The UK FSA has issued a press release on the 2008 monitoring reports for radioactivity on farms following the Chernobyl incident. The release states that:
"In 1986, an accident at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant in the former USSR (now Ukraine) released large quantities of radioactivity into the atmosphere. Some of this was deposited on certain upland areas of the UK where sheep are farmed.
In order to protect the health of consumers, restrictions were placed on the movement and sale of sheep from areas of the UK where contamination levels in sheep meat were over 1,000 Becquerels (a measure of radioactivity) per kilogram (Bq/kg) – the safety limit set in 1986.
Live sheep are monitored using a hand-held radiation monitor pressed against them. This gives a count rate that relates to a radioactivity concentration in Bq/kg. To allow for variability in live monitoring results, a pass mark is used to ensure there is only a 1 in 40 chance of a sheep above the limit giving a monitor reading below the limit.
In 1986, almost 9,000 farms were under restriction in the UK. Since then, the levels of radioactivity in sheep meat have fallen and the number of farms still under restriction is now 369, of which over 95% are located in north Wales.
The Agency is continuing to undertake further surveys to ensure that other farms can be released from restrictions when the levels of radioactivity in sheep are within safety limits".
Although it is twenty-three years since the nuclear accident it is concerning that there are still over 350 farms under restriction because of the high radiation levels.
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