“The radionuclide stations RUP 56 (Peledui) and RUP 57 (Bilibino) in Russia have resumed work and are currently transmitting data to the interim technical secretariat,” he wrote on Twitter.

Zerbo drew attention to the excellent cooperation and support from the operators at the Russian station.

Previously, the CTBTO stated that on August 10, Russian stations in Dubna and Kirov stopped working due to interruptions in communications.

It was also reported that the signal does not come from stations in the Chukchi Bilibino and Altai Zalesovo.

Presidential spokesman Dmitry Peskov, commenting on reports that the monitoring stations stopped reporting after the state of emergency in the Arkhangelsk region, noted that this issue was not the responsibility of the Kremlin.

He called absurd talk about a certain “radioactive cloud” after the accident and stressed that Russian leader Vladimir Putin receives all the information about the incident.

Putin, during a joint press conference with French colleague Emmanuel Macron, said that there was no increase in radiation background after the incident near Arkhangelsk.

On August 8, at a military training ground in the Arkhangelsk region, when testing a liquid propulsion system, an explosion occurred with a fire. As a result of the emergency, five Rosatom employees died.