Background: Northern Fleet bases and shipyards

Bellona Archive
The Northern Fleet consists of 11 bases and shipyards for service, graving and dismantlement. There are Severomosrk which serves as the main base and administrative centre for the Northern Fleet and lies 25 kilometers north of Murmansk on the eastern side of the Murmansk Inlet. Gazhievo is base point in Olenaya Bay and the settlement Skalisty. Sayda Bay is a former fishing village that was annexed as a military area in 1990. Its now stores hulls and reactor compartments from nuclear submarines. Nerpa is situated in the innermost part of Olenya Bay. Today, it falls under the auspices of the Ministry of Economy. The two shipyards of Severodvinsk, Zvedockha and Sevmash, are considered a closed city on the White Sea, 35 kilometres west of Arkhangelsk. Vidyaevo consists of two bases: Ara Bay and Ura Bay. In 1979, it Vidyaevo became a base for nuclear-powered submarines. Zapadnaya Litsa is the most important Russian naval base for nuclear-powered submarines. It is located in the Litsa Inlet at the westernmost point of the Kola Peninsula, about 45 kilometres from the Norwegian border. The Gremikha naval base is the second onshore storage site on the Kola Peninsula for submarine spent nuclear fuel and radioactive waste. The largest radwaste site is located in Andreeva Bay, situated on the north-western side of the Kola Peninsula. Andreeva Bay is part of Zapadnaya Litsa, and is 55 kilometres to the east of the Russian-Norwegian border. Navy Yard No. 10, or Shkval, is situated near the town of Polyarny, on the outermost western side of the Murmansk Inlet. It was the first shipyard to deal with nuclear submarines. Naval yard No. 35, Sevmorput, is a Northern Fleet naval repair yard located in the Murmansk Inlet between the nuclear icebreaker base Atomflot and the merchant harbour
BACKGROUND DOCUMENTS
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Foto: Bellona

[ 07.06.2007 ]
Andreyeva Bay is a ticking bomb, Bellona’s documents prove
Bellona is publishing its detailed position paper on the possibility of an uncontrollable chain reaction – or simply said, a small nuclear explosion – at the storage facility for radioactive waste and spent nuclear fuel at Andreyeva Bay on the Kola Peninsula, urges President Putin to take the situation under personal control.
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Igor Kudrik/Bellona

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Foto: Igor Kudrik

[ 24.10.2006 ]
Public hearings held in Murmansk on ecological rehabilitation of Andreyeva Bay
MURMANSK - Bellona’s Murmansk office in cooperation with SevRAO – the spent nuclear fuel clean-up branch of Russia’s Rosatom atomic energy agency – held hearings with the public to discuss nuclear remediation and rehabilitation projects at Northwest Russia’s Andreyeva Bay nuclear dumping site.