1. In the weeks after the Chernobyl explosion, traces of radioactive deposits were found in almost every country in the northern hemisphere. Thousands of UK farms were affected, and controls that required some farmers to test their livestock’s radiation levels were not lifted until 2012.
2. The town of Pripyat was built in 1970 for the workers of the power plant. Its 49,000 inhabitants were evacuated the day after the incident, forced to leave most of their possessions behind – including pets, because their fur may have contained radioactive dust.
3. More than 10,000 tourists visit the exclusion zone with specialised tour operators every year, but they are forbidden from touching anything and are scanned for high radiation levels before they leave.
1 thought on “Chernobyl Fast Facts”
The sad truth is, Chernobyl was a completely preventable disaster. The reactor design was flawed from the very beginning. If someone had caught the error and re-designed the flawed system, the power plant could have functioned perfectly for decades. Because Chernobyl was also manned by personnel who did not receive adequate training, it all became a recipe for disaster one dark night in 1986. Chernobyl was headed for horror from its earliest days, but with just a little more care and attention the catastrophe could have been completely avoided. It’s terrifying to know that the Chernobyl tragedy never had to happen at all.