Reuters, Moscow :
Russia’s state nuclear agency Rosatom said on Saturday that five of its staff members were killed in an accident during tests on a military site in northern Russia.
The accident occurred during the engineering and technical support of “isotope power sources” on a liquid propulsion system, Rosatom said in a statement. The statement did not give details of the isotope power sources and Rosatom, reached by Reuters, declined to clarify. Asked if there had been a release of radiation as a result of the incident, a
spokeswoman said Rosatom had nothing to add to statements released earlier by the Defense Ministry and regional authorities. A further three staff members suffered injuries, including burns, and were receiving medical treatment in specialized facilities, the statement said.
Russian authorities had previously said two people had been killed in the incident and that a nearby city had reported a rise in radiation levels when a liquid propellant rocket engine blew up at a testing site in the Arkhangelsk region on Thursday.
Authorities said after the incident they had shut down part of a bay in the White Sea, although public shipping information from the port of Arkhangelsk showed the area had been closed for the preceding month. It did not say why. Local residents have been stocking up on iodine, used to reduce the effects of radiation exposure, after the accident, regional media have reported. Russia’s Defense Ministry has given few details of the incident.
Although it initially said no harmful chemicals were released into the atmosphere and radiation levels were unchanged, authorities in the city of Severodvinsk reported what they described as a brief spike in radiation.
They said levels there had soon returned to normal. No official explanation has been given for why such an accident would cause radiation to spike. The radiation statement put out by the city of Severodvinsk was taken down on Friday without explanation.
Russia’s state nuclear agency Rosatom said on Saturday that five of its staff members were killed in an accident during tests on a military site in northern Russia.
The accident occurred during the engineering and technical support of “isotope power sources” on a liquid propulsion system, Rosatom said in a statement. The statement did not give details of the isotope power sources and Rosatom, reached by Reuters, declined to clarify. Asked if there had been a release of radiation as a result of the incident, a
spokeswoman said Rosatom had nothing to add to statements released earlier by the Defense Ministry and regional authorities. A further three staff members suffered injuries, including burns, and were receiving medical treatment in specialized facilities, the statement said.
Russian authorities had previously said two people had been killed in the incident and that a nearby city had reported a rise in radiation levels when a liquid propellant rocket engine blew up at a testing site in the Arkhangelsk region on Thursday.
Authorities said after the incident they had shut down part of a bay in the White Sea, although public shipping information from the port of Arkhangelsk showed the area had been closed for the preceding month. It did not say why. Local residents have been stocking up on iodine, used to reduce the effects of radiation exposure, after the accident, regional media have reported. Russia’s Defense Ministry has given few details of the incident.
Although it initially said no harmful chemicals were released into the atmosphere and radiation levels were unchanged, authorities in the city of Severodvinsk reported what they described as a brief spike in radiation.
They said levels there had soon returned to normal. No official explanation has been given for why such an accident would cause radiation to spike. The radiation statement put out by the city of Severodvinsk was taken down on Friday without explanation.