Chernobyl: Why the nuclear disaster was an accidental environmental success

in Steem Links3 years ago

(Updated: 09/05/2021; Euronews)

Widely hailed as the worst nuclear accident to ever occur, the incident happened during a safety test at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant in what was then Soviet Ukraine. The skies filled with contamination, with radioactive rain falling across Europe.

While the disaster killed fewer than 100 people in the immediate aftermath, the UN and WHO reported in 2005 that there had been 4,000 Chernobyl-related deaths. Other groups argue that the toll across Europe is actually as high as 16,000.


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But now, nearly 35 years on from the incident, the Exclusion Zone seems to have undergone a rewilding transformation.

Read the rest from Euronews: Chernobyl: Why the nuclear disaster was an accidental environmental success)

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The area has accidentally become one of Europe’s largest nature preserves, serving as a clear testament to the detrimental impact of humans on wildlife.

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As for now, the Exclusion Zone has increasingly been opening to tourists. Post-pandemic, it might even be possible to see this accidental rewilding project up close.

When humans stop over industrializing, nature always comes back in full force. What an interesting backdrop to that phenomenon: negative effects of the force of humanity will long be felt by life that emerges here.

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