Mayak

Mayak
Company typeFederal State Unitary Enterprise
IndustryNuclear energy
Founded1948
Headquarters,
Revenue195,000,000 United States dollar (1994) Edit this on Wikidata
ParentRosatom[1]
Websitepo-mayak.ru

The Mayak Production Association (Russian: Производственное объединение «Маяк», Proizvodstvennoye ob′yedineniye "Mayak", from Маяк 'lighthouse') is one of the largest nuclear facilities in the Russian Federation, housing production reactors (non electricity) and a reprocessing plant. The closest settlements are Ozyorsk to the northwest and Novogornyi to the south.

Lavrentiy Beria led the Soviet atomic bomb project. He directed the construction of the Mayak plutonium plant in the Southern Urals between 1945 and 1948, in a great hurry and secrecy as part of the Soviet Union's atomic bomb project. The plant had a similar purpose to the Hanford Site of the Manhattan Project. Over 40,000 gulag prisoners and POWs built the factory and the closed nuclear city of Ozyorsk, called at the time by its classified postal code "Chelyabinsk-40".[2] The first reactor, A-1, operated from 1948 and fuelled the first nuclear test RDS-1 in 1949. During the Cold War, 10 nuclear reactors were constructed, with a combined power of 7,333 MWth. Of these, four were used for plutonium production, yielding 31 tons of weapons-grade plutonium, out of the Soviet Union's all-time production of 145 tons. The other six reactors primarily produced tritium for thermonuclear weapons. In 1990, weapons-grade plutonium production was ceased.

As of 2025, Mayak is still active, with two reactors in operation at 1,900 MWth. Today the plant primarily produces tritium for domestic weapons maintenance, and plutonium-238, used by many space programs for radioisotope thermoelectric generators. Many other radioisotopes are commercially sold worldwide, including 14
C
, 60
Co
, 137
Cs
, 147
Pm
, 193
Ir
, 237
Np
, 241
Am
.[3] Polonium-210 produced at Mayak was reportedly used in the 2006 poisoning of Alexander Litvinenko. It also reprocesses the spent nuclear fuel from civilian reactors, and manages plutonium from decommissioned nuclear weapons.[4] In recent years, proposals that the plant reprocess waste from foreign nuclear reactors have given rise to controversy.[citation needed]

The site has had many radiation accidents and radioactive contamination. In 1949–1951, 76 million m3 of toxic chemicals and 3.2 million curies 750 km2 (290 sq mi) of radioactive waste were released into the Techa river.[5] In 1957, the Kyshtym disaster occurred at Mayak, releasing 20 million curies in a radioactive cloud across the eastern Urals.[6] It was the worst nuclear accident in history until the Chernobyl disaster, and is still the third most severe.[7] Mayak is also widely suspected to be the source of the ~200 TBq (~5400 curies) airborne radioactivity increase in Europe in autumn 2017.[8] Between the first two accidents, 38,000 people were evacuated. Many other communities remained exposed, suffering long-term effects of radiation poisoning.

  1. ^ "All enterprises". Rosatom.ru. Archived from the original on 21 April 2017. Retrieved 18 June 2017.
  2. ^ Brown, Kate (2013). Plutopia: Nuclear Families, Atomic Cities, and the Great Soviet and American Plutonium Disasters. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199855766. OCLC 813540523.
  3. ^ Standring, Will (1 July 2006). "Review of the current status and operations at Mayak Production Association". Review of the current status and operations at Mayak Production Association (Technical Report). Retrieved 2 May 2025.
  4. ^ Walker, Shaun (2 July 2017). "Russia begins cleaning up the Soviets' top-secret nuclear waste dump". The Guardian. Retrieved 7 July 2017.
  5. ^ "Radioactive Contamination of the Techa River and its Effects". Archived from the original on 15 March 2005. Retrieved 27 September 2020.
  6. ^ Kostyuchenko & Krestinina 1994, pp. 119–125
  7. ^ Cite error: The named reference :0 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  8. ^ Luxmoore, Matthew; Cowell, Alan (21 November 2017). "Russia, in Reversal, Confirms Radiation Spike". The New York Times. Retrieved 21 November 2017.

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