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    1. Home
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    3. >Ukraine marks 40th anniversary of Chornobyl disaster under cloud of war
    Headlines

    Ukraine Marks 40th Anniversary of Chornobyl Disaster Under Cloud of War

    Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®

    Posted on April 25, 2026

    3 min read

    Last updated: April 25, 2026

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    Ukraine marks 40th anniversary of Chornobyl disaster under cloud of war - Headlines news and analysis from Global Banking & Finance Review
    Tags:headlinesUkraineNuclearConflictChornobyl

    Quick Summary

    Ukraine is marking the 40th anniversary of the 1986 Chornobyl disaster amid renewed fears as Russia’s war continues to threaten nuclear safety, with repeated drone and missile flights near the plant and costly damage to its protective shelter.

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    Table of Contents

    • Commemoration and Ongoing Risks
    • Historical Context and Political Implications
    • Long-Lasting Consequences
    • Human and Environmental Impact
    • International Response and Ongoing Threats
    • Recent Attacks and Repair Needs
    • Eerie Calm at Chornobyl
    • Current State of the Exclusion Zone
    • Nature Reclaims the Area

    Ukraine Marks 40 Years Since Chornobyl Disaster Amid Ongoing War Threats

    Commemoration and Ongoing Risks

    By Dan Peleschuk

    KYIV, April 26 (Reuters) - Ukraine is commemorating the 40th anniversary of the Chornobyl nuclear disaster on Sunday amid lingering fears that Russia's four-year-old war could spark a repeat of the world's worst nuclear disaster.

    Kyiv says Moscow has repeatedly sent missiles and drones on a flight path near the plant to attack Ukrainian cities, even damaging a critical protective shield in an attack last year.

    Marking the disaster - which spewed radioactive material across much of Europe despite efforts by Soviet authorities to hide the scale - has taken on sharp new meaning during Russia's invasion of its smaller neighbour.

    Historical Context and Political Implications

    "The Chornobyl disaster was the result of a reactor experiment ordered by Moscow, in violation of safety protocols, and followed by lies and cover-ups," Ukraine's foreign ministry said in a statement this week.

    "To this day, the world has to face consequences brought by a totalitarian system that subordinated truth and science to ideology and political power."

    Long-Lasting Consequences

    Human and Environmental Impact

    Millions were exposed to radiation, hundreds of thousands forced to flee, and wide swathes of land contaminated after the accidental explosion and resulting meltdown inside reactor four at the Soviet-built plant in the early hours of April 26, 1986.

    Thousands have since succumbed to radiation-related illnesses such as cancer, although the total death toll and long-term health effects remain a subject of intense debate.

    International Response and Ongoing Threats

    A vast international effort saw the installation of a massive steel and concrete arc in 2016 to shield the original sarcophagus hurriedly built in 1986 to cover tons of radioactive debris.

    Recent Attacks and Repair Needs

    However, a February 2025 Russian drone strike punctured its hermetic seal, officials said. No leaks were detected, but the arc needs at least 500 million euros worth of repairs to prevent permanent damage, according to the European Bank of Reconstruction and Development.

    Earlier this week, Kyiv's top state prosecutor told Reuters that Ukrainian radars had detected at least 92 Russian drones that had flown within a five-km (3-mile) radius of the shield since June 2024.

    Details of official ceremonies in wartime Ukraine are typically not published in advance for security purposes.

    Eerie Calm at Chornobyl

    Current State of the Exclusion Zone

    Some 100 km north of Kyiv and circled by a 2,600-sq km exclusion zone, the plant - which Reuters visited on Wednesday - is shrouded in an eerie calm stretching across the vast woodlands around it.

    National Guardsmen patrol the facility, where around 2,250 employees work in days-long shifts overseeing its gradual decommissioning. The plant's last reactor was shut down in 2000.

    Nature Reclaims the Area

    The control room for reactor four is now a darkened space of mangled and rusted Soviet-era equipment.

    Moose and wild horses roam the area around the plant and the nearby abandoned city of Prypiat, in a sign of how nature has taken over in the absence of humans.

    (Editing by Philippa Fletcher)

    Key Takeaways

    • •A Russian drone strike in February 2025 punctured the New Safe Confinement, compromising key safety systems and raising corrosion risks; full repairs are projected to cost at least €500 million (thepublic.info).
    • •Since mid‑2024, at least 92 Russian drones have flown within a 5‑km radius of the shelter, illustrating ongoing intimidation and heightened nuclear danger (investing.com).
    • •The NSC was originally completed in 2019 (some sources cite 2017) at a cost of over €2 billion to ensure a century of containment; the war has severely undermined its integrity and long‑term lifespan (theguardian.com)

    References

    • The EBRD has estimated the cost of repairing the Chernobyl shelter following the drone strike at €500 million | thepublic
    • Forty years after nuclear disaster, Ukraine’s Chornobyl plant is haunted by war By Reuters
    • Inside Chornobyl: 40 years after disaster, nuclear site still at risk in Russia’s war | Chornobyl nuclear disaster | The Guardian

    Frequently Asked Questions about Ukraine marks 40th anniversary of Chornobyl disaster under cloud of war

    1Why is the 40th anniversary of the Chornobyl disaster significant in 2024?

    This anniversary comes at a time when Ukraine faces ongoing war, raising fears of another nuclear incident due to nearby missile and drone attacks.

    2How has the Russian invasion affected the Chornobyl plant?

    Russian missile and drone attacks have repeatedly threatened the plant's safety, with one recent strike damaging a crucial protective arc.

    3What are the lasting effects of the Chornobyl disaster?

    Millions were exposed to radiation, thousands died from related illnesses, and extensive land remains contaminated decades later.

    4What protections are in place at Chornobyl today?

    A massive steel and concrete arc installed in 2016 shields the site, but it has been damaged by recent Russian attacks and requires costly repairs.

    5Is the Chornobyl area still being monitored and managed?

    Yes, National Guardsmen patrol the site and over 2,200 employees oversee its gradual decommissioning.

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