National Post (National Edition)

Russia under pressure to end use of toxic fuel

Rocket stages fall in Canada’s Arctic waters

- TRISTIN HOPPER National Post thopper@nationalpo­st.com Twitter.com/TristinHop­per

The Canadian Arctic might be getting showered with trace amounts of poison thanks to Russian space launches that still use a highly toxic fuel that most of the world has already phased out.

The fuel, known as UDMH, has caused devastatin­g pollution in areas close to former Soviet spaceports. And every time the Russian Federation launches a “Rockot” space vehicle, several tonnes of it might be getting dumped into Canadian waters.

“This dropping of the rocket stages is of considerab­le concern to the Inuit of Canada and Greenland, who only learned about the practice in 2016,” reads a recent report by University of British Columbia Arctic scholar Michael Byers in the journal Polar Record. became known.

A 2004 United Nations Developmen­t Programme report noted that the chemical is “dangerous in all methods of transmissi­on to people.”

This has been most prevalent in the areas around the Baikonur Cosmodrome, the Kazakhstan spaceport from which most of the former Soviet Union’s most renowned space launches occurred.

A 1999 report by Russia’s Union for Chemical Safety noted that UDMH was found around Baikonur “in vegetation, soil and sediments, subsoil and surface waters, at concentrat­ions far in excess of those permissibl­e according to the Russian hygienic standards.”

Around the same time, a health examinatio­n of 48,000 people in the vicinity of Baikonur found only 26.5 per cent of the adult population could be described as “healthy people.”

Russian death rates from blood and liver diseases are upward of 30 per cent higher around Baikonur, although this has not been conclusive­ly linked to UDMH contaminat­ion.

Byers noted that mass dieoffs of fish have also been observed in lakes under the flight paths of UDMH-burning rockets.

However, the ocean dumping of Rockot stages has not seemed to have bothered other countries whose borders are near to the drops.

Following a June, 2016, launch that saw the first stage of a Rockot jettisoned off the Norwegian coast, a Norwegian Defence Establishm­ent official was quoted as saying that all residual fuel aboard would be quickly diluted by sea water.

Russia appears to be joining with space powers like the United States in phasing out UDMH, although launches of the UDMHburnin­g Rockot continue, likely due to the cheap availabili­ty of surplus UR-100N missiles, from which Rockots are converted.

The next Rockot launch is scheduled for Oct. 13, when it will carry the Sentinel-5P, a European Space Agency probe designed to monitor air quality.

On Thursday, a press release from the Inuit Circumpola­r Council demanded that the launch be postponed “while alternativ­e, non-toxic launch options are pursued.”

“The environmen­tal and health impacts of this action have not been studied in ocean waters and especially Arctic waters,” reads the statement signed by Inuit leaders from Greenland and Canada, including former Nunavut premier Eva Aariak.

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