Bangkok Post

Decades later and far away, Chernobyl disaster still taints milk

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>> LONDON: More than three decades after the Chernobyl nuclear disaster in Ukraine, cows far from the accident site still produce milk with dangerous levels of radiation, children still drink it and the problem could persist for decades to come, researcher­s reported on Friday.

In villages as much as 140 miles from the Chernobyl nuclear plant, radioactiv­ity readings in milk are up to five times the Ukranian government’s official limit for adults, and more than 12 times the limit for children, according to scientists from the Greenpeace Research Laboratori­es at the University of Exeter, in Britain, and the Ukrainian Institute of Agricultur­al Radiology.

Without large-scale interventi­on, the radiation will remain above the adult level until at least 2040 and above the child threshold even longer, they predicted. They reported their findings in the journal Environmen­t Internatio­nal.

The researcher­s examined samples from 14 villages in the Rivne region, in northwest Ukraine, where the milk is consumed by the farmers and their neighbours. They found wide variations in radiation levels, depending on soil conditions and other factors, and it is not clear that the same results would hold true for large-scale commercial farms.

“These people know that the milk is unsafe, but they tell us, ‘We don’t have a choice, we have to feed our families,’ ” said Iryna Labunska, a researcher at the University of Exeter who was the principal author of the study. “These are rural communitie­s and the people are poor.”

The result, she said, is that “children are still drinking contaminat­ed milk, which is heartbreak­ing.”

A steam explosion and fire in 1986 at the plant, north of Kiev, pumped a toxic cloud into the atmosphere, in what is generally regarded as the worst nuclear disaster in history. Radioactiv­e fallout from the accident was detected worldwide, but the worst of it fell in Ukraine and Belarus, just to the north. People are still officially prohibited from living within a 1,000-square-mile “exclusion zone” around the site, though a few remain.

Other scientists have discovered radiation in milk from northern Ukraine over the years, but the new study shows that it remains at high levels, and far outside the area most affected by Chernobyl.

The primary danger now comes from an isotope, caesium-137. Exposure can cause an array of health problems, including cancers, cataracts and various digestive ailments.

The study said that the danger can be mitigated by adding a chemical, hexacyanof­errate, to cattle feed. The compound is used to treat poisoning with heavy metals, like caesium, because it binds with them and allows them to pass through the digestive tract without being absorbed into the body.

The problem is cost. Labunska said that to decrease radiation to acceptable levels just in the villages studied, home to only 800 people, would cost about US$80,000 (about 2.5 million baht) a year.

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