(09-17) 10:53 PDT KIEV, Ukraine
(AP) --
Ukrainian officials signed a $505 million contract with a French-led
consortium Monday for construction of a new shelter for the Chernobyl
reactor, the site of the word's worst nuclear accident.
The project, financed by an international fund managed by the European
Bank for Reconstruction and Development, will be designed and built by the
French-led consortium Novarka, which includes the companies Bouygues SA
and Vinci SA.
The new shelter — an arch-shaped steel structure 345 feet tall and 490
feet long — will enclose the concrete sarcophagus erected hastily after
the 1986 accident. That structure has been crumbling and leaking radiation
for more than a decade.
"I am convinced that today, possibly for the first time, we can frankly
tell the national and international community that the answer to the
problem of sheltering the Chernobyl nuclear plant was found today,"
President Viktor Yushchenko said at the signing ceremony, according to the
presidential Web site.
The plan is to eventually dismantle the sarcophagus and the exploded
reactor inside the new shelter. Chernobyl's reactor No. 4 exploded on
April 26, 1986, spewing radiation over a large swath of the former Soviet
Union and much of northern Europe. An area roughly half the size of Italy
was contaminated, forcing the resettlement of hundreds of thousands of
people.
Ukraine has repeatedly asked for money from the European Union and
other Western sources to fund a new shelter.
Anton Usov, a spokesman for the European Bank for Reconstruction and
Development, said it will take about 1 1/2 years to design the shelter and
another four to build it.
The entire project of sheltering the reactor, which began in 1997 and
also includes strengthening the existing sarcophagus, monitoring radiation
and training experts, is estimated at $1.39 billion, Usov said.
Officials also signed a $200 million contract with New Jersey-based
Holtec International for decommissioning the power plant. The project
includes building a storage facility for spent nuclear fuel from the
plant's three other reactors, which kept operating until the station was
shut down in 2000.
That undertaking is also financed by international donors in a fund
managed by the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development.
"The successful implementation of the project depends not only on the
progress of the construction work, but also on the continued commitment of
both the Ukrainian authorities and the international community," European
Bank for Reconstruction and Development President Jean Lemierre said in a
statement.
In the first two months after the disaster, 31 people died from
illnesses caused by radioactivity, but there is heated debate over the
subsequent toll.
A 2005 report from the U.N. health agency estimated that about 9,300
people will die from cancers caused by Chernobyl's radiation. Some groups,
such as Greenpeace, insist the toll could be 10 times higher.