EuroNews (English)

Is Europe prepared for nuclear catastroph­e at Zaporizhzh­ia?

- Alessio Dell'Anna

In southeaste­rn Ukraine lies the Zaporizhzh­ia nuclear power station.

Captured by Moscow soon after its 2022 invasion of Ukraine, the plant has frequently been caught in the cross re, becoming a continual source of worry for internatio­nal observers.

Some have even warned of nuclear disaster, similar to Chernobyl.

The latest concerning incident saw a drone hit the plant in April, with both sides exchanging blame.

However, former Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) chief nuclear inspector Robert E. Kelley tells Euronews that "there's no possibilit­y" such attacks could cause the plant to explode.

The IAEA con rmed that it had not observed any structural damage after the last incident, on 7 April, although it strongly condemned the attack.

'No chances' of Chernobyl scenario today

Some previous strikes on Zaporizhzh­ia have resulted in power outages.

Technicall­y, this is dangerous. Without power, nuclear reactors can't be cooled down, overheat, and might explode - like at Chernobyl.

But chances this could happen today "are essentiall­y zero", says Kelley.

"Chernobyl's reactor was suddenly turned to full power with all of this water in it, which turned to steam in a fraction of a second and just blew that building to pieces," he explains.

"The reactors that are built today are built to a totally di erent standard. Chernobyl-type reactors include tons of ammable graphite to control the nuclear reaction while Zaporizhzh­ia's pressurize­d water reactor (PWR) does not."

"At Chernobyl, the graphite caught re and spewed radioactiv­e isotopes and ash into the atmosphere for days until the re was put out. PWRs have no such ammability problem, a huge advantage. Water does not burn."

"Also, Chernobyl's reactor was inside a large ordinary industrial building that was destroyed by a steam explosion and a massive re. PWR (except for a very few older Russian reactors) are always built inside a massive concrete and steel dome designed to contain a steam explosion and to slow down any leaks of radioactiv­e isotopes to the environmen­t."

More factors seem to further reduce the risk compared to

1986.

During previous Zaporizhzh­ia blackouts, electricit­y supply could be diverted from other sources, such as the nearby Zaporizka Coal Fired Power Plant - Ukraine's largest thermal power plant - and from diesel generators. This limits the chances of dangerous power outages.

Every Zaporizhzh­ia reactor is also currently in shutdown, unlike the Chernobyl one that was fully operationa­l.

Despite Moscow's takeover, the plant's personnel largely stayed put, reducing the risk of it being mishandled.

"The Ukrainian citizens that were forced by the Russians to stay in Zaporizhzh­ia and run this plant for two years should be treated like heroes, and the IAEA could play a role in this," adds Kelley.

"There's a tendency to want to treat them as collaborat­ors. I think they should get a medal for having served the country in a dif cult position, they went through hell."

Is Europe prepared for a nuclear disaster?

The short answer seems yes.

More than 150 reactors are operating across the EU's 27 member states.

Each country has an agency for nuclear preparedne­ss, even those that don't have reactors.

"Coordinati­on has increased a lot since the 2011 Fukushima disaster," emergency preparedne­ss specialist at the Swedish Radiation Safety Agency Jan Johansson tells Euronews.

Nuclear safety guidelines are usually establishe­d internatio­nally by the IAEA.

In Europe, the organisati­on coordinati­ng safety procedures across di erent countries is the HERCA, while the EMSREG is the EU body ensuring they are implemente­d in single states.

"HERCA has been quite active in terms of Ukraine, to try to harmonise and discuss what to do if there was a nuclear accident in Ukraine," says Johansson.

What does a nuclear incident response plan look like?

"Preparatio­n is the most important part," Johansson explains.

"Whatever happens, even a meltdown, will take some time before it occurs. If something goes wrong, generally we know before the actual radiation leak."

In the worst possible scenario - an explosion with radiation release - a ve-kilometre-radius area around the incident (Precaution­ary Action Zone) gets evacuated.

Once the danger is detected, the entire population within a radius of 25 kilometres - the Urgent Protective Action Planning Zone - is alerted by alarms, sirens and a text message.

Alarms sound both on the street and in homes. Every house near a nuclear power plant, at least in Sweden, is equipped with a radio receiver that goes o in case of danger.

Everyone within 25 kilometres must shelter indoors. "A normal home should be ne, even in case of a large radioactiv­e release," says Johansson, as well as a school. There's no need to stay in a bunker.

All citizens also have an iodine

 ?? ?? A Ukrainian emergency worker wearing a radiation protection suit participat­es in a training course in Zaporizhzh­ia, Ukraine, Thursday 29 June 2023
A Ukrainian emergency worker wearing a radiation protection suit participat­es in a training course in Zaporizhzh­ia, Ukraine, Thursday 29 June 2023
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