Chernobyl Exclusion Zone Challenge | Top Gear | Series 21 | BBC
With Clarkson in a Volkswagen Up, Hammond in a Ford Fiesta and May in a Dacia Sandero, the trio have been driving around the Crimean peninsula. But to complete their journey they must face one last fearsome challenge; to drive into Chernobyl. Cue as much wasting of fuel as possible. Clip taken from series 21, episode 3.
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Journey Inside Chernobyl’s Exclusion Zone | Short Film Showcase
Christiaan and Kseniya Welzel ventured into Chernobyl's exclusion zone on the 27th anniversary of the plant's nuclear disaster and documented their experience. Beautiful Ghost: A Filmmaker's Look at Chernobyl attempts to capture the location's eerie beauty and convey the feelings the Welzels felt there. Yes it's scary, it's a little eerie, but at the same time it was very peaceful, Kseniya says.
30 Years After Chernobyl, Nature Is Thriving:
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Journey Inside Chernobyl’s Exclusion Zone | Short Film Showcase
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Chernobyl - What It's Like Today
This is what a nuclear disaster area looks like.
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Chernobyl abandoned ghost town | Ep1
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Diseases Caused By Chernobyl
What happened after the explosion at the nuclear power plant at Chernobyl? What were the side effects of the radiation?
In the early morning of 26th April 1986, the Chernobyl nuclear power plant in the former Soviet territory of Ukraine exploded, creating what is usually described as the worst nuclear disaster the world has ever seen. The disaster spread radioactivity into the atmosphere in one of the largest bursts of unintentional radioactive release into the environment. Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus were subject to significant exposure following the event and the rest of Europe was on red alert. Years of independent research and government investigation followed as the world tried to calculate the extent of the damage caused by the disaster.
Today on the Infographics Show we take a look at the aftermath of this tragic event and see if the event was as disastrous as first predicted. Let’s take a look at – The Worst Effects of the Chernobyl disaster.
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Chernobyl: Two Days in the Exclusion Zone
Drew spends a few days in one of the most irradiated—and misunderstood—places on Earth.
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Venturing into Chernobyl - River Monsters
Jeremy enters the radioactive site of Chernobyl on his mission to find a mutated fish.
UK Viewers: Catch All New River Monsters Series 7 on ITV & ITV4 - April 2016
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Chernobyl's 1986 disaster
On 26 April 1986, it was decided at Chernobyl to take advantage of reactor number four's downtime by carrying out a safety test on an emergency core cooling feature.
At 1.24 am, an engineer recorded in his diary that the protective system was not working. At the same moment, a huge and catastrophic surge in power caused two explosions.
As fires raged, the core of reactor number four was destroyed. A huge cloud rose into the sky, spreading large amounts of radioactive fuel and materials into the atmosphere.
...
Chernobyl (2019) | Official Trailer | HBO
On April 26, 1986, the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant in Ukraine, Soviet Union suffered a massive explosion that released radioactive material across Belarus, Russia and Ukraine and as far as Scandinavia and western Europe. Chernobyl dramatizes the story of the 1986 accident, one of the worst man-made catastrophes in history, and the sacrifices made to save Europe from the unimaginable disaster. Chernobyl premieres May 6 on HBO.
#HBO #Chernobyl
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HOW RADIOACTIVE IS CHERNOBYL IN 2019? - Ukraine
Before visiting the exclusion zone of Chernobyl - home to the worst nuclear disaster in the world, we wondered just how much radiation we would be exposed to.
After our tour with Chernobyl Tour, we discovered that as long as you have a guide and follow all of the safety precautions, walking around the Chernobyl's 10km-30km exclusion zone is relatively safe.
After the initial reactor exploded in 1986, over 600,000 liquidators have since cleansed the area of radiation. In addition, in July 2019 a New Safe Confinement has been built around Reactor 4 to confine the exposed reactor.
So visiting Chernobyl in 2019 is an observation of incredible achievement and the most respected bravery to all that put their lives at risk.
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HBO Chernobyl
NOVA: Building Chernobyl's MegaTomb
The Russian Woodpecker
The Battle of Chernobyl
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Chernobyl: What happened 30 years ago? BBC News
It has been 30 years since the Chernobyl disaster - the worst nuclear catastrophe in human history.
Back in 1986, Yuriy Andreyev worked at the Chernobyl nuclear plant and was one of the engineers who helped contain the fallout of the accident.
In 2012 he gave his account of the events to BBC Ukrainian, which have been animated to tell the full story.
Animation by Luis Ruibal. Music by Alejandro Lovera. Producers Anastasiya Gribanova and Oleg Karpyak.
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The Chernobyl Disaster: How It Happened
On April 26, 1986, a routine safety test at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant in Ukraine spiraled out of control. Follow the dramatic events that led to the world's worst civilian nuclear disaster. (RFE/RL's Denis Artamonov, Stuart Greer)
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Inside Chernobyl’s new €1.5bn structure for exploded nuclear reactor
The new structure built to confine Chernobyl’s damaged reactor number 4 was shown to the media for the first time at the nuclear power plant in Ukraine.
With a span of 843 feet, the special shelter is the largest moveable land-based structure ever built, and it took nine years to complete.
The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development funded the new confinement project with €715 million, alongside contributions from the European Union and 45 other countries.
The megastructure seals in radiation from the molten reactor’s core and 200 tons of highly radioactive material.
#Chernobyl #NuclearDisaster #Radiation #Disasters
Report by Gianluca Avagnina.
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UKRAINE: CHERNOBYL: RE-OPENING
Russian/Nat
The only operational reactor at Ukraine's Chernobyl nuclear power plant has gone back on line after the end of repairs which were delayed for nearly a month.
Reactor number three at the station, where the world's worst nuclear accident occurred in 1986, had been under repair since it was shut down on December 15 last year.
Chernobyl's reactor number three was shut down in December for repairs that were initially delayed because of energy shortages in the former Soviet republic.
It was to have come back on line February 16, but the state nuclear energy company Energoatom said it needed more time to fix it.
Repairs included safety upgrades and a check of the reactor's regular and emergency cooling systems, which had some 50 defects.
Reactor number three is the only one remaining of four originally operating at the plant.
SOUNDBITE: (Russian)
We will heat up the reactor to nominal power and if everything is fine at 1800 on March 6 reactor number three will be hooked up to the electricity grid.
SUPER CAPTION: Andrei Shantsev,Reactor shift supervisor
Reactor number four - which blew up 13 years ago, spewing radiation over large parts of Europe - has been covered in a protective concrete covering ever since.
The other two reactors at Chernobyl were closed down in 1991 and 1996 respectively.
Chernobyl has been riddled by controversy since the catastrophe in 1986.
The concrete sarcophagus covering reactor number four has been the subject of apocalyptic predictions about its safety, with some experts predicting it could collapse causing disaster.
Although the Ukrainian government has pledged to shut down Chernobyl completely by 2000, the severe energy crisis in the former Soviet republic puts the promise in doubt.
Ukraine relies on its five nuclear power stations for 40 percent of its energy needs.
Therefore atomic energy authorities in the country have lobbied hard for Chernobyl's remaining reactor to be repaired and put into operation again.
SOUNDBITE: (Russian)
We received the permission of the administration body of atomic regulation for reactor number three to work in the electricity grid. Therefore after around 48 hours of work at nominal power, the reactor will hook up to the grid and will account for around three per cent of the energy output of Ukraine.
SUPER CAPTION: Andrei Shantsev, Reactor shift supervisor
Meanwhile, workers at the Chernobyl plant are continuing a protest action, which started on March 2.
The protesters, who are demanding wage arrears, have set up a tent city in the town of Slavutich, where most of Chernobyl's personnel live.
SOUNDBITE: (Russian)
Many workers are refusing to take rest after they have finished their shift and go to the town square to take part in the protest. Also they refuse to sleep and come to work having not rested. Of course, all that has a bad effect on the work of the station.
SUPER CAPTION: Oleg Goloskopkov, Head of public relations, Chernobyl Nuclear Power Station
The workers warn that disorder in the nuclear power industry could endanger the safety of the country's nuclear plants.
The protests began when the government failed to heed nuclear energy workers' demands in similar demonstrations last summer.
Last week, the government pledged 33 point three (M) million dollars to pay back wages, but never issued the actual order to pay.
The workers have threatened to stage hunger strikes, reduce plants output and even hold a full-blown strike beginning March 22 if their demands are not met.
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Chernobyl: Drone Footage Reveals an Abandoned City
Drone footage filmed between 2013 and 2016 shows the Ukrainian city of Pripyat and the Chernobyl nuclear facility. In 1986, the population of 50,000 people were evacuated after the reactor at the nuclear plant exploded.
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What Caused the Catastrophic Nuclear Accident in Chernobyl?
What Caused the Catastrophic Nuclear Accident in Chernobyl? Is Chernobyl safe to visit now? Do people still live in Chernobyl?
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Inside The Belarus Chernobyl Zone ????????
???????? So many vloggers have made the trip to Pripyat to make Chernobyl films that it has become an embarrassing cliche. So I decided to enter the real unexplored Chernobyl zone instead. The one across the border in Belarus. No tour guides here. Just me and my knife ready to face whatever came my way. Join me on a solo journey across the Zone...
How I Survived Chernobyl
The Chernobyl accident was one of the most deadly nuclear accidents to occur, and in today's educational cartoon we are going to look at the life of one of the survivors of the deadly incident.
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Bizarre Side Effects After The Chernobyl Disaster
ODD Discoveries That Scientists Couldn't Explain
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It’s been over 30 years since the nuclear plant at Chernobyl suffered a catastrophic meltdown. This represented the first time in history that a nuclear plant had blown up so spectacularly and left the area around it devastated for decades and generations to come. While we know the causes of the April 1986 accident, we are still assessing and witnessing the results of this environmental catastrophe. Many people have passed away, other deal with various disabilities resulting from the radiation. The environment has been forever scarred. Even the nearby town of Pripyat has been forever changed. The disaster at Chernobyl has led to a range of strange and horrible side-effects that we are still dealing with today. Some you likely know about, but others have popped up that have researchers scratching their heads.
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Inside the heart of the Chernobyl nuclear reactor | 60 Minutes Australia
In 2006, twenty years after the worst nuclear accident in history, reporter Richard Carleton went into the very belly of the beast, the heart of the Chernobyl nuclear reactor.
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For forty years, 60 Minutes have been telling Australians the world’s greatest stories. Tales that changed history, our nation and our lives. Reporters Liz Hayes, Allison Langdon, Tara Brown, Charles Wooley, Liam Bartlett and Sarah Abo look past the headlines because there is always a bigger picture. Sundays are for 60 Minutes.
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