Russian troops dug a 8km long canal to keep fires caused by a record heatwave away from a nuclear arms site, local media said on Saturday as air pollution from the crisis rose to more than six times above normal.
Forest and peat fires caused by the hottest weather recorded in Moscow have killed at least 52 people, made more than 4 000 homeless, diverted many flights and forced Muscovites to wear surgical masks to filter out foul air.
“The fire situation in the Moscow region is still tense, but there is no danger either for residential areas or for economic sites,” an Emergencies Ministry spokesperson said.
Weather forecasts said the smoke, which has reached even underground metro stations, would persist until Wednesday.
Echo Moskvy radio station said army troops excavated the canal to prevent the flames from advancing into the Sarov nuclear arms facility, ringed by forest in the Niznhy Novgorod region around 350km east of Moscow.
The Emergencies Ministry said the situation in Sarov had “stabilised”. Sarov is a closed town whose nuclear site produced the first Soviet atomic bomb in 1949 and remains the main nuclear design and production facility in Russia.
On Thursday, Russia’s nuclear chief assured President Dmitry Medvedev that all explosive and radioactive material had been removed from the nuclear site as a precautionary measure.
Air pollution surged to more than six times the normal reading in Moscow, a city of 10,5-million, the highest sustained contamination since the heatwave began a month ago, Moscow’s pollution monitoring agency said.
Hottest since records began
The heatwave is the worst since records began 130 years ago.
The US State Department urged people to carefully consider any plans to travel to Moscow. Italy’s Interior Ministry recommended people refrain from travelling to Russia in the next seven to 10 days, according to ITAR-TASS.
Many people on the streets of Moscow were wearing masks to ward off the heavy smog, while suffering from sweltering heat as the temperature climbed to 36°C, verging on the record high for the day.
Officials have urged Muscovites to stay indoors because of hazardous levels of carbon monoxide and fine particles in the air.
The capital was unusually quiet on Saturday, but those who had not left town went about their daily business. Some even tried to cash in on the smog by selling the masks on the street.
With visibility low, local media said air traffic was being diverted to Sheremetyevo airport, north of Moscow, where smog was not so dense as in other parts of the capital. Some flights have been rerouted as far away as Ukraine from Moscow.
The opposition Liberal Democrat Party called for a state of emergency to be declared in Moscow, urging factories to stop any activity that could further pollute the air and saying that the capital was “currently unbearable for living”. Moscow’s powerful mayor, Yuri Luzhkov, left on holiday earlier in the week.
Planes and helicopters involved in firefighting were temporarily grounded by the thick smoke.
The Russian Football Premier League postponed two scheduled weekend soccer matches in Moscow due to high air pollution. A friendly soccer match between Russia and Bulgaria scheduled for August 11 was switched from Moscow to smoke-free St Petersburg.
One of the world’s top grains producers, Russia has announced a temporary ban on exports after crops were ravaged by the dry weather. The news sent world wheat prices soaring.
President Dmitry Medvedev donated 350 000 roubles ($11 740) of his own cash to help the fire victims, local media reported — equal to about two years’ of wages for an average Russian but enough to cover only one sixth of the cost of rebuilding a burnt-down home. He urged other officials to chip in as well. – Reuters