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Radiation situation on the territories of the Leningrad Region affected by the Chernobyl accident

https://doi.org/10.21514/1998-426X-2017-10-3-103-112

Abstract

The accident at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant was the largest nuclear accident in the world. It led to radioactive contamination of 14 regions of the Russian Federation. In 1991, 4540 settlements were attributable to areas with levels of soil contamination by 137Cs of more than 1.0 Ci/km2. As of 2016, 3855 settlements with the population of more than 1,5 million people are carried to a zone of radioactive contamination according to the Government Directive No 1074 dated October 8, 2015 «On Approval of the List of settlements located within the boundaries of the zones of radioactive contamination from the Chernobyl disaster». In accordance with this Directive, in the Leningrad region 29 settlements were classified as zones of radioactive contamination. This article describes the dynamics of changes in the radiation situation and its current state in the territories of the Leningrad Region affected by the Chernobyl accident. The paper presents the dynamics of 137Cs and 90Sr contents in food products of local origin, the results of calculations of the current average annual effective doses used for the purposes of settlements’ zoning, and the average annual effective radiation doses actually received by the population, dating back to 1986. According to the results of laboratory studies, since 1987, there have been no exceedances of the permissible levels for 137Cs s in agricultural products and food raw materials of local origin. However in the wild products (mushrooms) excesses of the permissible levels for 137Cs have been periodically detected. The cases of exceeding the permissible levels for the content of strontium-90 in food, drinking water and water from open water bodies were not recorded for the entire observation period; the determined activity was at the level of tens and hundreds of times less than the permissible levels. In 2016, conservatively estimated average annual effective doses of exposure used for the purposes of settlements’ zoning, of residents of settlements in the Leningrad region, referred to the zones of radioactive contamination, do not exceed 0.090 mSv / year. The average annual dose actually received by the population in 2016, does not exceed 0.082 mSv / year. Thus, based on the results of the radiation monitoring, the situation associated with the impact of ionizing radiation sources in the Leningrad Region, formed as a result of the Chernobyl accident, currently is characterized as safe.

About the Authors

G. Ya. Bruk
Saint-Petersburg Research Institute of Radiation Hygiene after Professor P.V. Ramzaev, Federal Service for Surveillance on Consumer Rights Protection and Human Well-Being
Russian Federation

Gennadiy Ya. Bruk – Candidate of Technical Science, Senior Researcher, Head of the Internal Exposure Laboratory 

For correspondence: Mira str., 8, St.-Petersburg, 197101, Russia; E-mail: gen-bruk@yandex.ru



A. B. Bazyukin
Saint-Petersburg Research Institute of Radiation Hygiene after Professor P.V. Ramzaev, Federal Service for Surveillance on Consumer Rights Protection and Human Well-Being
Russian Federation
Anatoliy B. Bazyukin – Candidate of Biological Science, Lead Researcher, Internal Exposure Laboratory


A. A. Bratilova
Saint-Petersburg Research Institute of Radiation Hygiene after Professor P.V. Ramzaev, Federal Service for Surveillance on Consumer Rights Protection and Human Well-Being
Russian Federation
Anzhelika A. Bratilova – Researcher, Internal Exposure Laboratory


O. A. Istorik
Federal Service for Surveillance on Consumer Rights Protection and Human Well-Being, Leningrad Region
Russian Federation
Olga A. Istorik – Head, the Leningrad region Department


L. A. Eremina
Federal Service for Surveillance on Consumer Rights Protection and Human Well-Being, Leningrad Region
Russian Federation
Lyudmila А. Eremina– Deputy Chief, Sanytary Survivalence Department


References

1. Romanovich I.K., Bruk G.Ya., Barkovsky A.N., Bratilova A.A., Gromov A.V. Criteria and requirements for providing of the conversion of the settlements referred to the territories of radioactive contamination due to the Chernobyl accident to the conditions of the population normal life activity. «Medical and Biological Problems of Life Activity». Scientific and Practical Journal, 2016, № 1 (15), pp. 43-53. (In Russian).

2. Methodical guidelines. MG 2.6.1.784-99, 1999. The zoning of the Russian Federation settlements subject to radioactive pollution due to Chernobyl NPP accident by criterion of population radiation annual dose, Moscow, Minzdav of the Russian Federation, 1999. (In Russian).

3. Methodical guidelines. MG 2.6.1.1101-02. The zoning of the Russian Federation settlements subject to radioactive pollution due to Chernobyl NPP accident by criterion of population radiation annual dose (Addendum No. 1 to MG 2.6.1.78499). Moscow, Minzdav of the Russian Federation, 2002. (In Russian).

4. Methodical guidelines. MG 2.6.1. 2319-08. The zoning of the Russian Federation settlements subject to radioactive pollution due to Chernobyl NPP accident by criterion of population radiation annual dose (Addendum No. 2 to MG 2.6.1.784-99). Moscow, 2008. (In Russian).

5. Methodical guidelines. MG 2.6.1. 3154-13. The zoning of the Russian Federation settlements subject to radioactive pollution due to Chernobyl NPP accident by criterion of population radiation annual dose (Addendum No. 3 to MG 2.6.1.784-99). Rospotrebnadzor, 2013. (In Russian).

6. Methodological guidelines. MG 2.6.1.579-96. The reconstruction of population average acmulated in 1986 – 1995 effective exposure dose in radioactively contaminated Russian settlements after 1986 Chernobyl NPP accident. Moscow, Minzdrav of Russia, 1996, 33 p. (In Russian).

7. Methodological guidelines. MG 2.6.1.1114-02. The reconstruction of population average accumulated in 1986 – 2001 effective exposure dose in radioactively contaminated Russian settlements after 1986 Chernobyl NPP accident (Addendum No. 1 to MG 2.6.1.579-96). Moscow, Minzdrav of Russia, 2002, 8 p. (In Russian).

8. Methodological guidelines. MG 2.6.1.2004-05. The reconstruction of population average (individualized) accumulated effective exposure dose in radioactively contaminated Russian Federation settlements after 1986 Chernobyl NPP accident (Addendum No. 2 to MG 2.6.1.579-96). Мoscow, 2005, 15 p. (In Russian).

9. Methodological guidelines. MG 2.6.1.3153-13. The reconstruction of population average accumulated effective exposure dose in radioactively contaminated Russian Federation settlements after 1986 Chernobyl NPP accident (Addendum No. 3 to MG 2.6.1.579-96). Мoscow, 2014, 7 p. (In Russian).

10. Bruk G.Ja., Bazykin A.B., Barkovsky A.N., Bratilova A.A., Vlasov A.Yu., Goncharova Yu.N., Gromov A.V., Jesko T.V., Ivanov S.A., Kaduka M.V., Kravtsova O.S., Kuchumov V.V., Romanovich I.K., Saprykin K.A., Titov N.V., Travnikova I.G., Yakovlev V.A. The exposure for populations of the Russian Federation due to the chernobyl accident and main directions of further work in the coming period. Radiatsionnaya Gygiena = Radiation Hygiene, 2014, Vol. 7, № 4, pp. 72-83. (In Russian).

11. Radiological and hygienic issues of the mitigation of the Chernobyl NPP accident consequences. Ed.: G.G. Onishchenko, A. Yu. Popova. St. Petersburg., Research Institute of Radiation Hygiene after Professor P.V. Ramzaev, 2016, Vol.1, 448 p. (In Russian).


Review

For citations:


Bruk G.Ya., Bazyukin A.B., Bratilova A.A., Istorik O.A., Eremina L.A. Radiation situation on the territories of the Leningrad Region affected by the Chernobyl accident. Radiatsionnaya Gygiena = Radiation Hygiene. 2017;10(3):103-112. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.21514/1998-426X-2017-10-3-103-112

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ISSN 1998-426X (Print)
ISSN 2409-9082 (Online)