Nikolai_Fomin

Nikolai Fomin

Nikolai Fomin

Chief engineer of Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant during the disaster


Nikolai Maximovich Fomin (Russian: Николай Максимович Фомин, Ukrainian: Микола Максимович Фомін, romanized: Mykola Maksymovych Fomin; born 1937 in Novoekonomichne, Donetsk Oblast, Ukrainian SSR) is a Ukrainian engineer. He was the chief engineer of the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant from 1981 until the Chernobyl nuclear disaster in 1986.[1]

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Biography

Fomin was a member of the central CPSU, but was expelled after the Chernobyl disaster.[1] He started his career at the Zaporizhzhia thermal power station.[2] In 1972 he began working at the Chernobyl plant. As chief engineer, he approved the infamous turbine safety test that led to the explosion of the reactor. However, the deputy chief engineer, Anatoly Dyatlov, was responsible for the test.

Fomin learned of the accident at about 4 am on April 26, 1986, and participated in cleaning up during the aftermath of the disaster.[2] He was subsequently arrested together with plant director Viktor Bryukhanov. The start of the trial, originally scheduled for March 24, 1987, had to be postponed several times due to Fomin's suicide attempt.[3] During the trial, Fomin blamed the operators for deviating from the test plan.[4] Eventually, he and Bryukhanov were found guilty and were each sentenced to 10 years in prison.[3]

While in prison, Fomin received psychiatric treatment several times. For health reasons, he was released from prison early and transferred to a psychiatric hospital.[3] After his release from the hospital, he worked at the Kalinin Nuclear Power Plant. Since his retirement in 2000, he has lived with his wife, children and grandchildren in Udomlya.[1]

In the HBO television series Chernobyl, he is portrayed by Adrian Rawlins.


References

  1. Galina Tri︠a︡nova: Posledniĭ raspad Uz︠h︡gorod : Karpaty, 2006., ISBN 9666710897.
  2. Higginbotham, Adam (2019). Midnight in Chernobyl : the untold story of the world's greatest nuclear disaster. New York: Simon and Schuster. ISBN 1-5011-3461-2. OCLC 1083671410.

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