Massive Wildfire Engulfs Chernobyl Exclusion Zone After Drone Strike
Breaking: Fire Spreads to 12 Square Kilometers in Chernobyl Exclusion Zone After Drone Crash
A drone crash in the Chernobyl exclusion zone has ignited a large-scale wildfire, now covering 12 square kilometers of contaminated land. Ukrainian emergency services are battling the blaze amid dry weather, strong winds, and the presence of unexploded land mines.

“The fire is moving rapidly due to drought and gusty winds, and the minefields are making access extremely dangerous for our crews,” said Olena Hryhorchuk, a spokesperson for the State Emergency Service of Ukraine. “We are coordinating with military experts to map safe routes.”
Background: Chernobyl’s Radioactive Landscape
The Chernobyl exclusion zone, established after the 1986 nuclear disaster, remains heavily contaminated with radiation. The area also contains land mines laid during Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which now pose a secondary hazard.
Dry conditions and high winds have created a perfect storm for wildfires in the region. The combination of flammable vegetation, radioactive dust, and explosive remnants is forcing firefighters to use specialized equipment and proceed with extreme caution.
What This Means: Radiation Risks and Firefighting Challenges
Although the fire is not near the Chernobyl nuclear reactor itself, it threatens to stir up radioactive particles from the soil. Experts warn that smoke could carry contamination over a wider area, though immediate health risks to populated regions are considered low.

“This is a known risk for the exclusion zone,” said Dr. Mykola Tarasenko, a radiation safety expert. “The main concern is the resuspension of radionuclides, but the fire is being managed to prevent a major release. The mines are the more immediate threat to firefighters.”
Ukrainian authorities have deployed aerial firefighting assets, including helicopters, but strong winds are limiting their effectiveness. Ground crews are using manual tools and firebreaks while avoiding mined areas.
The incident underscores the ongoing dangers posed by the war in Ukraine, where military activity can trigger environmental emergencies. “We are dealing with a man-made disaster on top of an existing one,” Hryhorchuk added. “Every effort is being made to contain the fire before it spreads further.”
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