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Today in History - April 26, 1986 - The Chernobyl nuclear plant exploded in the Ukraine and parts of Belarus, Russia; it was the world’s worst civil nuclear catastrophe. The steam explosion and fire sent a cloud of radioactive dust over much of Europe, releasing at least five percent of the radioactive core of the reactor. The accident was a result of flaws in the reactor design and inadequately trained personnel. The safety systems had actually been turned off during a testing operation and an uncontrollable power surge was allowed to occur. As the Soviet design had no external containment, there was no final barrier to contain radioactive material once the steam explosions started. These design and training flaws are attributed to lax nuclear safety standards in the former Soviet Union. Over thirty people, mostly emergency workers and children, were killed soon after the explosion.
On May 2-4 approximately 160,000 people were evacuated from the area around the plant operator’s town of Pripyat. Eventually an additional 210,000 people resetled into less contaminated areas. The long term environmental and health effects are still being measured. The United Nations Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation has issued several reports and has conducted extensive longitudinal studies on the Chernobyl accident. Although there is some dispute as to exactly how may long-term radiation-related deaths occurred, no one questions that there were catastrophic social and economic consequences, with costs in the hundreds of billions of dollars.
For more information, see the Engineering Pathway’s educational resources on Chernobyl and nuclear energy and safety or view our Nuclear Engineering Education and Engineeering Ethics community sites. Readers may be interested in the Alsos digital library on nuclear issues and their resources on Chernobyl as well.













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