Wreck of the K-431 Soviet nuclear submarine that exploded on August 10, 1985 |
There is something sad but
instructive in looking back to the early years of this century to learn which
nuclear safety issues were of concern to researchers and policy makers in Japan.
Instead of proper planning for earthquakes and tsunamis, or an overhaul of the
corrupt Japanese nuclear regulatory system, there were worries over the
hazards to Japan of Russia’s operating and decommissioning of Soviet era
nuclear submarines in the Russian Far East. There were also studies on how much
cesium from Chinese weapons tests was landing on Japanese soil.
Compared to what has befallen the
country since 2011, these concerns seem quaint, even enviable. The cesium from
Chinese weapons tests was miniscule compared to the levels we have to deal with
now. It would be nice if the trace deposits from China were our biggest worry.
The concern over the Soviet
submarines was more substantial. The Chazhma Bay (alternatively spelled Chasma) explosion of 1985, near
Vladivostok, raised some alarming questions about the hazards posed by the
Soviet fleet to Russia and countries nearby – North and South Korea, China, and
Japan. Or, actually, it would have raised alarming questions if anyone had
known about it.
Japan was so concerned about the
danger by the late 1990s that it donated money and technical assistance after
the fall of the Soviet Union, yet the 1985 accident remained largely
unreported, even after 1993 when the Russian government released previously
classified information about it.
In a scientific paper about the
accident (Takano et al., 2001) authored by Japanese and Russian researchers, the
authors concluded that the impact was mostly local. The paper was concerned
with possible future accidents, similar to the actual accident that occurred in
1985, with emphasis on the possible effects on Japan if winds had blown in the
opposite direction. It concluded, “… the radioactive material might be
transported through the atmosphere to Japan in one to several days and might
contaminate a wide area of Japan. However, the radiological dose to the area
might not be significant.”
The severity of an accident would
depend on whether fuel rods were new or old, and whether the Russian government
would know or release information about the nuclear inventory involved in the
accident. In the case of the 1985 accident, precise data was hard to determine
because of Soviet secrecy. A 2003 paper about the accident (Sivintsev, 2003)
asked in its title, “Was the Chazhma
Accident a Chernobyl of the Far East?” and responded in the negative:
“It
is shown that the emission of long-lived radioecologically significant
radionuclides in Chazhma was approximately 0.79 Ci, while in the
Chernobyl accident this emission was 90 MCi… These quantitative
estimates are used to show that the Chazhma accident is not analogous to the
1986 accident in Chernobyl.”
Nonetheless,
the accident was still horrific for those involved. Ten people died instantly
in the explosive criticality incident and ensuing steam explosion, and 10
others had acute radiation exposure. In total, 290 cleanup workers had to live
with the consequences of their exposure. Chernobyl was too big to be kept a
secret, but the Chazhma accident was successfully covered up until 1993. In
1998, 205 responders were finally recognized as atomic veterans - equal to
Chernobyl liquidators in rights to compensation. Ironically, their accident was
overshadowed by Chernobyl happening only eight months later. The local
environment was contaminated, both the surrounding hills and the bay. The
remains of the submarine itself are still too hot to handle.
The
accident illustrates in typical fashion the most unsettling thing about nuclear
accidents. In spite of the utmost attempts to foresee problems and control
complex systems, it is impossible to know all the complex ways complex systems
can break down. In this case, the refueling operation was being done between
the submarine and a ship parked alongside it. There had been some problems with
the refueling, and these were tragically compounded by the fact that someone
had forgotten to make sure that marine traffic in the area was stopped. A navy
boat passed by, causing a large wake that disrupted the fuel transfer at a
critical moment.
Chazhma Bay Accident Summary:
·
deaths: 10
·
total radiation released: 259 PBq (Fukushima: 840
PBq)*
·
iodine 131 released: 29 GBq
·
workers exposed to radiation: 290
·
workers who suffered acute radiation sickness: 10
·
sediments of Chazhma Bay are 2,000 times more
radioactive than before the accident
·
the K-431 submarine wreck continues to be a source
of radiation
·
other submarine wrecks in the bay still emit
radiation
·
the Dunai Peninsula is still heavily contaminated
·
runoff from the accident’s disposal site still
leaks into the bay
·
saving grace: the fuel rods were new and contained
almost no strontium or cesium isotopes
source: IPPNW
Poster Exhibition: Hibakusha Worldwide - Chazhma
Bay, Russia International Physicians for the Prevention of
Nuclear War
*This figure for Fukushima may not be accurate. No
definitive methodology or tally for the catastrophe has been agreed upon by
the scientific community. One reliable estimate was as study by the Norwegian
Institute for Air Research that estimated two of the radionuclide releases
as 16,700 PBq of short-lived xenon 133, and 36 PBq of long-lived cesium 137 –
42% of the cesium 137 released from Chernobyl. The total release would
include data for many more radionuclides.
|
Unanswered questions:
The few
studies on this accident that exist have nothing to tell about how widely the
short-lived radionuclides were dispersed. The world learned about the Chernobyl
accident from the staff at a Swedish nuclear reactor. They had picked up
radiation outside their workplace and set off alarms when they entered it. The
Chazma Bay accident begs the question of whether something similar happened at
Japanese nuclear power plants. The paper by Takano et al. lists in the
references a person by the name of Y. Murakami, and the reference is described
as “Radiation monitoring at three TEPCO nuclear reactors facing the Sea of
Japan in August 1985, Private Communication, July (2000).” Takano et al. claim
that the wind direction, as usual in summer months, was away from Japan toward
Russia, and this private communication confirmed that no spike in radiation
levels was observed in August 1985. However, it is odd that an unidentified
private communication is the best recorded evidence that these researchers
could find. If TEPCO had the records, why could they not be made public?
Reading
the paper by Takano et al. after the Fukushima catastrophe, it is easy to smile
sardonically. In retrospect, we see that the scientific establishment was
worried about Russian submarines when it faced the largest threat from its own
nuclear power plants – an infrastructure for which everyone had far too much
confidence and complacency. But the lesson for everyone in the world is that
the next accident is never like the last accident. We need to expect what we
least expect. Even if Japan restarts some of its nuclear power plants, the next
major nuclear accident will probably happen somewhere else. I’m starting to
wonder if it will be in China, Taiwan or South Korea and the winds will blow
the fallout over Japan anyway. Japan seems to be destined in history to play a
central role as nuclear victim. The only nuclear bombs used in war were dropped
on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the Castle Bravo tests in the Pacific contaminated
the Japanese tuna fleet (and tuna catch), the Chazhma Bay accident may or may
not have released a radioactive plume that drifted over Japan, and with Fukushima
Daiichi Japan victimized itself.
Sources:
The
Bellona Foundation. “What is the
Committee for Veterans at Special Risk hiding?” October 29, 2007.
Commander Gregory D. Young, U.S. Navy (Retired) Russian Sub Casualties. Proceedings, April 2005.
IPPNW Poster Exhibition: Hibakusha Worldwide - Chazhma Bay, Russia. International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War.
Hideshi Fujiwara. “Atmospheric Deposition of Radioactive Cesium (137Cs) Associated with Dust Events in East Asia.” Bulletin of the National Institute of Agro-Environmental Sciences. pp. 85 – 115. 2010.
Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan. Japan-Russian Federation Joint Efforts for Disarmament and Environmental Protection, Plan for Dismantling of Decommissioned Nuclear Submarines in the Far East Region. May 29, 1999.
Takano, Makoto, Vanya Romanova, Hiromi Yamazawa, Yuri Sivinitsev, Keith Compton, Vladimir Novikov, and Frank Parker. “Reactivity Accident of Nuclear Submarine Near Vladivostok.” Journal of Nuclear Science and Technology 38, no. 2. pp. 143-157. 2001.
Yu. V. Sivintsev. “Was the Chazhma Accident a Chernobyl of the Far East?” Atomic Energy. June 2003, Volume 94, Issue 6, pp 421-427.
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