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Ticking time bomb

April 14, 2011

Increased levels of radiation have been found in the controversial Asse nuclear waste depot in the German state of Lower Saxony. The discovery has led to new calls for the depot to be emptied and closed.

https://p.dw.com/p/10tkr
Yellow containers with nuclear sign
The former salt mine holds some 127,000 waste containersImage: AP

German nuclear safety officials have found increased levels of radioactivity in a borehole at the Asse atomic waste depot in the northwestern state of Lower Saxony.

A spokesman from the Federal Office for Radiation Protection (BfS) said its measurement of the radioactive substance cesium were 24 times over the allowed limit - the highest level recorded since nuclear waste stopped being stored in the depot in 1978.

The BfS measured a concentration of the radioactive substance cesium of 240,000 becquerels per liter. The measurement was taken 750 metres below ground level.

The spokesman added that the BfS had made sure that no one came in direct contact with the contaminated salt solution and that no radioactivity could seep outside. He said the reason for the raised level was unknown.

Time bomb

Bildgalerie Atomkraft in Deutschland Lagerung radioaktiver Abfälle in ehemaligen Salzbergwerk
Parts of the former salt mine are in danger of caving inImage: picture-alliance/ dpa

In the wake of the discovery, there have been renewed calls for the containers stored in the depot to be retrieved. The Green parliamentary spokeswoman on nuclear policy, Sylvia Kotting-Uhl, said time was running short and described the depot as a "ticking time-bomb."

SPD parliamentarian Ute Vogt asked for comprehensive clarification by the German government. Vogt said that the coalition had to make it clear that it was not shirking the question of the final disposal of atomic waste in its alleged new direction on energy policy.

The former salt mine holds some 127,000 containers with low and medium-grade radioactive waste, placed there from 1967 to 1978. Plans are under way to retrieve the containers, but experts first need to ascertain their condition.

Author: Timothy Jones (AP, dpa)
Editor: Joanna Impey