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Keywords
Day
Health
Healthcare buildings
Indoors
KWCI (GPI)
Men
Nuclear (campaign title)
One person
Radiation
Radiation victims
Recreational buildings
Director of Recreation and Rehabilitation Center in Belarus
Nadeshda director Vyacheslav Makushinsky shows a plan of the PV installation.
The Children’s Rehabilitation and Recreation Centre Nadeshda was founded in Belarus in 1984 by several German and Belarussian NGOs with the support of the ministry for emergency situations of Belarus. Situated in a marvelous forest near the lake some 80 km north of Minsk, it hosts about 4600 children coming from the areas contaminated after the Chernobyl disaster – mainly Gomel and Mogilev regions. The location has the lowest natural level of background radiation in Belarus: 4.6 μR/h. While the Belarussian government is building a new nuclear reactor in Ostrovets, some 80 kilometers away from here, Nadeshda is switching to 100% renewable energy. The centre installs PV-system producing yearly 600 kW/h, enough to cover the centre’s needs. Nadeshda has the most powerful solar collector system in Belarus – installed capacity 91.5 kW. All the buildings are energy efficient and heating is based on renewable and alternative sources.
Unique identifier:
GP0STPR2S
Type:
Image
Shoot date:
01/04/2016
Locations:
Belarus
,
Eastern Europe
Credit line:
© Greenpeace
Size:
3328px × 4992px 9MB
Ranking:
★★★★ (E)
Containers
Shoot:
Children of Chernobyl Recreation and Rehabilitation Center in Belarus
The Children’s Rehabilitation and Recreation Centre Nadeshda was founded in Belarus in 1984 by several German and Belarussian NGOs with the support of the ministry for emergency situations of Belarus. Situated in a marvelous forest near the lake some 80 km north of Minsk, it hosts about 4600 children coming from the areas contaminated after the Chernobyl disaster – mainly Gomel and Mogilev regions. The location has the lowest natural level of background radiation in Belarus: 4.6 μR/h. While the Belarussian government is building a new nuclear reactor in Ostrovets, some 80 kilometers away from here, Nadeshda is switching to 100% renewable energy. The centre installs PV-system producing yearly 600 kW/h, enough to cover the centre’s needs. Nadeshda has the most powerful solar collector system in Belarus – installed capacity 91.5 kW. All the buildings are energy efficient and heating is based on renewable and alternative sources.
Related Collections:
Children of Chernobyl Recreation and Rehabilitation Center Nadeshda in Belarus (Photo & Videos)
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