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NewsApril 23, 2006

MOSCOW -- The Chernobyl plant sits idle 20 years after the world's worst nuclear accident, its last reactor taken out of service some six years ago. But a dozen other reactors of the same design remain in operation and some could be in service for another 30 years. Could another one blow up?...

JIM HEINTZ ~ The Associated Press

~ Technical problems have been addressed, but others wonder about the human factor.

MOSCOW -- The Chernobyl plant sits idle 20 years after the world's worst nuclear accident, its last reactor taken out of service some six years ago.

But a dozen other reactors of the same design remain in operation and some could be in service for another 30 years. Could another one blow up?

The explosion of April 26, 1986, is attributed by experts to a fatal combination of design flaws and poor staff training. The design problems have been addressed, but doubt remains about the human factor.

The accident was a terrible irony, coming during a routine drill to test how long the electricity-generating turbines would spin and supply power during a shutdown.

But reactors of the RBMK type used at Chernobyl have a "positive void coefficient" in which excess steam, which absorbs neutrons less effectively than water, leads to an increase in reactor power. RBMKs are considered unstable at low power.

Automatic shutdown systems had been switched off for the test, and workers couldn't insert control rods in time once they started losing control of the reactor, according to generally accepted accounts of the blast.

Since then, the RBMK reactors in Russia and Lithuania have undergone modifications recommended by the International Atomic Energy Agency.

People 'fairly relaxed'

Nuclear experts say the changes have substantially reduced the technical likelihood of a repeat of the Chernobyl blast.

"Very significant changes have been made in the technology," IAEA deputy director Tomihiro Taniguchi told The Associated Press. "The IAEA is firmly committed that such an accident not happen again."

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"People are fairly relaxed about the RBMKs," said Ian Hore-Lacey, a spokesman for the World Nuclear Organization, which promotes peaceful uses of nuclear energy.

John Ahearne, a former U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission chief who now teaches at Duke University, agreed with the technical assessment, but was less sure about staff at plants using RBMKs.

"How well are they trained, how well are they paid -- that's harder to assess," he said.

Vladimir Chuprov, head of energy issues at the Russian branch of the Greenpeace environmental watchdog group, said work conditions are as important as the technology -- and more worrisome.

Reactors can be modernized, he said, but "the majority of nuclear accidents are connected not with technology, but with the human factor."

A study by Greenpeace and the Russian Academy of Sciences found many nuclear workers in Russia showing up for work drunk or on drugs, Chuprov said. At the Leningradsky plant in northern Russia, pay is so poor that some workers have to moonlight as taxi drivers, he said.

Yuri Sarayev, a nuclear expert at the Russian Academy of Natural Sciences, said pay hasn't kept up with the country's booming economy, so "specialists with solid training and 10-15 years experience are leaving, and being replaced by less-prepared people."

Russian officials insist the RBMK reactors' future is bright and their service life will be extended from 30 to 45 years, with the last to close in 2036.

That confidence isn't universally shared. Lithuania, a former Soviet republic, has already mothballed one RBMK at its Ignalina plant and is to shut the other in 2009.

Can a Chernobyl-type disaster happen again?

Nikolai Tarakanov, a scientist and retired general who heads the Center for Social Support of Chernobyl's Invalids, replies: "No one can give you a guarantee that it will not happen tomorrow."

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