Soviet Announces Nuclear Accident at Electric Plant
Power Reactor Damaged
Mishap Acknowledged After Rising Radioactivity Levels Spread to Scandinavia
By Serge Schmemann
Special to The New York Times
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Moscow, April 28 -- The Soviet Union announced today that there had
been an accident at a nuclear power plant in the Ukraine and that ''aid is
being given to those affected.''
The severity of the accident, which spread discernable radioactive
material over Scandinavia, was not immediately clear. But the terse
statement, distributed by the Tass press agency and read on the evening
television news, suggested a major accident.
The phrasing also suggested that the problem had not been brought under
full control at the nuclear plant, which the Soviet announcement
identified as the Chernobyl station. It is situated at the new town of
Pripyat, near Chernobyl and 60 miles north of Kiev.
Heightened Radioactivity Levels
The announcement, the first official disclosure of a nuclear accident
ever by the Soviet Union, came hours after Sweden, Finland and Denmark
reported abnormally high radioactivity levels in their skies. The readings
initially led those countries to think radioactive material had been
leaking from one of their own reactors.
The Soviet announcement, made on behalf of the Council of Ministers,
after Sweden had demanded information, said in its entirety:
''An accident has occurred at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant as one
of the reactors was damaged. Measures are being taken to eliminate the
consequences of the accident. Aid is being given to those affected. A
Government commission has been set up.''
Concern Is Reinforced
The mention of a commission of inquiry reinforced indications that the
accident was a serious one. [United States experts said the accident
probably posed no danger outside the Soviet Union. But in the absence of
detailed information, they said it would be difficult to determine the
gravity, and they said environmental damage might conceivably be
disastrous. Page A10. [The Chernobyl plant, with four 1,000-megawatt
reactors in operation, is one of the largest and oldest of the 15 or so
Soviet civilian nuclear stations. Nuclear power has been a matter of high
priority in the Soviet Union, and capacity has been going into service as
fast as reactors can be built. Page A10.] Pripyat, where the Chernobyl
plant is situated, is a settlement of 25,000 to 30,000 people that was
built in the 1970's along with the station. It is home to construction
workers, service personnel and their families.
A British reporter returning from Kiev reported seeing no activity in
the Ukrainian capital that would suggest any alarm. No other information
was immediately available from the area.
But reports from across Scandinavia, areas more than 800 miles to the
north, spoke of increases in radioactivity over the last 24 hours.
Scandinavian authorities said the radioactivity levels did not pose any
danger, and it appeared that only tiny amounts of radioactive material had
drifted over Scandinavia. All of it was believed to be in the form of two
relatively innocuous gases, xenon and krypton. Scandinavian officials said
the evidence pointed to an accident in the Ukraine.
In Sweden, an official at the Institute for Protection Against
Radiation said gamma radiation levels were 30 to 40 percent higher than
normal. He said that the levels had been abnormally high for 24 hours and
that the release seemed to be continuing.
In Finland, officials were reported to have said readings in the
central and northern areas showed levels six times higher than normal. The
Norwegian radio quoted pollution control officials as having said that
radioactivity in the Oslo area was 50 percent higher.
Since morning, Swedish officials had focused on the Soviet Union as the
probable source of the radioactive material, but Swedish Embassy officials
here said the Soviet authorities had denied knowledge of any problem until
the Government announcement was read on television at 9 P.M.
The first alarm was raised in Sweden when workers arriving at the
Forsmark nuclear power station, 60 miles north of Stockholm, set off
warnings during a routine radioactivity check. The plant was evacuated,
Swedish officials said. When other nuclear power plants reported similar
happenings, the authorities turned their attention to the Soviet Union,
from which the winds were coming.
A Swedish diplomat here said he had telephoned three Soviet Government
agencies - the State Committee for Utilization of Atomic Energy, the
Ministry of Electric Power and the three-year-old State Committee for
Safety in the Atomic Power Industry -asking them to explain the high
readings over Scandinavia. All said they had no explanation, the diplomat
said.
Before the Soviet acknowledgment, the Swedish Minister of Energy,
Birgitta Dahl, said that whoever was responsible for the spread of
radioactive material was not observing international agreements requiring
warnings and exchanges of information about accidents.
Tass, the Soviet Government press agency, said the Chernobyl accident
was the first ever in a Soviet nuclear power plant.
It was the first ever acknowledged by the Russians, but Western experts
have reported at least two previous mishaps. In 1957, a nuclear waste dump
believed related to weapons production was reported to have resulted in a
chemical reaction in the Kasli areas of the Urals, causing damage to the
environment and possibly fatalities. In 1974, a steam line exploded in the
Shevchenko nuclear breeder plant in Kazakhstan, but no radioactive
material is believed to have been released in that accident.
Soviet authorities, in giving the development of nuclear electricity
generation a high priority, have said that nuclear power is safe. In the
absence of citizens' opposition to nuclear power, there has been virtually
no questioning of the program.
The terse Soviet announcement of the Chernobyl accident was followed by
a Tass dispatch noting that there had been many mishaps in the United
States, ranging from Three Mile Island outside Harrisburg, Pa., to the
Ginna plant near Rochester. Tass said an American antinuclear group
registered 2,300 accidents, breakdowns and other faults in 1979.
The practice of focusing on disasters elsewhere when one occurs in the
Soviet Union is so common that after watching a report on Soviet
television about a catastrophe abroad, Russians often call Western friends
to find out whether something has happened in the Soviet Union.
Construction of the Chernobyl plant began in the early 1970's and the
first reactor was commissioned in 1977. Work has been lagging behind
plans. In April 1983, the Ukrainian Central Committee chastised the
Chernobyl plant, along with the Rovno nuclear power station at
Kuznetsovsk, for ''inferior quality of construction and installation work
and low operating levels.'' ---- U.S. Offers to Help AGANA, Guam, Tuesday,
April 29 -Donald T. Regan, the White House chief of staff, said today that
the United States was willing to provide medical and scientific assistance
to the Soviet Union in connection with the nuclear accident but so far
there had been no such request. Back to the top of this page. Back to today's page. Go to another day.
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