HomeNewsWorldRussia finds 1,000-times normal level of radioactive isotope after nuclear accident claims

Russia finds 1,000-times normal level of radioactive isotope after nuclear accident claims

November 21, 2017 / 16:40 IST
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Greenpeace measuring water from Techa river outside the village of Muslyumovo November 19, 2010. The village is located on the banks of the Techa river in Russia's Urals, one of the country's most lethal nuclear dumping grounds. The Mayak nuclear complex located 30 km (18 miles) from Muslyumovo, currently processing foreign radioactive wastes, dumped 76 million cubic metres (2.68 billion cubic feet) of highly radioactive waste into the river from 1949 to 1956. Picture taken November 19, 2010.    REUTERS/Denis Sinyakov  (RUSSIA - Tags: HEALTH DISASTER ENVIRONMENT) - GM1E6BN0E8S01
Greenpeace measuring water from Techa river outside the village of Muslyumovo November 19, 2010. The village is located on the banks of the Techa river in Russia's Urals, one of the country's most lethal nuclear dumping grounds. The Mayak nuclear complex located 30 km (18 miles) from Muslyumovo, currently processing foreign radioactive wastes, dumped 76 million cubic metres (2.68 billion cubic feet) of highly radioactive waste into the river from 1949 to 1956. Picture taken November 19, 2010. REUTERS/Denis Sinyakov (RUSSIA - Tags: HEALTH DISASTER ENVIRONMENT) - GM1E6BN0E8S01

Russia's meteorological service said on Tuesday it had measured pollution of a radioactive isotope at nearly 1,000 times normal levels in the Ural mountains, the first official Russian data supporting reports that an accident had taken place.

The data appears to support a report by the French nuclear safety institute IRSN, which said on November 9 a cloud of radioactive pollution over Europe had indicated that an accident had taken place at a nuclear facility either in Russia or Kazakhstan in the last week of September.

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Neither Russia nor Kazakhstan has acknowledged any accident.

Russian state weather service Roshydromet said in a statement it had found "extremely high pollution" of ruthenium 106 in samples from two meteorological stations in the southern Ural mountains region in late September and early October.