Space Industry and Business News  
Serbia stops Bulgarian train over radioactive cargo: customs

File image.
by Staff Writers
Belgrade (AFP) Nov 3, 2008
Serbia has denied entry to a train from Bulgaria after discovering a carriage laden with radioactive material, the customs service said Monday.

"Serbian Customs found radioactivity 3,000 times over permitted levels inside one of the carriages of the train and 300 times on the (outer) surface of the carriage," it said in a statement sent to AFP.

The train, which was stopped at a checkpoint in Dimitrovgrad, a town on the border between Serbia and Bulgaria, was travelling towards Macedonia on Friday when the discovery was made.

It was later ordered to go back to Bulgaria, said the customs statement, which did not elaborate on the origins of the radioactive material.

Bulgaria's nuclear regulation agency confirmed it had measured heightened radioactivity in one of 15 carriages of a scrap-laden train.

But agency official Marina Nizamska told AFP that the radioactivity found was 200 times over the permitted levels and not 300 as the Serbian customs said in their statement.

Nizamska said that she herself had measured radioactivity levels of 50 mSv/h on the outside of the waggon, compared to the natural level of 0.2 mSv/h at the border station where it was held after the Serbian authorities turned it back.

"Radioactivity of over 200 times the natural level was detected in a 30-centimetre-long levelling instrument that contained Radium 226, while the other 54 tonnes of metal scrap (in the carriage) were not radioactive," Nizamska said.

Bulgaria's civil defence earlier said that the waggon's radioactivity level was within the norms and that a possible error in measuring was the reason for its return by Serbia.

Nizamska also said that gadgets with excessive radioactivity were often found among scrap metal and that Bulgaria had also returned potentially dangerous train loads to Serbia and Romania.

She added that the radioactive instrument would be treated according to the rules for disposing of such material, while the rest of the metal was already returned to the company that ordered its export.

The Serbian authorities let the rest of the train through the border to Macedonia where it was initially headed, she added.

Related Links
Nuclear Power News - Nuclear Science, Nuclear Technology
Powering The World in the 21st Century at Energy-Daily.com



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Areva shares rise sharply on US nuclear waste deal
Paris (AFP) Nov 3, 2008
Shares in French group Areva were up sharply on Monday after the world's biggest nuclear operator said it would be taking part in a US deal to manage atomic waste.







  • China tells Microsoft to rethink 'black-out' anti-piracy tactics: report
  • US tech giants join move to protect freedom of speech online
  • Workers Discover A Second Life At Work
  • Free US wireless network a step closer

  • Student Experiments On Board REXUS 4 Launched
  • Russia Starts Preparations To Launch US Telecoms Satellite
  • New ASTRA 1M Satellite Ready For Launch On 6 November
  • First Ariane 5 For 2009 Arrives At The Spaceport

  • Aviation giants look to China amid global turbulence
  • Boeing sees China buying 3,710 planes over next 20 years
  • New EU CO2 caps anger airlines
  • Energy Department has high school contest

  • USAF Tests Battlespace Information Solution On AC-130 Gunship
  • Harris Awarded Contract For USAF Satellite Control Network Program
  • LockMart Delivers Key Hardware For US Navy's Mobile User Objective System
  • Boeing JTRS GMR Engineering Model Enters New Test Phase

  • Intelsat Retires The Oldest Commercial CommSat
  • Kazakh Satellite Brought Back Into Orbit
  • The Sky Isn't Falling And That's A Problem
  • Sarantel Antenna Featured In New Iridium 9555 Satellite Phone

  • Berndt Feuerbacher New President Of IAU
  • Orbital Appoints Frank Culbertson And Mark Pieczynski To Management
  • Chris Smith Named Director Of Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory
  • AsiaSat Appoints New General Manager China

  • Arctic Sea Ice Thinning At Record Rate
  • NASA-Enhanced Dust Storm Predictions To Aid Health Community
  • GeoEye Releases First Image Collected By GeoEye-1
  • Maps Shed Light On CO2's Global Nature

  • Horizon Navigation Integrates Clear Channel Total Traffic Network
  • New ESRI ArcGIS API For Flex Enhances Web Mapping
  • Garmin GPSMAP 696: A Big Screen Portable Aviation Navigator
  • Russia Invites Cuba To Join Glonass

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright Space.TV Corporation. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space.TV Corp on any Web page published or hosted by Space.TV Corp. Privacy Statement