June 21, 2012 6:43 AM | CBS News
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(AP) STOCKHOLM - Sweden raised the security alert for the country's nuclear power
plants Thursday after explosives were found on a truck at the southwestern atomic power
station Ringhals. Police said they were investigating possible sabotage.
Police said bomb sniffer dogs detected the explosives during a routine check Wednesday
afternoon by security staff at an industrial area within the power plant's enclosure. Police
declined to describe the amount or type of explosive material.
Four reactors are at Ringhals, 45 miles south of Sweden's second-largest city, Goteborg.
The plant is controlled by energy companies Vattenfall and E.ON.
Police spokesman Tommy Nyman said officers were investigating but had no suspects. Nyman
said the driver of the truck had been unaware of the explosives and was not suspected of
being involved.
"An outsider has obviously placed them on the truck," Nyman said. "We're talking to the
truck driver and are trying to map out her movements within the premises throughout the
day."
The area surrounding the truck has been evacuated and cordoned off.
Bomb technicians said the material lacked an ignition device, meaning there was no danger of
an explosion. Ringhals officials said that an explosion on the truck would not have caused
"any serious damage" to the site.
Sweden has 10 nuclear reactors providing about half of the country's electricity.
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(AP) STOCKHOLM - Sweden raised the security alert for the country's nuclear power
plants Thursday after explosives were found on a truck at the southwestern atomic power
station Ringhals. Police said they were investigating possible sabotage.
Police said bomb sniffer dogs detected the explosives during a routine check Wednesday
afternoon by security staff at an industrial area within the power plant's enclosure. Police
declined to describe the amount or type of explosive material.
Four reactors are at Ringhals, 45 miles south of Sweden's second-largest city, Goteborg.
The plant is controlled by energy companies Vattenfall and E.ON.
Police spokesman Tommy Nyman said officers were investigating but had no suspects. Nyman
said the driver of the truck had been unaware of the explosives and was not suspected of
being involved.
"An outsider has obviously placed them on the truck," Nyman said. "We're talking to the
truck driver and are trying to map out her movements within the premises throughout the
day."
The area surrounding the truck has been evacuated and cordoned off.
Bomb technicians said the material lacked an ignition device, meaning there was no danger of
an explosion. Ringhals officials said that an explosion on the truck would not have caused
"any serious damage" to the site.
Sweden has 10 nuclear reactors providing about half of the country's electricity.