Ukraine’s Other Chernobyls
APR 29, 2015
KYIV – In 1983, the
Soviet Union inaugurated two nuclear reactors in what is now Ukraine.
One of them, unit four at Chernobyl, experienced an explosion and fire
three years later that released large quantities of radioactive
particles into the atmosphere – a catastrophic accident whose effects
are still being felt far beyond Ukraine’s borders. The other reactor,
unit one at the South Ukraine Nuclear Power Station, remains in
operation, though all indications suggest that it should be retired.
The prolonged
operation of unit one and the country’s aging nuclear power plants
probably would not have been possible without financial support from
European taxpayers, delivered through the European Bank for
Reconstruction and Development and the European Atomic Energy Community
(Euratom) as part of a €600 million ($650 million) “safety upgrade” program. In defiance of both the Convention on Environmental Impact Assessment in a Transboundary Context (the Espoo convention) and the EBRD loan agreement, the program was undertaken in the absence of any consultation with Ukraine’s European neighbors.
Thanks to these
efforts, the South Ukraine plant was granted a ten-year lifetime
extension permit in 2013 by the State Nuclear Regulatory Inspectorate
(SNRIU). But, according to a comprehensive study
released last month by the National Ecological Centre of Ukraine
(NECU), the assessment on which this decision was based was deeply
flawed. In fact, the unit one reactor suffers dangerous vulnerabilities,
with observed wear in some areas already exceeding tolerable levels by a
factor of ten. Such vulnerabilities, the study warns, could result in a
nuclear emergency, including a release of radioactive particles inside
the unit – or even into the environment.
This is hardly an
isolated case. Three of Ukraine’s nuclear power units are currently
operating beyond their design lifetime, with nine others set to reach
the end of their intended lifetime within the next five years. Most
immediately, unit two in South Ukraine will reach that point in less
than three weeks, meaning that the SNRIU must now decide whether to
grant that unit a 20-year lifetime extension.
The SNRIU will make
this critical decision without key information about the health and
environmental risks that the reactor poses to Ukraine and its neighbors.
Though this contravenes Ukraine’s responsibility, as a signatory to the
Espoo convention, to carry out a cross-border environmental-impact
assessment (not to mention missing the opportunity to consider potential
alternatives to continuing the reactor’s operation), no such analysis
is expected to take place.
Last month, campaign
groups in neighboring countries wrote to their representatives at the
EBRD, requesting that the bank suspend its support for revitalizing
Ukraine’s nuclear power plants until a cross-border assessment is
carried out. A similar letter,
signed by CEE Bankwatch Network and 45 other environmental NGOs from
across the region, had already been sent to the European Commission’s
Directorate-General for the Environment and the European Union’s
director at the EBRD.
But, even with such
an analysis, Ukraine’s nuclear regulator would be in no position to
guarantee the safe operation of aging nuclear units. Not only is its
professional capacity dubious, as the NECU study highlighted; its
independence has been dramatically curtailed by the government’s recent
decision to reduce significantly regulatory obligations for businesses
and state-owned companies (except with regard to taxation). As the EBRD
acknowledged in February, the SNRIU is now prohibited from taking the lead in conducting safety inspections, which is in breach of the EBRD loan agreement conditionality.
This is to say
nothing of the immediate threat posed by the ongoing military conflict
with Russia-backed rebels in the Donbas region of eastern Ukraine.
Beyond the obvious risks associated with instability, there is the fact
that Ukraine depends on Russia not only for most of the fuel to run its
aging reactors, but also for the treatment and storage of most of its
spent fuel. In other words, Ukraine’s dependence on nuclear energy,
which accounts for about half of its electricity generation, has
increased its strategic vulnerability to Russia.
That alone should be
enough to convince Ukraine’s government not to perpetuate their
country’s reliance on this insecure and dangerous energy source. If it
is not, the 29th anniversary of the Chernobyl disaster, commemorated
this month, should serve as a stark reminder of how much damage a
nuclear accident can cause.
Ukraine should take
its reactors’ expiration dates as an opportunity to pursue a safer, more
sustainable energy future. Given that this would also be in Europe’s
interest, EU governments and citizens must do whatever it takes to
support this effort. It is a long-term commitment, but one for which
there may not be a lifetime extension.
Iryna Holovko is a Ukraine campaigner at CEE Bankwatch Network and the National Ecological Centre of Ukraine.
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