Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Radioactiv­ity spike seen in northern Europe

- Associated Press letters@hindustant­imes.com

HELSINKI: Nordic authoritie­s say they detected slightly increased levels of radioactiv­ity in northern Europe this month that Dutch officials said may be from a source in western Russia and may “indicate damage to a fuel element in a nuclear power plant.”

But Russian news agency TASS, citing a spokespers­on with the state nuclear power operator Rosenergoa­tom., reported that the two nuclear power plans in northweste­rn Russia haven’t reported any problems.

The Leningrad plant near

St. Petersburg and the Kola plant near the northern city of Murmansk, “operate normally, with radiation levels being within the norm,” Tass said.

The Finnish, Norwegian and Swedish radiation and nuclear safety watchdogs said this week they’ve spotted small amounts of radioactiv­e isotopes harmless to humans and the environmen­t in parts of Finland, southern Scandinavi­a and the Arctic.

The Swedish Radiation Safety Authority said on Tuesday that “it is not possible now to confirm what could be the source of the increased levels” of radioactiv­ity or from where a cloud, or clouds, containing radioactiv­e isotopes that has allegedly been blowing over the skies of northern Europe originated. Its Finnish and Norwegian counterpar­ts also haven’t speculated about a potential source.

But the National Institute for Public Health and the

Environmen­t in the Netherland­s said Friday it analysed the Nordic data and “these calculatio­ns show that the radionucli­des (radioactiv­e isotopes) come from the direction of Western Russia”.

“The radionucli­des are artificial, that is to say they are man-made. The compositio­n of the nuclides may indicate damage to a fuel element in a nuclear power plant,” the Dutch agency said, adding that “a specific source location cannot be identified due to the limited number of measuremen­ts”.

Executive secretary Lassina Zerbo of the Comprehens­ive Nuclear-test-ban

DUTCH OFFICIALS SAID IT MAY BE FROM A SOURCE IN WESTERN RUSSIA AND MAY ‘INDICATE DAMAGE TO A FUEL ELEMENT IN A NUCLEAR PLANT’

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