The fire crew in the Chernobyl area responded immediately after receiving
an alarm from the plant. First on the scene were 3 fire engines. Seeing
that this was not enough, Lieutenant Pravik (commander of the Chernobyl
fire crew) sent an emergency signal to Pripyat, Chernobyl town, and the
whole Kiev region asking for them to mobilize their fire brigades.
Some of the first firefighters climbed into the machine hall to fight
the fire there. When the Pripyat fire brigade arrived just moments later,
they decided to fight the fire by going into the reactor building. Major
Leonid Telyatnikov, commander of a second fire station in Pripyat reacted
to the emergency call and was on scene about 10 minutes after the original
fire fighters had started their job. He took overall command and climbed
onto the roof of Reactor number 3, which had many fires on it. Even more
dangerous was that Reactor number 3 was still operating. It was clear that
the most important thing to do was to keep the fire from collapsing the
roof of Reactor number 3, which would cause an even greater disaster. Unsuccessful
in their efforts, the firefighters were replaced by the Kiev fire brigade.
At 6:35 AM, about four and a half hours after the explosion, all of
the fires were extinguished, except the graphite fire inside the reactor
crater, by 37 fire crews consisting of 186 firemen and 81 fire engines
[11]. Nine days later, using sand, boron, dolomite, clay and lead to smother
the fire from airdrops by helicopter, the MAIN GRAPHite fire in the reactor
was extinguished, after it had already caused the main release of radioactivity
into the environment. [12]
Many of those firefighters who battled the fire from the reactor building
died. Fire fighters who had been on the roof of Reactor number 3 suffered
later from acute radiation sickness, but most survived.
It was decided that the Chernobyl plant was perhaps not best suited
for handling fires such as those that occurred in the explosion. The roofs
of the reactor buildings were made of an easily flammable material, bitumen
[13]. Also, the firemen were not adequately prepared. Firemen in other nuclear
stations in other countries wear protective clothing and breathe through
special respirators. The fire fighters at Chernobyl had nothing of this
kind. There also had never been a fire-drill at the Chernobyl nuclear station.
Many of the firefighters did not even know what they were fighting, they
did not even know the dangers of radiation, much less that they were surrounded
by it at the time. No account was ever taken of the possibility of radiation.
Later, in August of 1986, Soviet authorities at the IAEA meeting were
advised to provide systems for "fire-fighting with specific provisions
for nuclear safety", provide firemen with clothing that can protect from
high temperatures and radioactive contamination, and to use less flammable
building materials. [14]
There were two explosions at the Chernobyl nuclear power station. The
first explosion destroyed the core of Reactor number 4. The second explosion,
which was much more powerful, shot burning lumps of graphite and reactor
fuel into the air. These lumps landed in various places causing many fires.
In all, the explosion had created a crater with burning graphite and about
30 fires in other places around the plant. The fires were the first emergency.
[ Chernobyl Quiz ~ Team ~ Credits ]