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HELL ON
EARTH, part 4 of 4
Baltic
states cleaning up to impress EU
Globalization drives former republics of the
Soviet Union to raise standards to levels
required for membership in European market.
PALDISKI,
ESTONIA -- The beach-going teenagers taunt
and tease each other at high volume as a
volleyball floats back and forth over the
net that separates them. The sand is clean,
the waters of the Baltic Sea are blue.
There's
nothing visible on this unusually warm
afternoon to suggest that less than seven
years ago, this spot was contaminated with
radioactive runoff from a nearby nuclear
submarine base.
Like the rest of the former Soviet Union,
Estonia and Baltic neighbours Latvia and
Lithuania were left an atrocious legacy of
cities polluted by enormous outdated
factories and towering smokestacks, as well
as a countryside littered with Red Army
relics.
But a decade on, the Baltic states have put
their resources and reputation into cleaning
up the mess, even as neighbours such as
Russia continue to let their worst
environmental problems slide.
In Estonia,
the government says that, per capita, it is
spending more money on the environment than
any other former Soviet republic. And it is
not because of an effective environmental
movement. Estonia is being pushed toward
higher standards by globalization -- the
force that is often the target of
environmentalists.
"Estonia and
the other Baltics have been moving faster
because they want to be seen as European
countries," said Anto Raukas, a geologist at
Estonia's Tallinn Technical University who
heads the program to clean up the Soviet
military mess.
To become a full member in the European
Union, which the Baltic states would like to
be in the next few years, they must
harmonize their laws with those of other
member states, modernize aging refineries,
tackle zones of excessive air pollution, and
meet continental standards for drinking
water and forest management.
The lure of
Europe's open market appeals to Estonia and
its neighbours, as does the aid they are
eligible to receive to meet some of the
world's toughest environmental standards.
With the help of EU money, Lithuania is
closing a giant Soviet-era landfill near its
northern border with Latvia and building a
modern one in a more secure location. Latvia
is renovating its water-purification and
sewage facilities, a move that will reduce
pollution flowing into the Baltic.
And in
Estonia, the number of waste sites has
fallen to 50 from 350 during the past two
years. All old-style dumps are to be closed
by 2009 when the country will be served by
20 modern facilities that meet EU standards.
But Estonia's
boldest moves may be the ones taken near the
beaches at Paldiski. For years, this area --
Russia's last redoubt in the Baltics -- was
a training centre for submariners and so
secret it didn't appear on maps.
When the
Russians finally pulled out in 1995, four
years after Estonia declared independence,
curious Estonians flocked here to have a
look.
They found a massive training complex,
disguised as a regular factory but complete
with two indoor full-scale models of nuclear
submarines, functioning reactors and all.
What they
discovered inside shocked them. Piles of
scrap metal littered the base. Nuclear
material was carelessly disposed of in
insecure places. And radioactive waste
remained in liquid form, against all modern
conventions.
A massive,
and immediate, cleanup was needed but there
was no one in Estonia trained to do it.
Unlike Russia, which has often been too
proud to acknowledge it needs outside
scientific help, the fledgling Estonian
states had no hangups.
They appealed to the international
community, and scientists and money came
flooding in from the United States, Germany,
Sweden and Finland. Estonia's own people
watched and learned until they were ready to
take over.
"At the
start, we didn't have any expertise but
we've grown up a little bit," said Henno
Putnik, whose small firm, Alara, has been
leading the Paldiski cleanup with a dozen
full-time staff.
The task is enormous.
"There was
not a radioactive waste storage, there was a
radioactive waste dump," Mr. Putnik said.
"Everything radioactive was just thrown in
the same spot, with no segregation, no
packaging."
As a result, the base cleanup is still a
work in progress, years away from being
finished. But already the liquid nuclear
waste has been transformed into solid
material in more secure containers. A
massive oil spill has been cleaned.
And the Paldiski beaches have been mopped up
and are now a popular weekend getaway for
residents of Tallinn, the scenic,
medieval-style capital that is a 30-minute
drive away.
The submariners' barracks, an imposing
structure that dominates the centre of town,
has become a popular concert venue.
But the twin
reactors, which functioned continuously from
the early 1970s through to 1989, remain in
place. For the time being, there isn't
anywhere else to put them.
The potential
for disaster remains uncomfortably high. The
reactors are encased in an orange concrete
sarcophagus, but the departing Russian navy
did not bother to install monitors that
could tell the Estonians the temperature and
humidity inside the reactor.
"We have no
idea what's going on inside there," Mr.
Putnik said. What is known is that material
inside is still highly radioactive. In 1994,
a civilian died after coming across
radioactive waste near the base.
Paldiski is
not the only environmental problem left to
Estonia when the Soviet Union crumbled.
Though smaller than Nova Scotia, the country
is dotted with more than 1,500 military
sites, about 200 of them in and around
Tallinn.
"The [Soviet]
army was not controlled, and isn't up to
now, in Russia," Mr. Raukas said as he
toured a site where dozens of tunnels were
carved into artificial hills to hide mobile
missile launchers, whose nuclear warheads
were once pointed at Western Europe.
The site near
Tallinn is both an outdoor Cold War museum
and a blight that stretches across several
square kilometres that might have otherwise
made an attractive camping area. Only from a
close angle can you see that the hills are
of a uniform shape and have garage doors.
Heaps of garbage and old uniforms of
soldiers still litter the ground, along with
empty vodka bottles and spent bullets.
"This place is a gift of the big Russian
nation to the people of little Estonia," Mr.
Raukas said wryly, kicking at a piece of
metal.
Though the
base was handed over peacefully, the insides
of most buildings, even the cafeteria and
main guard house, are riddled with bullet
holes. At another base, an Estonian cleanup
crew found a 16-square-kilometre area
covered with a layer of petroleum one
centimetre thick.
At a cost of
millions of dollars, Estonia has cleaned up
or at least removed the most dangerous waste
from all the army bases and several old
military airports. Unlike many post-Soviet
states, it could afford to do so. "Estonia
has more money than Central Asian states
like Kazakhstan and less corruption than
Russia," Mr. Raukas said.
The same
applies for Latvia and Lithuania. Almost
alone among the 14 former Soviet republics,
the three have seen consistent rises in
their national wealth and standards of
living since their independence in the
1990s.
"They're
doing so much better economically than, say,
Kazakhstan or Uzbekistan, and they also get
more aid from the international community,"
said Vera Pisareva, an adviser to Sergei
Mitrokhin, who heads the liberal Yabloko
Party in the Russian parliament. "And their
Soviet legacy was not so horrible as in
Russia and other ex-Soviet republics."
Some people,
however, aren't impressed. The head of Green
Cross International, a
sustainable-development organization founded
by former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev,
believes Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia have
been playing a shell game, making cosmetic
changes and moving the mess around to
impress the EU.
"They have
the Soviet legacy too and they're unable to
handle it," Vladimir Leonov said. "They
pretend they can because they're trying to
look their best in front of the West and
because they so badly want to join the EU."
And, bad as
the Soviet scars are, the Baltic states
never had a Chernobyl to deal with, unlike
Ukraine and Belarus. The truly monstrous
industrial and nuclear sites that have made
such a mess around the former Soviet Union
are largely within Russia proper or, in the
case of some of the worst nuclear testing,
in barren parts of Kazakhstan.
There also
may be a difference in mindset, though,
between the Baltics and the rest. While
Russians and their government focus almost
solely on economic issues -- President
Vladimir Putin is constantly asking his
economists to find new ways to increase the
gross domestic product -- Ms. Pisareva
believes the Baltic states are "more
European" in outlook, and have tried to
develop their economy without sacrificing
their environment.
This approach allows them to attend, with
their heads held high, the World Summit on
Sustainable Development in Johannesburg. The
summit, running from Aug. 26 to Sept. 6,
marks the 10th anniversary of the bigger
Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro. While the
entire ex-Soviet bloc was fingered as a
problem area in Rio, of the 14 former
republics, only Latvia, Lithuania and
Estonia can claim significant progress in
cleaning up the mess.
"If we want to be part of Europe -- and we
do -- we know we've got to clean this up,"
said Mr. Raukas, gesturing at a landscape
dotted with Soviet military relics.
"Besides, nobody wants to live like this any
more."
The Globe
and Mail; 14 August 2002
The “Hell
on Earth” series was a finalist for the 2002
National Newspaper Award for international
reporting.
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