A pipeline is feared to have broken in the Arctic city
of Norilsk, where Daldykan River runs close to a nickel-producing
factory. Russian authorities ordered an investigation into the possible
pipeline break after the river turned bright red.
Social
media users began sharing photos of the unnaturally red Daldykan River
on Tuesday, with some writing that it had also changed colour in June.
A
few users suggested iron ore in the ground had changed the river’s
colour, but others said industrial waste was a more likely reason. The
river runs near to the Nadezhda metallurgical factory run by Norilsk
Nickel, the world’s leading producer of nickel and palladium.
Russia’s
natural resources and environment ministry said in a statement on
Wednesday that it was investigating complaints of unknown chemical
pollution, possibly caused by a “break in a Norilsk Nickel slurry pipe”.
Norilsk Nickel denied an industrial spill into the
Daldykan and said the “colour of the river today doesn’t differ from its
usual condition”, the state news agency RIA Novosti reported. But the
company said it was temporarily reducing manufacturing work while it
monitored the situation. The Norilsk mayor’s office said the city’s
water supply came from other sources.
According to
Denis Koshevoi, a PhD candidate at the Vernadsky Institute for
Geochemistry and Analytical Chemistry, who is researching pollution in
the area, Norilsk Nickel pumps chemical solutions from Nadezhda to a
nearby tailings dam via pipes. It also pumps metal concentrates from ore
mills to Nadezhda, he said.
“Periodically there are
accidents when these pipes break and the solutions spill and get into
the Daldykan — that’s why it changes colour,” Mr. Koshevoi said.
Norilsk
developed as a gulag camp in 1935 and is known for its harsh winters,
two-month polar night and high level of industrial pollution.

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