Nuclear Meltdown Watch

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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby Simulist » Tue May 29, 2012 9:06 pm

In an unusually stark warning, Japan’s prime minister during last year’s nuclear crisis told a parliamentary inquiry on Monday that the country should discard nuclear power as too dangerous, saying the Fukushima accident had pushed Japan to the brink of “national collapse.”

As tragic as Fukushima clearly is — and my remarks here are not intended to diminish this unfolding tragedy in any way — it may also prove to be an interesting test case: a test case for how modern societies react to very real threats of "national collapse" while, at the same time, those very threats fuel the engines of their comfortable existence.

On the larger scale: think "oil" and "anthropogenic climate change."

Just as the Japanese culture will probably not abandon nuclear power — even in the face of the clear and present danger of national collapse — I sincerely doubt that the larger global culture will (ever) willingly abandon petroleum even in the face of the very real threat of global catastrophe.
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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby Saurian Tail » Tue May 29, 2012 9:08 pm

Nordic wrote:
Naoto Kan, Japan’s Former Leader said ...

"He said the prospect of losing Tokyo made him realize that nuclear power was just too risky, that the consequences of an accident too large for Japan to accept."

This is the simplest calculation of all. It's just not worth it.
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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby justdrew » Wed May 30, 2012 5:02 am

By 1964 there were 1.5 million mobile phone users in the US
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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby seemslikeadream » Wed May 30, 2012 6:44 am

Published on Monday, May 28, 2012 by Common Dreams
Japan's Toxic Tsunami Debris Heads Towards North America Chris Pallister of the Gulf of Alaska Keeper Organization: "This is more hazardous than oil"
- Common Dreams staff

As the heavier debris from the March 2011 tsunami that struck Japan makes its way across the Pacific Ocean, scientists warn of the ecological threat of toxic, chemical debris headed towards North America's western coast.

Chemical contamination "could be a real threat," Dr. M. Sanjayan, the lead scientist at conservation group the Nature Conservancy, tells CBC News. (screenshot from CNN video below) Chemical contamination "could be a real threat," Dr. M. Sanjayan, the lead scientist at conservation group the Nature Conservancy, tells CBC News. "Finding one drum of, say, paint thinner, or something you might find in your garage, it's not hugely toxic. But if you find 50 of them all washed up on a rocky shore and then breaking and leaking, then you have some problems."

"This is more hazardous than oil," Chris Pallister of the Gulf of Alaska Keeper Organization warns the Homer Tribune. "Entire communities went into the ocean — industrial, household chemicals, anything you can think of in your garage — and it's all coming here. This is like a great big toxic spill that is widely dispersed."

Chris Pallister, who's been cleaning marine debris on Alaska's Montague Island for 15 years, told CNN, "The influx of tsunami debris really concerns us mostly because of the amount of Styrofoam that's coming with it and also the toxic chemicals that are coming. We think they're going to have a really detrimental impact on the environment out here long term."

* * *

CBC News: Chemicals in tsunami debris could pose coastal threat

The spill and spread of industrial chemicals across the coastline of British Columbia is a possibility as slower-moving tsunami debris from Japan approaches the west coast, according to experts observing its movements.

The risk of chemical contamination is sizable, especially considering that many of the tsunami-affected areas on the Japanese coast were industrial and used many different types of toxic chemicals in manufacturing operations.

"[Chemical contamination] could be a real threat," said Dr. M. Sanjayan, the lead scientist at conservation group the Nature Conservancy. "For example, it's very hard to imagine how 50 drums [filled] with something could all show up at the same time, unless it's an event like this. That's where it can be a little dangerous. [...]

Dianna Parker of the NOAA notes that the majority of the debris is heavier and slower-moving than the more buoyant items that have been found on coastlines in recent months. Objects that ride high, such as plastic containers, bottles and buoys, travel much faster than intact and possibly dangerous industrial chemical containers. The bulk of the debris pulled out to sea by the tsunami is still suspended north of the main Hawaiian Islands in the Pacific. [...]

The Nature Conservancy and the NOAA believe that publicity surrounding the debris field will bring attention to the fact that ocean-going debris from the tsunami merely added to an ever-growing pile of junk accumulating in the Pacific and on shorelines. The estimated five million tonnes of debris from the Japanese tsunami represents less than one per cent of what's already out there in the Pacific.

* * *

NOAA map as of May 15, 2012 of tsunami debris

Mother Nature Network: Japan tsunami debris looms off U.S. coasts

The Pacific Ocean is no stranger to litter, thanks to a big maritime mess known as the Great Pacific Garbage Patch. But for the past 14 months, a different type of debris has been sailing around the Pacific — not the familiar bits of plastic found in the garbage patch, but some 5 million tons of detritus that washed offshore after the deadly Japanese earthquake and tsunami of March 2011. [...]

While it pales in comparison to the disaster that sent it there, some worry all this debris could pose environmental dangers for the U.S. and Canada, possibly even on par with an oil spill. "This is more hazardous than oil," Chris Pallister of the Gulf of Alaska Keeper Organization tells the Homer Tribune. "Entire communities went into the ocean — industrial, household chemicals, anything you can think of in your garage — and it's all coming here. This is like a great big toxic spill that is widely dispersed." [...]

Nonetheless, many people from Alaska to California say tsunami debris is already flooding in, and they want immediate action. "The time for talk is over," Sen. Mark Begich, D-Alaska, said in a recent statement. "The prospect of debris coming to our shorelines is not just a theory, it is here." Begich and other lawmakers have pushed the Obama administration to allocate emergency funds to study the tsunami debris, and to reconsider a planned budget cut for NOAA's Marine Debris Program.
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby crikkett » Wed May 30, 2012 10:00 am

Simulist wrote:Just as the Japanese culture will probably not abandon nuclear power — even in the face of the clear and present danger of national collapse — I sincerely doubt that the larger global culture will (ever) willingly abandon petroleum even in the face of the very real threat of global catastrophe.


Do you say that in the knowledge that Japan currently has no nuclear power plant on-line?
Although the Prime Minister is calling for "safe restarts"

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/sns- ... 9511.story
Japan PM says safe reactor restarts needed

Kentaro Hamada and Linda Sieg Reuters
7:44 a.m. CDT, May 30, 2012

TOKYO (Reuters) - Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda, keen to restart idled nuclear reactors to avoid a summer power crunch, said on Wednesday it was necessary to start those whose safety has been confirmed, adding he was winning understanding from local authorities.

Nuclear power supplied nearly 30 percent of Japan's electricity needs before last year's earthquake and tsunami crippled the Fukushima plant - the world's worst nuclear accident in 25 years. But all of the country's 50 reactors have since been taken offline for checks.

The government has been struggling to win support from local authorities for the restarts, although their permission is not legally required.

Noda, talking after a meeting with key ministers to discuss resuming operations at two of Kansai Electric Power Co's reactors in western Japan, said he would make a final decision once local authorities have made up their minds.

A group of regional governors, long concerned about whether it was safe to resume power generation at Kansai Electric's No. 3 and No. 4 reactors in Ohi, western Japan, signaled their agreement to the restarts as a "limited" step.

The governor of the host prefecture of Fukui and the mayor of the town of Ohi where the reactors are located have yet to give final approval, although Ohi's local assembly has signed off on resuming operations.

"If we get a decision by local authorities, then we will discuss among the four key ministers and I will make the final decision," Noda told reporters.

A decision by Noda and key ministers to restart the reactors would ease worries about power shortages among firms in the region, including struggling electronics giants Panasonic Corp and Sharp Corp. But the move could also irk voters and undermine Noda's already sagging public support.

Noting the central government has yet to set up a new regulatory agency, promised after the disaster, the Union of Kansai Governments said current safety standards were therefore provisional. Parliament began debate on creating the new agency this week after months of delay.

Anti-nuclear activists have cast doubt on the government's assurances that the two reactors at Kansai Electric Power Co's Ohi plant in Fukui, western Japan, are safe.

"We have consistently said that none of the safety or emergency measures that have been called for by experts in the community has been completed," said Greg McNevin, a spokesman for Greenpeace International.

"Our consistent position is that this is being rushed."

Kansai Electric has said it would take six weeks to reconnect them to the grid and the government has asked businesses and consumers in its service area to cut summer electricity usage by 15 percent from 2010 levels.

(Reporting by Kentaro Hamada; Writing by Linda Sieg; Editing by Edmund Klamann and Nick Macfie)
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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby 2012 Countdown » Wed May 30, 2012 11:06 am

“Absolutely Every One” – 15 Out of 15 – Bluefin Tuna Tested In California Waters Contaminated with Fukushima Radiation
Submitted by George Washington on 05/29/2012

Image

http://www.zerohedge.com/contributed/20 ... -waters-co
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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby hanshan » Wed May 30, 2012 3:32 pm

...



Say What?!

http://tinyurl.com/83thuzd



TV: Incredibly, it takes this long for the truth to come out about radiation in California bluefin — “So people who have been eating tuna for the last half a year have been eating cesium?” (VIDEO)


Interview with Kevin Kamps, radioactive waste specialist at Beyond Nuclear
The Big Picture with Thom Hartmann
May 30, 2012

At 2:15 in

Kamps: These readings on the tuna were taken in August 2011. Incredibly, it takes this long for the truth to come out.

[...]

Host: So people who have been eating tuna for the last half a year have been eating cesium?




...
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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby StarmanSkye » Wed May 30, 2012 5:42 pm

Thanks for that, Hanshan.
So this 'latest' bluefin tuna reading was from last August, 8 MONTHS AGO?
We also have recent/latest 'news' reports about 10 out of 10 tuna captured in westcoast US waters being hot. Dunno if this is part of the same test-batch. Info isn't very clear and it sure isn't very timely. A lot of confusion out there, deliberately so IMHO to keep the public dumb.

BTW: A linked video provides some of the BEST comprehensive information about the urgent situation w/r/t the damaged Unit 4 buildings weakened fuel-pool, contrasting the deep concern of scientists and contractors, even politicians, with that of the TEPCO official who is markedly diffident, disconnected, relatively unconcerned, poorly informed and incapable of appreciating the emotional state of affected & displaced residents.

Some of the comments are priceless, puts a human face on what is unarguably a tragedy of epic proportions.

http://tinyurl.com/8xyt5ya
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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby StarmanSkye » Wed May 30, 2012 6:01 pm

Good Golly! Just when you thought the news couldn't get worse, a 'found' TEPCO e-mail suggests there may be recriticality in Reactor 2 as water-levels and pressure are fluctuating. In comments, someone writes that strict monitoring of reactor air-samples for Iodine and short-lived gasses means TEPCO Has to know what's going on (unless they're total incompetants, a distinct possibility), but aren't/won't -- more obfuscation and official denials?

Clearly, I don't know what the score is but there are too many knife-edge possibilities for uncertainty to be a good thing.

But I can't do anything about it, so I'm not gonna stress over it.

http://tinyurl.com/6rvbgcf
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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby hanshan » Fri Jun 01, 2012 11:02 am

...


quite sad


http://tinyurl.com/c9yubkr

Tokyo Professor: We are facing a nuclear winter in Japan


On the Cesium Road
Hoover Institution’s Hoover Digest
Toshio Nishi
April 6, 2012 no. 2

[...]

We realize now that the government and the power executives think we are not intelligent enough to understand the technical jargon about nuclear power. Of course, we were not familiar with those esoteric terms when the disaster struck. But we do understand we are facing a nuclear winter on this beautiful archipelago, placed on the Ring of Fire, and may not live long enough even to see such a winter.

[...]

Since bombs fell on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan has cultivated a religion that condemns nuclear arms. Along the way, however, Japan metamorphosed into a strange creature that felt immune to things nuclear. Few Japanese left the country within the first weeks after the Fukushima meltdown. We can remain calm even in the midst of a horrible reality. Meanwhile, the falsehood of safe, cheap, and forever clean energy is swept away like the receding sea.



Toshio Nishi is a research fellow at the Hoover Institution. From 1991 to the present, Nishi has been a distinguished guest professor at Reitaku University in Chiba, Japan, and from 2004 a graduate school professor at Nihon University in Tokyo. [...] From 1985 to 1991, Nishi was a foreign correspondent for NHK Journal, a radio program of Japan’s largest media system. [...]

See also:

Japanese Professor: Where did all that plutonium contaminated water disappear to? Into the Pacific Ocean or the ground, of course -- Who can comprehend the magnitude of radioactive contamination that threatens never to end?
Stanford Publication: Were TV experts paid to say Fukushima Daiichi had a small leak when it was the largest in the world?


http://www.hoover.org/publications/hoover-digest/article/113111


edited once to add link to the original article: On the Cesium Road byToshio Nishi

...
Last edited by hanshan on Fri Jun 01, 2012 1:19 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby hanshan » Fri Jun 01, 2012 12:28 pm

...

given the incomplete (by design) data set re: Fukushima
the following hypothesis, w/out actually having to shoehorn, seems apt

recommend visiting the site as there are charts & vids which don't
copy


http://nukeprofessional.blogspot.com/p/uranium-aerosolized-into-atmosphere.html

Uranium Aerosolized Into Atmosphere

Conclusion – Fukushima really blew up, launching TONS of Uranium and Plutonium into the atmosphere.




Here is a link to a site documenting other EPA data that does show significant Plutonium contamination in Guam, Hawaii, California
http://blog.alexanderhiggins.com/2011/0 ... ars-20549/


HERE is all the supporting information, in the yellow highlight right below, click on to download all of the data and calculations, which prove beyond a shadow of a doubt that at least Tens of Tons of Poisonous Heavy Metals were launched into the atmosphere, aerosolized well enough to travel all the way to Europe.

Exhibits and Tables for Uranium in Air

See the video of Unit 3 exploding over 1000 feet in the air. Very dramatic. There is no Reactor 3 left, only a few scattered pieces of yellow metal in the rubble.


Video Analysis of Unit 3 Explosion here




My maximum estimate is 195 TONS of Uranium based on an affected column of air 8 miles high, and the reality is that the actual TONNAGE LAUNCHED may certainly be less based on assumptions made, but the bottom line is that a huge amount of Uranium and Plutonium was exploded and aerosolized.


The quantity of tons aerosolized can be estimated by using official Government data, in particular Exhibit F-1 which is a 4/6/2011 publication of the EPA Radnet. Keep in mind Uranium and Plutonium are heavy metals. The air densities are higher in Guam and Saipan which are closer, still quite high in Hawaii, and they fall off quite a bit in California and Washington. But this is April 6th, so these heavy metals have been floating for quite some time anyway.

UPDATE: I found the RADNET link direct, the proof of all that uranium in the air.
http://www.epa.gov/japan011/docs/rert/r ... -final.pdf


Exh F-1 Shows 130 aCi/M3 of URANIUM in air, in Honolulu, with similar amount in Kauai, and even more in Guam.


The “Background” amount of Uranium in Air in Honolulu is around 5 aCi/M3, thus making the measured Uranium 2600% higher than Background .See Table 9 from the EPA for this proof of background data.


Using a dispersion simulator, printout attached as Exh G-1, and with help of Google Earth (Exhibit G2 and G3) I calculate an affected area, which is about 2800 miles by 4900 miles.
Here is the simulator.
http://cerea.enpc.fr/fr/fukushima.html


Now to make an estimate of affected volume of air, we need to select a height, I selected 8 miles.
The meat of the calculations are on Exhibit C-1, which is the next page


195 Tons Of Uranium!
Lets do a sensitivity analysis on the assumptions. What if the affected area is 50% of the size the simulator shows, then use a multiplier of 0.5.


What if the height of the affected air is only more like 2 miles instead of 8, uses a multiplier of 0.25
195 tons *.5*.25= 24 Tons (Conservative Estimate)


Under the Conservative Estimate, and using .89% Plutonium per Table 1, this would be 433 pounds of Plutonium aerosolized. But keep in mind the MOX fuel is souped up with Plutonium which could be more like 9% to 10% of the fuel rods, so it is possible that TONS of Plutonium was launched into our HOME PLANET atmosphere.

Truth is not the friend of Nuke,
No wonder this stuff has to be covered up.


...
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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby hanshan » Fri Jun 01, 2012 1:11 pm

...


http://tinyurl.com/ca6tp2q

Former head of Japan’s #1 newspaper worked with CIA to promote nuclear power



Japan’s Nuclear Industry: The CIA Link
Wall St. Journal – Japan Real Time
By Eleanor Warnock
June 1, 2012, 10:18 AM JST

[...]

Rewind almost 60 years and the government had a similar problem: how to persuade the public to support its ambition to become a nuclear nation only nine years after the U.S. dropped atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki?

According to one Japanese university professor, that ambition was achieved with help from an unlikely source: the CIA.

Tetsuo Arima, a researcher at Waseda University in Tokyo, told JRT he discovered in the U.S. National Archives a trove of declassified CIA files that showed how one man, Matsutaro Shoriki, was instrumental in jumpstarting Japan’s nascent nuclear industry.

Mr. Shoriki was many things: a Class A war criminal, the head of the Yomiuri Shimbun (Japan’s biggest-selling and most influential newspaper) and the founder of both the country’s first commercial broadcaster and the Tokyo Giants baseball team. Less well known, according to Mr. Arima, was that the media mogul worked with the CIA to promote nuclear power.

[...]

Mr. Shoriki, backed by the CIA, used his influence to publish articles in the Yomiuri that extolled the virtues of nuclear power, according to the documents found by Mr. Arima. Keen on remilitarizing Japan, Mr. Shoriki endorsed nuclear power in hopes its development would one day arm the country with the ability to make its own nuclear weapons, according to Mr. Arima. Mr. Shoriki’s behind-the-scenes push created a chain reaction in other media that eventually changed public opinion.

[...]



...
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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby seemslikeadream » Sun Jun 10, 2012 11:56 am




Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby seemslikeadream » Mon Jun 18, 2012 10:39 am

Japan PM orders first nuclear restart

Published: June 18, 2012 at 10:12 AM

TOKYO, June 18 (UPI) -- Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda ordered the restart of two reactors at the Oi nuclear complex in Fukui Prefecture in western Japan.

Noda gave the restart order Saturday shortly after Oi Gov. Issei Nishikawa announced his acceptance of the restart. The reactors could be generating power within the next two weeks, officials said.

Last month the last of Japan's active reactors was shut down, marking the first time the country was without nuclear power in four decades.

"We are determined to make further efforts to restore people's trust in nuclear policy and safety regulations," Noda said Saturday.

But the restarts come amid division among Japanese about the safety of nuclear power since the Fukushima power plant disaster following the March 11, 2011, earthquake and tsunami.

A recent Pew Research Center poll indicates 70 percent of Japanese surveyed want nuclear power reduced or eliminated, with 80 percent of respondents saying they disapproved of the government's response to the Fukushima nuclear crisis.

An editorial in Tokyo Shimbun last Friday questioned Saturday's inevitable approval: "Does this reflect the sentiment of the citizens, who are seeking an exit from nuclear power? Won't it instead make what was supposed to be a rare exception par for the course?"

Also Friday an antinuclear group led by the Nobel Literature laureate Kenzaburo Oe presented the Japanese government with what it said was the signatures of 7.5 million people calling for the abolition of nuclear power.

Kansai Electric Power Co., operator of the Oi nuclear plant, had said that without the restarts, the demand for electricity this summer would exceed supply by about 15 percent. The reactors are expected to reach full operation late July.

The fate of Japan's 48 other reactors remains in limbo.

The Japanese government is slated this summer to devise the country's new energy strategy, which could shape the future role of nuclear power.

Last Thursday major Japanese political parties agreed on a bill to establish a new nuclear watchdog that would replace the scheme of government, industry and regulators whose interdependence has been blamed for lax safety standards.

The bill is expected to be passed by the Upper House this week. Even so, the new regulatory commission wouldn't take the reins from the current troika before September.

As far as future reactor restarts, an unnamed government official in charge of establishing the new commission told the Yomiuri Shimbun, "If we hasten procedures [on reactor restarts], the public's confidence in the new regulatory commission will be lost."


Quake rumbles off northern Japan
Published: June 18, 2012 at 8:53 AM

TOKYO, June 18 (UPI) -- A 6.4-magnitude earthquake rattled Japan's northern coast Monday, the U.S. Geological Survey said, but no tsunami warning was issued.

The earthquake's epicenter was about 72 miles from Morioka in the Iwate prefecture, and slightly more than 19 miles deep, the Japan Daily Press reported.

Officials said there were no reports of serious injuries or damage.

The earthquake was the third measuring in the 5- to 6-magnitude range to strike Japan in recent weeks, the Daily Press reported.
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby StarmanSkye » Sat Jun 30, 2012 3:20 pm

Latest (June 26) Update discussion on the ongoing disaster-saga of the Fukushima Reactors w/ particular attention to Reactor 4's bulging wall which is threatening potential collapse of the used-fuel storage pool -- then seguing into the design flaws of the re-engineered San Onofre Calif. Nuclear Reactor's steam-tube heat-exchanger due to steam-bubble vibration which has caused its shutdown. Including a general discussion of societal implications of nuclear reactor design failures which have been far-more common than is generally known as the Nuclear Industry kept them secret from the public so as not to prejudice the public's tacit acceptance of nuclear power.

*****
--quote--
sowingthewinds 30.06.2012
"This is not Japan's problem. Whatever is their problem is OUR PROBLEM!"
We are speaking about a COVER UP that is the CRIME of the NUCLEAR
Industry: The Government's CORRUPTION and the greed of the CORPORATE SYSTEM endangering all the Planet. All LIFE!
Thank You Mr.Gundersen for yours constant effort to alert the World.
Blessings Aloha Namaste

Arnie Gundersen, Fairewinds Associates: Where that bulge [in Unit 4] is located indicates it's something called a first mode Euler strut buckle defect.
That means it's likely a seismic problem that came with the initial earthquake
or perhaps one of the ones after that.
When you see a building buckle like that, it's actually called a first mode Euler strut buckle. And it's caused by seismic induced stress. So of course the industry the has been saying all along, "Well these plants withstood the earthquake perfectly well."
But buckling like we are seeing in unit 4 is an indication that perhaps they didn't ride out the earthquake anywhere near as well as we thought.



Interview with Arnie Gundersen
EcoReview
June 26, 2012


Bonus audio interview here: http://www.radio4all.net/index.php/program/61062

Arnie Gundersen / Fairewinds:
http://www.fairewinds.com/
http://www.youtube.com/user/fairewindsenergy
in Japanese: http://www.fairewinds.com/ja

GUNDERSEN ON FUKUSHIMA FISH SALES AND REACTOR'S BUCKLING BUILDING


In a startling mix of market forces and nuclear therapy, the Japanese government is now allowing the sale of seafood from Fukushima, where radioactivity continues to be released daily into the Pacific from the doomed Fukushima Daichi nuclear power stations. Officials and merchants insist that the locally sold octopus and snails are safe for consumption. But a new study shows alarming levels of hot cesium, strontium and plutonium in local anchovies, crabs, and other marine species. However, sea bass off the coast of Japan are being thrown back for exceeding radiation limits, and "hot" bluefin tuna have now traveled all the way to the U.S. west coast,
Nuclear expert ARNIE GUNDERSEN of Fairewinds Associates
[ fairewinds.com ]


Part 3/4
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