iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Chernobyl: 25 Years After The Nuclear Disaster (PHOTOS)

First Posted: 02/ 2/2011 8:48 am   Updated: 09/19/2011 9:47 pm

From iLCP:

This year marks the 25th Anniversary of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster. At 1:23am on April 26th, 1986, operators in the control room of Reactor #4 botched a routine safety test, resulting in an explosion, and a fire that burned for 10 days. The radioactive fallout spread over tens of thousands of square miles, driving more than a quarter of a million people permanently from their homes. It remains the world's worst nuclear disaster to date.

Since 1993, renowned National Geographic photographer Gerd Ludwig has visited the site several times, creating an in-depth look at the many consequences of tragedy. The thawing of bureaucratic barriers in Ukraine enabled him to move freely within the Exclusion Zone and delve deeper into contaminated reactor than any other Western still photographer. "I know that my explorations are not without personal risk. However," he says, "I do this on behalf of otherwise voiceless victims who allow me to expose their suffering solely in the hope that tragedies like Chernobyl may be prevented in the future."

This spring, Gerd Ludwig plans to return to the reactor and the areas around it to investigate the state of contamination to the land; to report on the progress of its cleanup; and to examine the health consequences in the fallout regions of Ukraine and Belarus. Harnessing social media outlets like Facebook and Twitter, his project entitled The Long Shadow of Chernobyl is funded partially through the crowd-funding website Kickstarter, where individuals can pledge their support for the project.

1 of 12
Wind blows through the desolate town of Pripyat. On April 26, 1986, this amusement park was being readied for the annual May Day celebrations when the Chernobyl nuclear reactor exploded less than two miles away and severely contaminated tens of thousands of square miles.

The Long Shadow of Chernobyl - Photographs © Gerd Ludwig/INSTITUTE
Total comments: 702 | Post a Comment
1 of 12
This Image
Doesn't Capture Much
Unbelievable

  • 1

  • 2

  • 3

  • 4

  • 5

  • 6

  • 7

  • 8

  • 9

  • 10
Top 5 Photos
loading...
Users who voted on this slide
loading...

Today, the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant sits inside a fenced area known as the Exclusion Zone. Radioactive remnants of the failed reactor linger inside the so-called sarcophagus, a 24-story concrete and steel encasement hastily erected after the accident. Leaky and structurally unsound, it now threatens to collapse, shaking loose enough radiation to cause a second disaster of similar magnitude. Work has started on a new encasement, which will slide over the existing sarcophagus to seal in the remaining nuclear fuel - at an estimated cost of 2 billion dollars.

Less than 2 miles away from the reactor, the evacuated town of Pripyat, once inhabited by 50,000 plant workers, is a chilling ghost town still littered with the remnants of its hasty abandonment. Within the Exclusion Zone, in dozens of abandoned villages collapsed houses are disappearing under overgrowth. Ignoring radiation levels, some 400 elderly people have returned to their homes.

From the first day, officials downplayed the damages of the catastrophe and the politics of misinformation continues: A UN report estimates that 4,000 people will eventually succumb to cancer-related illnesses as the result of the accident. But major environmental organizations have accused the report of whitewashing Chernobyl's impact and state that more than 100,000 people have already died as a consequence of the disaster.

In the desperate search for alternative energy sources, it is important that we remember the Chernobyl accident as a possible outcome of nuclear power.

FOLLOW HUFFPOST GREEN

From iLCP: This year marks the 25th Anniversary of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster. At 1:23am on April 26th, 1986, operators in the control room of Reactor #4 botched a routine safety test, resulti...
From iLCP: This year marks the 25th Anniversary of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster. At 1:23am on April 26th, 1986, operators in the control room of Reactor #4 botched a routine safety test, resulti...
Filed by Joanna Zelman  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 702
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4 5  Next ›  Last »  (10 total)
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
paulrandall
05:37 AM on 03/21/2011
"Radiation is good for you"
ann coulter
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
03:06 AM on 02/05/2011
I've been visiting Pripyat, Chernobyl and Mitino Cemetery (where the firemen are buried in lead graves) for some time now, trying to develop a more introspective angle about the tragedy. Something that restores a bit of dignity to the memory of Pripyat. Hopefully my efforts compliment the excellent efforts of Gerd Ludwig and others who are constantly working to remind us of what went wrong and what we should avoid. If you are interested take a look.
http://smithjan.com/blog/2011/01/27/chernobyl-25-years-revisited-chapter-2/
photo
Morgantheaxe
Eisenhower Republicans don't drink tea!!
02:55 AM on 02/04/2011
Far from being any kind of expert and someone with a casual interest in studying the Soviet Union It seems as though there was a culture that permiated almost every aspect of their society which insisted on there never ever being bad news. It seems as though it was unacceptable to question or god forbid to say that something might not work. So it seems nobody wanted to be the person to say, "Houston, we have a problem." A calousness from the leadership seemed to doom them from the very beggining. I hope someone here has learned from that lesson. Although it seems at times the willingness to sell out to lobbyists here is all but insuring we will follow in the Soviets footsteps.
02:22 PM on 02/03/2011
I was there a few years ago. It's an amazing and horrifying place to visit. http://chernobyl-pripyat.com/
04:15 PM on 02/03/2011
What happens to the camera's?
09:49 AM on 02/03/2011
I'm from Kiev,Ukraine.its not far from Chernobyl..sad day in the history not only for Ukraine,but for all the world....
There's a Museum of Chernobyl in Kiev.i visit it sometimes...it's a good reminder for me how many people died rescuing us...
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
HappyBalance
People BEFORE Profits
08:50 AM on 02/03/2011
Wow. I remember that day. Extremely sad.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
08:10 AM on 02/03/2011
My god you guys swipe a lot of photos.
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
SSF
Republican no longer!
07:00 AM on 02/03/2011
At least those old folks who moved back to their evacuated villages won't have to worry about the need for streetlights at night. Their houses probably glow in the dark!
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Krzysztof Kosiski
05:28 PM on 02/16/2011
Sorry to ruin your joke but radioactive things do not glow in the dark. It is a cultural myth.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
10:54 PM on 03/20/2011
A cultural myth that nonetheless proved true in at least one noteworthy nuclear accident: The glow-in-the-dark properties of cesium chloride are what caused people in the Goiana, Brazil nuclear accident to use it as make-up. No joke. Unfortunately that killed some of them.
KennebunkportIndependent
Back in my day, we had NINE planets.
06:10 AM on 02/03/2011
Looks like the photos of Detroit that were here last week.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jim Shaffer
50 yo US citizen, 25 year resident in Bilbao Spain
04:43 AM on 02/03/2011
Chernobyl, all my favorite dead heroes are there, those annonymous thousands of folk that got lethally exposed in a desperate attempt to save not their own lives but all our lives. They'll never be gone from my memory.
10:46 AM on 02/03/2011
It was 30 people, not thousands. There were a few hundred others who received radiation related injuries, but recovered.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jim Shaffer
50 yo US citizen, 25 year resident in Bilbao Spain
02:46 PM on 02/03/2011
Uh yeah, the 'official' numbers, supplied by soviet bureaucrats, those are the ones that died immediately from radiation poisoning not the ones that died of cancer a few years later. But no follow up studies have been or will be done. Thousands participated in the cleanup and were exposed to lethal dosis, we can only suppose what's become of them.
photo
acorn57
... every happy ending needs to have a start ...
04:06 AM on 02/03/2011
It's been years since I discovered this website- it's about a girl on a motorcycle that had clearance to visit this area. The entire city was vacant, there are some eerie photos of the abandoned, empty city.....

http://www.kiddofspeed.com/chernobyl-revisited/
01:06 PM on 02/03/2011
That entire story is a hoax. The first version of that website went up before she even visited the place. She never rode a motorcycle there. The photos were scans from coffee table books. Most were anachronisms. When she finally did go, it was in a car on a standard tour.
photo
acorn57
... every happy ending needs to have a start ...
06:50 PM on 02/03/2011
Yeah- you're right. I didn't take the time to fact check to see if it was authentic. When I first found the site years ago it seemed real. Even so, most of the pictures are supposed to be from that area.
photo
MichaelMcKLA
I'm moving to Pandora.
03:39 AM on 02/03/2011
I imagine real estate in that area is pretty cheap.

;)
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Notsosurearewe
A pair o' pathetic peripatetics
03:54 AM on 02/03/2011
Only if you're willing to brave the fun of thyroid cancer...
09:41 AM on 02/03/2011
that's what potassium iodide is for.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
06:31 PM on 02/03/2011
Not much worry about that any more.

Thyroid cancer is a concern with a reactor release because of radioactive iodine(which is only formed when the reactor is operating), which if you are exposed to concentrates in the thyroid. But Iodine-131 has a half life of 8 days, that means that after only 1 year less than 1 trillionth of the I-131 would remain.

There are about 1.33*10^50 atoms in the entire Earth, if all of them where I-131 they would all be gone after only 4 years.

In other words, no I-131 left, thus no increased risk of thyroid cancer.
12:55 AM on 02/03/2011
What a testament to the stupidity of our race.
02:22 AM on 02/03/2011
More like a testament to hasty innovation. During the formative years of the nuclear age, we tried to run before we mastered walking, and we ended up with some questionable reactor designs, a few of which encountered fairly serious problems.

Today we know a whole lot more than we did back then, but we still mostly operate improved first-generation reactors, because the few major incidents with early reactors have made us afraid to pursue more modern designs.

With respect to pending applications, the mantra of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission appears to be "better the devil we know". They're more open to older designs which have proven to be manageable although complicated and not exactly fool-proof than they are to advanced designs that promise a whole new level of simplicity and inherent safety.

The consequence of Chernobyl and Three Mile Island is that we're basically stuck with technology that is only a modest improvement over those designs. We were too hasty at first, and now we're suffering from a knee-jerk reaction in the opposite direction.
11:35 AM on 02/03/2011
I'm sorry, but I don't buy the argument. In the name of greed and cheap energy, nuclear facilities were built. As long as there are such facilities, there will always be the potential for nuclear disaster (don't forget sabotage). No matter how much you've convinced yourself it is or can be safe. Same with oil rigs. I don't think the earth can take another Chernobyl, or worse.
photo
SURFER DUDE
Semper Fi
02:54 AM on 02/03/2011
More like a testament to Russian technology and the effect of low bid contracts.
08:18 AM on 02/03/2011
And poor training.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Krzysztof Kosiski
05:47 PM on 02/16/2011
There were no "low bid contracts" in Soviet Union.
photo
LMPE
I connect the most dissimilar things
12:16 AM on 02/03/2011
The Belarus government wants to repopulate its evacuated regions.

Question is, who's actually going to want to move back to those regions?
DontJustFollow
Ask not what your country can do for you...
12:01 AM on 02/03/2011
This was Bush/Cheneys fault too - right?
12:21 AM on 02/03/2011
What is it with you? Are you 12?
08:53 AM on 02/03/2011
I was thinking 7
01:20 AM on 02/03/2011
No, not this, but the cancers in Iraq amongst its population, caused by depleted uranium most certainly is.
02:02 AM on 02/03/2011
Depleted uranium doesn't cause cancer, although breathing in just about any kind of particulate matter (dust, smoke, etc.) and/or drinking contaminated water does tend to cause cancer. People living in combat zones are at high risk of cancer, but not because of depleted uranium in particular. It's not strongly radioactive because the U235 has been mostly separated out.
10:28 AM on 02/03/2011
I think more died from acute and abrupt lead poisoning.