Twenty-eight years after the Chernobyl nuclear disaster, its effects are
still being felt as far away as Germany in the form of radioactive wild
boars.
Wild boars still roam the forests of Germany, where they are hunted for
their meat, which is sold as a delicacy.
But in recent tests by the state government of Saxony, more than one in
three boars were found to give off such high levels of radiation that
they are unfit for human consumption. They are believed to be a legacy of the Chernobyl nuclear accident in
1986, when a reactor at a nuclear power plant in then Soviet-ruled
Ukraine exploded, releasing a massive quantity of radioactive particles
into the atmosphere.
Even though Saxony lies some 700 miles from Chernobyl, wind and rain
carried the radioactivity across western Europe, and soil contamination
was found even further away, in France.
Wild boar are thought to be particularly affected because they root through the soil for food, and feed on mushrooms and underground truffles that store radiation.
Many mushrooms from the affected areas are also believed to be unfit
for human consumption.
Since 2012, it has been compulsory for hunters to have wild boar they
kill in Saxony tested for radiation. Carcasses that exceed the safe
limit of 600 becquerels per kg have to be destroyed.
In a single year, 297 out of 752 boar tested in Saxony have been over
the limit, and there have been cases in Germany of boar testing dozens
of times over the limit.
The radioactivity causes economic problems as well. Many hunters sell
the boar as game, and across Germany hundreds of thousands of euros are
paid out each year out in government compensation to hunters whose kills
have to be destroyed.
"It doesn't cover the loss from game sales, but at least it covers the
cost of disposal," Steffen Richter, the head of the Saxon State Hunters
Association said.
Germany's radioactive boar problem is not expected to go away any time
soon. With the levels of contamination still showing in tests, experts
predict it could be around for another 50 years.
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