A Fukushima on the Hudson? The Growing Dangers of Indian Point
A Fukushima on the Hudson?
The Growing Dangers of Indian Point
By Ellen Cantarow and Alison Rose Levy
It was a beautiful spring day and, in the control room of the nuclear
reactor, the workers decided to deactivate the security system for a
systems test. As they started to do so, however, the floor of the
reactor began to tremble. Suddenly, its 1,200-ton cover blasted flames
into the air. Tons of radioactive radium and graphite shot 1,000 meters
into the sky and began drifting to the ground for miles around the
nuclear plant. The first firemen to the rescue brought tons of water
that would prove useless when it came to dousing the fires. The workers
wore no protective clothing and eight of them would die that night --
dozens more in the months to follow.
It was April 26, 1986, and this was just the start of the meltdown at
the Chernobyl nuclear power plant in Ukraine, the worst nuclear
accident of its kind in history. Chernobyl is ranked as a “level 7
event,” the maximum danger classification on the International Nuclear and Radiological Event Scale. It would spew out more radioactivity than 100 Hiroshima bombs. Of the 350,000 workers involved in cleanup operations, according to
the World Health Organization, 240,000 would be exposed to the highest
levels of radiation in a 30-mile zone around the plant. It is uncertain
exactly how many cancer deaths have resulted since. The International
Atomic Energy Agency’s estimate of the expected death toll from
Chernobyl was 4,000. A 2006 Greenpeace report
challenged that figure, suggesting that 16,000 people had already died
due to the accident and predicting another 140,000 deaths in Ukraine and
Belarus still to come. A significant increase in thyroid cancers in
children, a very rare disease for them, has been charted in the region
-- nearly 7,000 cases by 2005 in Belarus, Russia, and Ukraine.
Click here to read more of this dispatch.http://www.tomdispatch.com/post/176122/tomgram%3A_cantarow_and_levy%2C_could_nuclear_disaster_come_to_america/#more
No comments:
Post a Comment