Radiation monitoring of sunk Soviet sub begins.

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  • u-5075
    Junior Member
    • Feb 2003
    • 1134

    #1

    Radiation monitoring of sunk Soviet sub begins.

    TASS-ONLINE

    Radiation monitoring of sunken sub begins in Barents Sea



    29.06.2007, 09.12



    MOSCOW, June 29 (Itar-Tass) - An environmental radiation monitoring has begun in the Barents Sea, where Russia’s B-159 nuclear-powered submarine sunk in 2003, the head of the Russian Navy’s press service, Captain First Rank Igor Dygalo told Itar-Tass on Friday.

    “The operation began on Thursday within the framework of the Arctic Military Environmental Cooperation,” he said. “The AMEC brings together Russia, Britain, the United States and Norway.”

    “Taking part in the operation are Russian Northern Fleet’s ship and Britain’s ship that will examine the sunken submarine and the control area to prepare for raising,” Dygalo said.

    “Unmanned underwater vehicles will conduct the monitoring. The previous monitoring in 2003 exposed no violations of the radiation background in the area, where B-159 sank,” he said.

    B-159 sank in August 2003 while being tugged for scrapping. Nine crewmembers, including a captain, died, and only one survived.

    Before tugging the submarine’s reactors were turned nuclear safe.
  • u-5075
    Junior Member
    • Feb 2003
    • 1134

    #2
    Experts complete survey of Russian

    Experts complete survey of Russian sunken submarine
    21:51 | 09/ 07/ 2007



    MOSCOW, July 9 (RIA Novosti) - Russian and foreign experts have finished monitoring radiation levels at the site of a 2003 incident involving a Russian nuclear submarine in the Barents Sea, the Russian Northern Fleet press service said Monday.

    The K-159, a November class nuclear submarine with 800 kilograms (about 1,700 pounds) of spent nuclear fuel onboard, sank in 2003 while being towed to Polyarny, in northwest Russia, for decommissioning. Nine members of the 10-man crew died.

    The radiation levels, according to preliminary monitoring results, are normal and pose no threat to the environment, the press service said.

    Vladimir Vysotsky, the commander of the Northern Fleet, said a decision on whether to raise the submarine will be made after six weeks or two months, when the monitoring data has been completely studied and analyzed.

    Subject to technical feasibility, Russia has committed itself to recovering the submarine and safely disposing of its reactors as part of an international agreement set up to assist with the safe disposal of Russian nuclear waste material.

    The operation is being carried out under a joint project developed by Russia, Britain, the U.S. and Norway within the framework of the Arctic Military Environmental Cooperation agreement (AMEC), signed in September 1996.

    The Russian Navy has been hit by several accidents involving submarines. The worst of these occurred August 12, 2000, when the Russian nuclear submarine Kursk sank following an onboard torpedo explosion, killing all 118 crewmembers.

    In August 2005, the Priz AS-28 mini-sub with seven submariners onboard became entangled in a fishing net at a depth of about 190 meters (about 620 feet) in the Berezovaya Bay in the Bering Sea.

    A rescue mission was successfully mounted after three days with the help of the British Scorpio 45, an unmanned deepsea rescue vehicle.

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