Russia launched an urgent rescue mission yesterday after one of its atomic-powered icebreakers developed a nuclear leak in the frozen seas of the Arctic and was forced to abandon its mission.

The Rosatomflot nuclear fleet said in a statement that an “insignificant increase in activity” had been detected on board its 21,000-tonne Taimyr icebreaker.

But the incident was serious enough to force the vessel to abandon its mission and begin a five-day journey back to its home port in the northwestern city of Murmansk.

The agency also announced plans to shut down the reactor before the ship enters into port – a reversal of an initial statement saying that decision would only be reached if the situation got out of hand.

Officials stressed that their most immediate worry concerned the 23-year-old vessel’s ability to navigate the rough icy sea of the Arctic.

“What we are most concerned about right now is movement along the waterways,” the state-run RIA Novosti news agency quoted top Rosatomflot official Andrei Smirnov as saying.

The fleet official said another icebreaker was being dispatched to the region to help the Taimyr’s journey back to port. But it was not clear how far it remained from the stricken craft.

The incident was reported in the Kara Sea – a part of the Arctic Ocean about 2,000 kilometres east of Norway’s border.

The Taimyr has a single 171-megawatt reactor that generates about one-third the energy of the Fukushima 1 reactor that suffered in the Japanese earthquake and tsunami disaster in March.

Rosatomflot said the increased levels of radiation were first detected in the air ventilation system surrounding the icebreaker’s power unit and that subsequent check showed no further damage.

It attributed the higher readings to “a leak in the primary coolant system”.

But most other details – including how many people were on board the ship – remained sketchy.

The agency initially said the ship’s reactor would be shut down “if the situation deteriorates”.

But a second statement issued about 10 hours later the nuclear power generator would be shut before the icebreaker enters into port “to reduce the time frames needed to prepare for repairs”.

Rosatomflot stressed that the incident was still being registered as a zero on the seven-point International Nuclear and Radiological Event Scale – a level officially defined as “bearing no safety significance”.

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