Chernobyl accident
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Discussion

anonymous-user

Original Poster:

78 months

Tuesday 25th April 2023
quotequote all
I was just wondering if anyone remembers, when Chernobyl blew its lid off, if energy prices rose and if so, how much by?

cheesejunkie

5,252 posts

41 months

Tuesday 25th April 2023
quotequote all
What have you done? smile.

youngsyr

14,742 posts

216 months

Tuesday 25th April 2023
quotequote all
pocketspring said:
I was just wondering if anyone remembers, when Chernobyl blew its lid off, if energy prices rose and if so, how much by?
Not sure how many PHers were paying for electricity nearly 40 years ago, but by all accounts people in the West didn't even know it had happened until radiation was detected in Scandinavia, so I'm assuming the Iron Curtain stopped any East/West trading of power as well as most other things.

sherman

14,951 posts

239 months

Tuesday 25th April 2023
quotequote all
I dont remember Fukashima affecting prices massively in the UK. I doubt Chernobyl did either.

We were getting more than enough oil from the North sea in the 80s

anonymous-user

Original Poster:

78 months

Tuesday 25th April 2023
quotequote all
cheesejunkie said:
What have you done? smile.
Wasn't me, supervisor told someone else to do it.

anonymous-user

Original Poster:

78 months

Tuesday 25th April 2023
quotequote all
sherman said:
I dont remember Fukashima affecting prices massively in the UK. I doubt Chernobyl did either.

We were getting more than enough oil from the North sea in the 80s
An interesting answer, thank you.

OMITN

2,921 posts

116 months

Tuesday 25th April 2023
quotequote all
Interesting question..!

Others will know much more about electricity markets back then, but for context the USSR was still behind the Iron Curtain. I would guess that actually the electricity produced by Soviet power stations was only for consumption in the relevant country or across the USSR. I doubt it would have been sold the Western Europe electricity market.

I recall hearing about it as a child (I’d have been about 10) and watching footage of brave people trying to put out the fire in the reactor. I think the radiation fallout landed on high ground in Wales and Cumbria and may well have had an effect on sheep farming.

In fact, come to think of it, I don’t think the U.K. energy market was privatised at that point - I think it came at the end of Thatcher’s reign and was more Major’s work.


dudleybloke

20,553 posts

210 months

Tuesday 25th April 2023
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Men stopped buying soviet underwear because Chernobyl fallout.

TGCOTF-dewey

7,398 posts

79 months

Tuesday 25th April 2023
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pocketspring said:
cheesejunkie said:
What have you done? smile.
Wasn't me, supervisor told someone else to do it.
Bet it was Gary C... He's our graphite moderated reactor expert laugh

anonymous-user

Original Poster:

78 months

Tuesday 25th April 2023
quotequote all
TGCOTF-dewey said:
pocketspring said:
cheesejunkie said:
What have you done? smile.
Wasn't me, supervisor told someone else to do it.
Bet it was Gary C... He's our graphite moderated reactor expert laugh
That's the fella! It was him!

eharding

14,648 posts

308 months

Tuesday 25th April 2023
quotequote all
pocketspring said:
cheesejunkie said:
What have you done? smile.
Wasn't me, supervisor told someone else to do it.
How are the ambient radiation readings looking - firmly pegged at 3.6 roentgen by any chance?

anonymous-user

Original Poster:

78 months

Tuesday 25th April 2023
quotequote all
OMITN said:
Interesting question..!

Others will know much more about electricity markets back then, but for context the USSR was still behind the Iron Curtain. I would guess that actually the electricity produced by Soviet power stations was only for consumption in the relevant country or across the USSR. I doubt it would have been sold the Western Europe electricity market.

I recall hearing about it as a child (I’d have been about 10) and watching footage of brave people trying to put out the fire in the reactor. I think the radiation fallout landed on high ground in Wales and Cumbria and may well have had an effect on sheep farming.

In fact, come to think of it, I don’t think the U.K. energy market was privatised at that point - I think it came at the end of Thatcher’s reign and was more Major’s work.
I was about 7 at the time. I didn't really understand the accident but certainly remember the news items about the fallout over the Welsh sheep etc.

So all the fuel we got back then was self serviced in this country?

Timothy Bucktu

16,725 posts

224 months

Tuesday 25th April 2023
quotequote all
dudleybloke said:
Men stopped buying soviet underwear because Chernobyl fallout.
Take your coat, and get out... getmecoat

What The Deuces

2,780 posts

48 months

Tuesday 25th April 2023
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I don’t think energy proves suffered, the milk market and some farmers suffered a little though.

anonymous-user

Original Poster:

78 months

Tuesday 25th April 2023
quotequote all
eharding said:
pocketspring said:
cheesejunkie said:
What have you done? smile.
Wasn't me, supervisor told someone else to do it.
How are the ambient radiation readings looking - firmly pegged at 3.6 roentgen by any chance?
Weeeeell, you know. Not great but not terrible. Send the blokes on the roof, it's fine.

Allegro_Snapon

557 posts

52 months

Tuesday 25th April 2023
quotequote all
No change to price. It was a end of commissioning test gone wrong. Unit hadn't exported that much electricity to grid so no harm done in electric supply as it wasn't supplying anyway.

Plus we had loads of coal and oil and in the CEGB whilst we still hadn't quite got the nuclear parts of Heysham Stage 1 and Hartlepool running we were burning £10 notes / graduate trainees to raise steam as it was cheaper than getting an AGR commissioned. Proved true in the case of Dungeness; but to both Heyshams and HRA and TOR live long and prosper ladies whilst your graphite holds out.

thebraketester

15,567 posts

162 months

Tuesday 25th April 2023
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I'm guessing we had our own resources and made most of our electricity from coal dug out of the ground in the UK.

rodericb

8,579 posts

150 months

Wednesday 26th April 2023
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It was touch-and-go with the store-bought chicken kyevs for a while though....

Armitage.Shanks

2,982 posts

109 months

Wednesday 26th April 2023
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Slightly off topic but if you get chance to watch the Chernobyl (I think 6 part) dramatisation it’s harrowing what the rescuers went through and how the Russian government responded and tried to cover it up.

I was fortunate (now) to have visited the site a few years back when Kiev was on the cards for a cheap city break. Pripyat. What a place, relatively untouched and decaying since the disaster.

Did it have an impact on fuel bills at the time? I don’t think so as nuclear energy was in its infancy and the authorities were busy cutting female protesters loose from the fence around Greenham Common.

anonymous-user

Original Poster:

78 months

Wednesday 26th April 2023
quotequote all
Armitage.Shanks said:
Slightly off topic but if you get chance to watch the Chernobyl (I think 6 part) dramatisation it’s harrowing what the rescuers went through and how the Russian government responded and tried to cover it up.

I was fortunate (now) to have visited the site a few years back when Kiev was on the cards for a cheap city break. Pripyat. What a place, relatively untouched and decaying since the disaster.

Did it have an impact on fuel bills at the time? I don’t think so as nuclear energy was in its infancy and the authorities were busy cutting female protesters loose from the fence around Greenham Common.
Seen it, a fascinating series if quite eerie. Certainly shows a lot of what people didn't see. I believe the fire uniforms are still locked in the hospital basement?