- Fears that the UK's nuclear plants are vulnerable to
a 9/11-style attack or accident are growing. Evidence is emerging that
the no-fly zones around nuclear plants are regularly breached by both military
and civilian aircraft. And a report for the UK parliament leaked to New
Scientist says that such an attack might kill millions.
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- Since the 2001 attacks on New York and Washington DC,
the area of the ban has been doubled to cover a radius of two nautical
miles (3.7 kilometres). Planes also have to stay above a certain height,
which varies for different sites.
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- But these restrictions have been flouted on numerous
occasions. Over the past five years, the operators of 19 nuclear sites
around Britain have lodged more than 100 complaints about aircraft flying
too close. The sites include reactors and stores of radioactive waste or
nuclear bombs.
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- Declassified reports from the Ministry of Defence (MoD)
reveal that there were 56 alleged breaches of the no-fly zones by military
aircraft between 2000 and 2003.
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- Four of the complaints came from the MoD's own nuclear
weapons sites at Aldermaston and Burghfield in Berkshire, and at Faslane
near Glasgow. Most of the other complaints were made by the government
agencies and private companies that run the UK's civil nuclear programme.
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- The incidents include one on 24 April 2002, when a jet
flew so close to the Torness reactors in East Lothian that it set off three
intruder alarms on the perimeter fence. And on 10 June 2003 three military
jets were seen rehearsing a flypast for the queen's birthday near the Sizewell
reactors in Suffolk.
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- Hot air balloon
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- The MoD's internal investigations have confirmed only
five breaches of the no-fly zones: three at Berleley in Gloucestershire,
one at Torness and one at Dungeness in Kent. "We can only confirm
that a breach has occurred when we have proof," an MoD spokesman says.
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- There have been 71 complaints of civilian aircraft breaching
the no-fly zones since the beginning of 1999. According to the Civil Aviation
Authority, there was only enough evidence to launch formal investigations
in 12 cases, including three at Aldermaston, two at Burghfield and two
at Sellafield in Cumbria.
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- Four investigations are ongoing, and there have been
two successful prosecutions: one for a hot air balloon at Aldermaston in
2001 and the other for a powered hang-glider at Heysham nuclear station
in Lancashire in 2003.
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- The breaches will do little to reassure the public that
nuclear sites are adequately protected from a terrorist attack or an accidental
aircraft crash. In 2002 the UK House of Commons Defence Committee requested
a report on the risks of terrorist attacks on nuclear facilities, and the
UK Parliamentary Office of Science and Technology is due to publish its
long-awaited reply in the next few weeks.
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- New Scientist has seen a copy of the report and can reveal
that it says that a large plane crashing into a reactor could release as
much radioactivity as the Chernobyl accident in 1986, while a crash into
waste tanks at Sellafield in Cumbria could cause at worst, "several
million fatalities".
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- Confidential information
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- The report acknowledges that the risks are difficult
to assess because so much information - including operators' estimates
of the health impacts of radiation releases - is kept secret.
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- But it concludes that it would be possible for terrorists
to cause a radioactive release - and that the UK's current emergency arrangements
may not be sufficient to cope.
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- "It is totally unacceptable that the information
we need to judge the risks is kept confidential, and that we have to take
so much on trust," says Llew Smith, a Welsh MP who has been investigating
the risks of nuclear attacks by terrorists.
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- But the British Nuclear Group, which operates the Sellafield
site, has dismissed the report's suggestion that flying a plane into the
waste tanks might kill millions, saying the idea is implausible.
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- Smith says this attitude is dangerously misleading: "The
consequences of deliberately crashing an aircraft into a nuclear plant
would be horrific."
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