Joint satellite programme to monitor Chernobyl and Fukushima from space as the safest place to do it from
,,,“Yesterday at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant (it was impressed upon me) the fact that even after 27 years since the accident Ukraine still continues to struggle with the consequences of the disaster,” Japan’s minister told journalists, as translated into Ukrainian.,,,
Clean-up after the disaster is expected to take around four decades.???????
Image source; http://www.independentaustralia.net/2012/environment/the-heavy-hidden-costs-of-nuclear-power/
26 August 2013
Ukraine and Japan have agreed to launch a joint satellite project to track the state of crippled Chernobyl and Fukushima nuclear plants, sites of the world’s greatest nuclear disasters.
“We have agreed on co-operation in the space sector to monitor the regions surrounding Chernobyl and Fukushima,” Japan’s Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida told reporters after talks with his Ukrainian counterpart Leonid Kozhara.
The project aims to put into orbit by 2014 eight miniature satellites to gather information on the effects of radioactive fallout on the areas adjacent to the plants.
According to the Japanese foreign ministry, it will be a joint project of Tokyo University and the Ukrainian state space agency with launches of Japanese-developed satellites by Ukrainian carrier rockets.
In March 2011, an earthquake and tsunami caused meltdowns at the Fukushima nuclear plant in northeast Japan.
Clean-up after the disaster is expected to take around four decades.
While no one is officially recorded as having died as a direct result of the meltdown at the reactors, large areas around the plant had to be evacuated, with tens of thousands of people still unable to return.
Satellites in the joint programme are expected to weigh about 60kg and span 50cm in diameter, the Japanese delegation confirmed yesterday.
They will take satellite images every two hours from an altitude of about 600km.
They will also receive signals from sensors installed on the ground to collect information from areas where radiation levels exceed the norm.

On Sunday Kishida visited Chernobyl, the site of the 1986 tragedy, as part of his trip to Ukraine to compare notes on relief efforts following Japan’s own disaster at Fukushima.
“Yesterday at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant (it was impressed upon me) the fact that even after 27 years since the accident Ukraine still continues to struggle with the consequences of the disaster,” Japan’s minister told journalists, as translated into Ukrainian.
The explosion at reactor number four of the Chernobyl power plant in the early hours of April 26, 1986 sent radioactive fallout into the atmosphere that spread from the Soviet Union across Europe.
According to official Ukrainian figures, more than 25,000 of the clean-up workers from then-Soviet Ukraine, Russia and Belarus have died since the disaster.
The two catastrophes are the world’s only nuclear disasters to have been categorised as level seven on the United Nations’ seven-point International Nuclear Event Scale (INES).
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