Responsible for him were the Soviet construction troops.
The dry storage containers consist of three steel underground blocks: "3A", "2A", and "2B": 18 m (59 ft) in diameter, 1,000 mAfter the refitting project was approved, the 50 cm (20 in) concrete covers over the containers were broken in order to load the drums. The Minamata Disaster . The repository consisted of two piers, as well as a stationary berth and a sanitary treatment station.

Andreeva Bay is a dedicated nuclear waste facility for the Soviet Northern Fleet, located in the Litsa fjord on the Barents Sea coast of the Kola Peninsula. Through them penetrated the device, capable of seizing the covers from the bottom of the pool.

Because of its location, townspeople eat a lot of fish. The repository on the Andreeva Bay appeared in the early 1960s. Elimination of the consequences of this disaster took several years. This facility was rightfully considered the most dangerous in terms of radiation throughout the Cold War. Now starts the reprocessing of Russia’s Arctic Cold War-era legacy next door the the plant where Stalin’s first nuclear bomb was made. When they were transferred to a dry storage unit, there were several situations in which spent nuclear fuel poured out of deformed shells and ice.When this happened, the sailors with a shovelquickly poured it into the cells intended for disposal.

The repository, constructed in the early 1960s, is a naval base on the shore of the Zapadnaya Litsa bay. In particular, only 55 kilometers from Murmansk and 60 kilometers from the border with Norway. Spent nuclear fuel stored in so-called “bottles” at Andreyeva Bay. Only after that, new wastes are no longer shipped to the pool.Until September 1987, SNF was unloaded fromlips Andreeva from the left pool. At the presentation of the device, which determines the radiation, to their clothes the shooter went off scale, showing tens of millions of beta decays. At the moment, most experts believe that the latest version is the most believable.The fact is that due to temperature differencesincreased pressure on welded seams. At that time there were no special radiation protection devices.According to eyewitnesses, all those presentthe face displayed indescribable horror, as they represented what a dangerous radiation radiation at the bottom of the pool.
Because the powerful source of dangerous gamma radiation has become their very body. They were installed in a vertical position, and outside were poured with concrete. Entry into the building #5 was decorated by deformed trucks previously used for carrying nuclear fuel and half-torn-down heavy gates.

The administrative center is in Zaozersk, Murmansk region.The most famous problem, which for many yearsexists on the Andreeva Bay in the Murmansk region, is associated with waste. There are still huge reservoirs with liquid radioactive waste in the area.Environmentalists are still concerned about all the secrecy about safety standards at the Mayak plant.Nils Bøhmer with the Bellona Foundation in Norway was attending the ceremony in Andreeva Bay on June 27 when the first spent nuclear fuel was shipped out. The Cleggan Bay Disaster is the story of that fateful night in the life of the two communities – a night that changed the course of local history. In addition to spent nuclear fuel from submarines and icebreakers, the Mayak plant reprocess fuel from Russia’s nuclear power plants with press-water reactors.After confirming you're a real person, you can write your email below and we include you to the subscription list.Mayak reprocessing plant i the South Urals is more than 3,000 kilometers from the Kola Peninsula. Only 25 cases remained, which were filled with boron to absorb neutrons.Finally, all the radiation fuel was unloaded only by December 1989.The commissions working at the facility put forward several reasons that led to the radiation accident.This could be a poor quality of welds,which was used to skin the pool. About 700,000 tonnes of highly radioactiv Finally, we managed to cope with it only by 1989. For many, this toponym was the most terrible definition, characterizing the technical base on Andreeva Bay.Andreeva Bay is located right on the shore of the Barents Seaseas. The working sailors then used regular shovels to pour the fuel into the cement-encased vertical steel pipes of the storage containers. Finally, we managed to cope with it only by 1989. Inside, the building was dilapidated, electric equipment in dangerous condition, the roof letting through sights of the Aurora Borealis, and, most terrifyingly, colossal beta particle contamination levels and travelling gamma waves reflected from plates and walls. As a result, dangerous radioactive aerosols were carried throughout the premises of Building No. 5. Unable to withstand the weight of an adult, the sheet, along with the liquidator, fell into the radioactive water. They were attached to special consoles at a considerable distance from each other, which made it possible to exclude the possibility that the chain reaction would begin on its own.Water at the same time served as a biologicalprotection. Hydrogen could be released from the fuel, resulting in an explosion and fire, he says.“The risk is real and serious enough to warrant a study of the potential radiological consequences as these could potentially apply to Scandinavia and north-west Europe,” he adds.

But the worst thing, according to eyewitnesses, is the prohibitive levels of pollution.