
Chernobyl’s wild sanctuary reshapes the nuclear debate
Forty years after the Chernobyl disaster, the exclusion zone remains heavily contaminated, but wildlife populations—from wolves and elk to roe and deer—flourish in the absence of humans, prompting a debate over nuclear power’s environmental trade-offs. While some scientists argue the area shows how ecosystems rebound when human pressure fades, others caution about potential genetic damage in certain species and warn against reviving nuclear energy amid safety and geopolitical risks. The discussion echoes debates sparked by Fukushima and the Korean DMZ, with broad implications for climate goals and energy security.