San Francisco Chronicle

Chernobyl’s radioactiv­e dust shelter completed

-

KIEV, Ukraine — A structure built to confine radioactiv­e dust from the nuclear reactor at the center of the 1986 Chernobyl disaster was formally unveiled on Wednesday.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy inaugurate­d the “new safe confinemen­t” shelter that spans the remains of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant’s Reactor No. 4.

The enclosure cost almost $1.7 billion to build, and the project took nine years to complete and cost about $2.5 billion in all.

Officials have described the reactor enclosure as the largest movable landbased structure ever built, with a span of 843 feet and a total weight of over 40,000 tons.

Reactor No. 4 at the plant in what was then Soviet Ukraine exploded and burned on April 26, 1986. The disaster’s eventual death toll is subject to speculatio­n and dispute.

The World Health Organizati­on’s cancer research arm estimates that 9,000 people will die of exposurere­lated cancer and leukemia if the Chernobyl disaster’s health effects follow a similar pattern to the Hiroshima and Nagasaki atomic bombings.

About 350,000 people were evacuated from the explosion area in the early days after the accident. About 600,000 people had exposure to radiation at elevated levels while fighting the fire at the plant or working to clean up the contaminat­ion.

The new confinemen­t structure was designed to keep radioactiv­e dust from moving and as a safeguard from further crumbling of the reactor. A section of the machine hall collapsed in 2012.

Deputy project manager Victor Zalizetsky­i, who has been part of constructi­on and repairs at the Chernobyl plant since 1987, said he was “filled with pride” that he got to work on a job “that has such a big importance for all humankind.”

However, Zalizetsky­i expressed concern that wartorn Ukraine might struggle to cover the maintenanc­e costs for the reactor’s new enclosure.

 ?? Sergei Supinsky / AFP / Getty Images ?? The dome encasing the destroyed reactor is said to be the world’s largest movable metal structure.
Sergei Supinsky / AFP / Getty Images The dome encasing the destroyed reactor is said to be the world’s largest movable metal structure.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States