, again God Willing, that the humanity doesn't suffer another dark age from some catastrophe or another).
Taking a 4 hour automobile trip has a small but finite chance of destroying the car and its contents. As soon as our record for getting things out of Earth's gravity well is
Re:Mobile radation only (Score:1)
Nuclear power will complete the current death spiral before reliable space vehicles are completed.
Reading comprehension (Score:3, Interesting)
Currently the page says:
> Estimated cost of clean up to prevent further toxic leakage is millions of euros.
Millions of euros is small change.
However, the actual article [go.com] says: Strand said it will take billions of dollars (euros) to clean up.
Since the source is ABC news, I assume that they use the American billion (10^9).
Now that is a whole different story, considering the fact that the projected revenue [russiajournal.com] for the Russian Y2005 budget is only ~92 billion Euros.
A conservative assumption of single digit "billions" results in something like 10% of the total budget revenue.
Just for comparison, this would be akin to [akamaitech.net] the US spending 200 billion dollars on a similar task.
Re:Reading comprehension (Score:2)
on the one hand, the US just wasted about 200 billions dollars in Iraq for some oil, and on the other hand, millions of euros is no small change : given that I could easily retire to a nice sunny island and spend my days in between champagne and women.
Re:Reading comprehension (Score:2)
Sinking? (Score:2)
They're designed to do that.
Mea Culpa (Score:1)