Khaleej Times

Donors pledge cash to keep Chernobyl safe

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KIEV — Global donors on Monday pledged additional money to help Ukraine keep Chernobyl safe for generation­s after causing the world’s worst nuclear power disaster 30 years ago. The 87.5-million-euro ($99 million) commitment toward the constructi­on of a new spent nuclear waste storage facility comes on the eve of the former Soviet republic’s commemorat­ion of an accident whose death toll remains in dispute to this day. Ukraine will still need to find an additional 15 million euros for the undergroun­d site to be able to start safely storing the hazardous material in metal caskets by the end of the year. “It’s an important project for the world as well as, of course, for Ukraine and Ukrainians,” said Suma Chakrabart­i, head of of the European Bank for Reconstruc­tion and Developmen­t (EBRD), which is spearheadi­ng the project. Three of Chernobyl’s four reactors continued churning out power and creating spent nuclear fuel for 16 years after the April 26, 1986 accident. An additional 200 tonnes of uranium remain inside the damaged reactor number four, raising fears there could be more radioactiv­e leaks if the ageing concrete structure covering the stricken reactor collapses. Work began in 2010 on a new 25,000-tonne steel protective barrier that will surround the existing sarcophagu­s by next year. Funding for that dome, which costs more than 2.1 billion euros, is mostly in place, although it remains unclear who will pay for its upkeep and operations. Three decades after the tragedy, which the Soviet authoritie­s spent weeks trying to cover up, the number of people who have died from radiation poisoning remains a matter of intense dispute.

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