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Exclusion zone
There is a 30 km Exclusion Zone around Chernobyl where officially nobody is allowed to live, but people do.
It is estimated that the land can be utilized for industrial purpose within 60 – 100 years and it can eventually be utilized for farming or any other type of agricultural industry within 200 years.
The Exclusion Zone is now so lush with wildlife and greenery that the Ukrainian government designated it a wildlife sanctuary in 2007, and at 488.7 km2 it is one of the largest wildlife sanctuaries in Europe.
According to a 2005 U.N. report, wildlife has returned despite radiation levels that are presently 10 to 100 times higher than normal background radiation. Although they were significantly higher soon after the attack, the levels have fallen because of radioactive decay.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chernobyl_accident
Target countries with operational reactors
Austria
Construction on the Zwentendorf Nuclear plant finished in 1978, however a referendum was passed that did not allow startup. Nuclear power is illegal.
Belguim
Power station reactors
· Nuclear Plant Doel - 4x PWR reactors, total power of 2839 MWe · Nuclear Plant Tihange - 3x PWR reactors, total power of 2985 MWe
The Doel Nuclear Power Station is one of the two nuclear power plants in Belgium. The plant lies on the bank of the Scheldt, near the village of Doel in the Flemish province of East Flanders. The Belgian energy corporation Electrabel is the plant's largest stakeholder. The plant employs 800 workers and covers an area of 80 hectares.
The plant consists of four second-generation pressurised water reactors with a total capacity of 2839 MWe, making it the second largest nuclear power plant in Belgium, after Nuclear Plant Tihange. Its four units are rated as follows:
· Doel 1: 392 MWe · Doel 2: 433 MWe · Doel 3: 1006 MWe · Doel 4: 1008 MWe
The Tihange Nuclear Power Station, along with Doel Nuclear Power Station, is one of the two large-scale nuclear power plants in Belgium. It is located on the right bank of the Meuse River in the Belgian deelgemeente of Tihange, part of Huy municipality in the Walloonian province of Liè ge. The primary stakeholder in the plant is the Belgian energy company Electrabel.
The plant has three pressurised water reactors, with a total capacity of 2985 MWe and makes up 52% of the total Belgian nuclear generating capacity.[1] Its units are rated as follows:
· Tihange 1: 962 MWe · Tihange 2: 1008 MWe · Tihange 3: 1015 MWe
Research Reactors
· Mol (BR-1) - Research reactor · Mol (BR-2) - Research reactor · Mol (BR-3) - PWR reactor (shut down)
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