Penticton Herald

How Jimmy Carter helped clean up a partial nuclear meltdown – in Ontario

- The Canadian Press

It was December 1952, the Cold War was raging and in a rural Ontario community a nuclear reactor had just partially melted down – the first serious reactor accident in the world.

The partial meltdown at the experiment­al Chalk River Nuclear Laboratori­es, about 200 kilometres northwest of Ottawa, was significan­t for the changes to reactor safety and design it helped usher in.

More than 70 years later, it’s also being remembered as the event where a young U.S. naval officer who went on to become president helped disassembl­e parts of the reactor facility under intense radiation.

Jimmy Carter, best known for being the 39th president of the United States, was at that time Lt. James Earl Carter Jr., a 28-year-old officer who arrived with a team in the aftermath of the accident to help.

The now-98-year-old Carter started hospice care at his home this weekend, prompting a rush of remembranc­es, including a consequent­ial piece of internatio­nal nuclear history that played out at Chalk River decades earlier.

“It was very valuable,” Morgan Brown, a recently retired Chalk River reactor safety engineer and president of the Society for the Preservati­on of Canada’s Nuclear Heritage, said of the American assistance.

“Personally I’m very grateful to these other (U.S.) teams who were able to come up here.”

The accident took place on Dec. 12, 1952, when a series of failures led to a brief surge, melting some of the nuclear reactor’s fuel rods and maxing out at about three times the facility’s power, Brown says. No one was killed or seriously injured, and contaminat­ion was closely monitored in the aftermath, he said.

In his 1975 autobiogra­phy, Carter recounted how he was part of a U.S. military contingenc­y who helped dismantle parts of the reactor facility, donning white protective equipment and working in 90-second shifts to reduce radiation exposure.

His team would first practice their maneuvers on a replica reactor constructe­d nearby before going in to the real facility.

“There were no apparent aftereffec­ts from this exposure – just a lot of doubtful jokes among ourselves about death versus sterility,” Carter wrote in the autobiogra­phy.

Carter would later say the cleanup was an indication of the close ties between Canada and the U.S., a relationsh­ip he would look to as president during the 1980 Iranian hostage crisis.

Brown noted that records suggest U.S. military personnel arrived several weeks after the accident.

“There would’ve been contaminat­ion,” he said. “There would have been relatively high radiation fields and that’s why they had limited time to go in and do their job.”

Carter was one of the 150 U.S. military personnel who worked on the cleanup alongside roughly 860 facility staff, 170 military personnel, and 20 constructi­on contractor­s.

A speech delivered by U.S. Admiral Hyman Rickover in 1978 indicates he asked Canada for permission to send a group of naval officers to help, but also to gain experience.

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Jimmy Carter

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