Nuclear Meltdown Watch

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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby seemslikeadream » Thu Jul 05, 2012 9:20 am

I guess that means it was man made :wallhead:

Japan's atomic disaster caused by "collusion" : panel report

Members of the media and Tokyo Electric Power Co. (TEPCO) employees, wearing protective suits and masks, walk in front of the No. 4 reactor building at the tsunami-crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in Fukushima prefecture May 26, 2012. REUTERS/Tomohiro Ohsumi/Pool

By Risa Maeda and Linda Sieg

TOKYO | Thu Jul 5, 2012 9:03am EDT

(Reuters) - Japan's Fukushima nuclear crisis was a preventable disaster resulting from "collusion" among the government, regulators and the plant operator, an expert panel said on Thursday, wrapping up an inquiry into the worst nuclear accident in 25 years.

Damage from the huge March 11, 2011, earthquake, and not just the ensuing tsunami, could not be ruled out as a cause of the accident, the panel added, a finding with serious potential implications as Japan seeks to bring idled reactors on line.

The panel criticized the response of Fukushima Daiichi plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Co, regulators and then Prime Minister Naoto Kan, who quit last year after criticism of his handling of a natural disaster that became a man-made crisis.

"The ... Fukushima Nuclear Power Plant accident was the result of collusion between the government, the regulators and Tepco, and the lack of governance by said parties," the panel said in an English summary of a 641-page Japanese document.

The report - issued hours after a reactor began supplying electricity to the grid for the first time in two months - put an official imprimatur on criticism of the cozy ties that have bound a powerful nexus of interests known as the "nuclear village".

Regulators, it said, had been reluctant to adopt global safety standards that could have helped prevent the disaster in which reactors melted down, spewing radiation and forcing about 150,000 people from their homes, many of whom will never return.

"Across the board, the Commission found ignorance and arrogance unforgivable for anyone or any organization that deals with nuclear power. We found a disregard for global trends and a disregard for public safety," the panel said.

The panel's finding that seismic damage may well have played a role could affect the restart of reactors that were taken offline, mostly for maintenance and safety checks, in the months since Fukushima. Japan is one of the world's most quake-prone countries.

"We have proved that it cannot be said that there would have been no crisis without the tsunami," Katsuhiko Ishibashi, a seismologist and panel member, said in the report.

The panel urged strict checks on all reactors against guidelines set in 2006, and said Japan's 21 oldest reactors, whose construction was approved before guidelines were set in 1981, may be at similar risk from a big quake as Fukushima Daiichi.

Experts have said that an active fault may lie under Kansai Electric Power Co's Ohi plant in western Japan, whose No. 3 unit began supplying electricity to the grid early on Thursday. Ohi's No. 4 unit will come on line later this month after the government approved the restarts to avoid a power shortage.

"This means that all of Japan's reactors are vulnerable and require retro-fitting, calling into question the hasty decision of the (Prime Minister Yoshihiko) Noda cabinet to restart reactors before getting the lessons of Fukushima," said Jeffrey Kingston, Asia studies director at Temple University in Tokyo.

The report by the experts - one of three panels looking into the Fukushima disaster - follows a six-month investigation involving more than 900 hours of hearings and interviews with more than 1,100 people, the first such inquiry of its kind.

MISSED OPPORTUNITIES

Many of the shocking details of the disaster, including operator Tokyo Electric Power Co's (Tepco) failure to prepare for a big tsunami and the chaotic response by the utility and government, have already been made public.

In an effort to repair tattered public trust in the regulatory regime, the government will in a few months set up a more independent nuclear watchdog that will then draft new safety rules.

The report pointed to numerous missed opportunities to take steps to prevent the disaster, citing lobbying by the nuclear power companies as well as a "safety myth" mindset that permeated the industry and the regulatory regime as among the reasons for the failure to be prepared.

Resource-poor Japan has for decades promoted nuclear power as safe, cheap and clean. Atomic energy supplied nearly 30 percent of electricity needs before the disaster.

"As a result of inadequate oversight, the SA (Severe Accident) countermeasures implemented in Japan were practically ineffective compared to the countermeasures in place abroad, and actions were significantly delayed as a result," it said.

Tepco came under heavy criticism in the report, partly for putting cost-cutting steps ahead of safety as nuclear power became less profitable over the years. "While giving lip service to a policy of 'safety first', in actuality, safety suffered at the expense of other management priorities," the team said.

In a report on its internal investigation issued last month, Tepco denied responsibility, saying the big "unforeseen" tsunami was to blame - though it admitted that in hindsight it was insufficiently prepared.

Tepco, struggling under huge costs for compensation, cleanup and decommissioning, was effectively nationalized last month with a 1 trillion yen ($12.53 billion) injection of public funds.

The panel also said it had found no evidence to back up Kan's allegation that Tepco had planned to abandon the tsunami-ravaged plant as the crisis risked spinning out of control.

But fans of Kan, a former civic activist who angered the powerful nuclear industry when he became a harsh critic of atomic power after the disaster, questioned that finding.

"I think the crisis would have been far worse if Kan hadn't intervened," Temple University's Kingston said.
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 Jul 16, 2012 2:20 pm

Nuclear operator to release secret Fukushima tapes
PM By North Asia correspondent Mark Willacy and staff
Updated July 16, 2012 23:39:56


Former Japanese prime minister Naoto Kan, who was in office during the Fukushima nuclear meltdowns, has told the ABC he believes the plant's operator has been hiding key evidence.

For months TEPCO has resisted pressure to release critical recordings, arguing they are in-house material and to release them would compromise the privacy of those on the tapes.

The company now says it will bow to months of pressure from Mr Kan and the government and release the many hours of teleconference video taken in the days after last year's meltdowns.

But it has confirmed crucial audio of a heated exchange with Mr Kan is missing, claiming its hard drive was full.

PHOTO: 'Extremely strange': former Japanese PM Naoto Kan says TEPCO has something to hide (Reuters)
The recordings are a window into the decisions, dramas and dangers at the heart of the world's worst nuclear crisis since Chernobyl, and Mr Kan says the withheld information is "crucial".

"This is extremely important material which is needed to investigate the cause of this accident," Mr Kan told the ABC in an exclusive interview.

"It's like the black box flight recorder on an aeroplane. The black box is crucial to understanding how an accident happened. So too are these recordings."

Lawyer Hiroyuki Kawai has been fighting for the release of the TEPCO tapes. He believes they will help solve some abiding mysteries at the heart of the disaster.

It's like the black box flight recorder on an aeroplane. The black box is crucial to understanding how an accident happened. So too are these recordings.

Former Japanese prime minister Naoto Kan
"TEPCO executives purposely delayed pumping seawater into the damaged reactors," Mr Kawai said.

"The tapes will prove they did this because they knew pumping in saltwater would force them to decommission the reactors."

Detailed records
Another mystery the recordings could help solve is who is telling the truth about TEPCO's early handling of the crisis, specifically whether the company wanted to withdraw its workers from the crippled plant, as Mr Kan has alleged.

"The most contentious issue is whether or not TEPCO was planning to abandon the Fukushima plant," he said.

"The audio and video will make it clear what discussions TEPCO was having about withdrawing."

The recordings may also clear up persistent questions about Mr Kan's handling of the crisis, specifically allegations he meddled at key moments, effectively delaying TEPCO's response to the disaster.

But the crucial recording of Mr Kan addressing the company's 200 executives and its president at the start of the crisis has no audio, which the company blames on a lack of hard drive space.

Mr Kan has described the missing audio of his speech as "extremely strange".

The TEPCO recordings are a common asset of the Japanese people and not for a private company like TEPCO to hide.

Lawyer Hiroyuki Kawai
"The speech was filmed and broadcast to all TEPCO sites. Surely they recorded the sound at one of those sites.

"It would appear the company is trying to hide something inconvenient."

TEPCO now has to decide when to release the teleconference recordings and how it will release them.

Mr Kawai believes the release of the tapes is crucial if Japan is to both understand the causes of the nuclear meltdowns and to learn from them.

"The Fukushima nuclear accident is ongoing. It's not been resolved yet," Mr Kawai said.

"The TEPCO recordings are a common asset of the Japanese people and not for a private company like TEPCO to hide."

The revelations come as tens of thousands of people rally in Tokyo to demand an end to nuclear power, the latest in a series of protests since the Fukushima disaster.
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 » Tue Jul 17, 2012 10:03 am

36 Percent Of Fukushima Children Have Abnormal Growths From Radiation Exposure
Michael Kelley | Jul. 16, 2012, 1:28 PM
There are about 360,000 Fukushima residents who were 18 or younger in March 2011.

Of more than 38,000 children tested from the Fukushima Prefecture in Japan, 36 percent have abnormal growths – cysts or nodules – on their thyroids a year after the Fukushima nuclear disaster, as reported by ENENews.
The shocking numbers come from the thyroid examination section of the "Sixth Report of Fukushima Prefecture Health Management Survey," published by Fukushima Radioactive Contamination Symptoms Research (FRCSR) and translated by the blog Fukushima Voice.
Shunichi Yamashita, M.D., president of the Japan Thyroid Association, sent a letter to members in January with guidelines for treating thyroid abnormalities. In 2001 Yamashita co-authored a study that found normal children in Nagasaki to have 0 percent nodules and 0.8 percent cysts.
The introduction of the letter, written by Fukushima Voice, states that the results in Fukushima show a "much faster progression compared to Chernobyl" as research done around Chernobyl showed the rate of thyroid nodules in children 5 to 10 years after the accident to be 1.74 percent.
In March 2011 a massive earthquake triggered a tsunami that led to series of nuclear meltdowns and releases of radioactive materials at the Fukushima Nuclear Power Plant, leading to the largest nuclear disaster since Chernobyl in 1986.
The introduction of the letter notes that Australian pediatrician Helen Caldicott said that is "not at all normal for children to have thyroid nodules or cysts" and that "early appearance of thyroid abnormalities, less than one year, meant the children received a very high dose of radiation."
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 Usrename » Thu Jul 19, 2012 10:51 pm

CONFIRMED: 36 Percent Of Fukushima Kids Have Abnormal Thyroid Growths And Doctors Have Been Left In The Dark

A few days ago we reported that 36 percent of Fukushima children have abnormal thyroid growths likely from radiation exposure, based on the "Fukushima Prefecture Health Management Survey."

...

When asked why these results haven't been widely reported, Calidcott noted that Japanese officials are not sharing ultrasound results with foremost experts of thyroid nodules in children and accused the media of "practicing psychic numbing," saying that she doesn't understand why media outlets are choosing to ignore the nuclear fallout.

...

The New York Academy of Sciences estimates that nearly one million people around the world have died from exposure to radiation released by the 1986 nuclear disaster at the Chernobyl reactor.


Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/fukushim ... z217xrDdGI
one if by land, two if by sea..
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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby StarmanSkye » Sat Jul 21, 2012 6:52 pm

http://www.fairewinds.com/content/pacif ... -fairewi...

Background Briefing's Ian Masters hosts Arnie Gundersen of Fairewinds Energy Education for a discussion regarding the independent commission finding that Fukushima Daiichi triple meltdowns were a man-made catastrophe. The parliamentary commission's independent report released July 5, 2012 alerts the world to the fact that these accidents were preventable and not an act of nature. Arnie Gundersen discusses how instead of learning from the Japanese disasters, the U.S. nuclear industry had the head of the NRC forced out for trying to increase safety measures in U.S. nuclear power plants with identical reactors and similar vulnerabilities as the stricken Fukushima Daiichi power plant.

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

________________________________________

How are the activities of those who design and operate nuclear reactors as well as nuclear storage facilities in any way private? How are the operations of companies extracting oil from, say, the Gulf of Mexico or the Tar Sands of Alberta, in any way private? What is private about the assaults on ecology and public health that have been shown to occur regularly and on a massive scale in the industrial transformation of matter into energy? Who is supposed to pay for the clean up when supposedly-private corporations mess up? Who is to be held liable in societies where the for-profit corporations have been legally structured around the concept of limited liability?
Dr. Anthony J. Hall: From Hiroshima to Fukushima, 1945-2011
http://www.veteranstoday.com/2011/03/28 ... 1945-2011/

"NEI's Mission: The Nuclear Energy Institute (NEI) is the POLICY organization of the nuclear energy and technologies industry and participates in both the NATIONAL AND GLOBAL POLICY-MAKING PROCESS.
NEI's objective is to ENSURE the formation of POLICIES THAT PROMOTE the beneficial uses of nuclear energy and technologies in the United States and around the world."
(emphasis supplied)
http://www.nei.org/aboutnei/


Lessons Not Learned From Fukushima Daiichi (Pacifica Radio Host Ian Masters & A. Gundersen)
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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby jfshade » Tue Jul 24, 2012 3:26 pm

TEPCO subcontractor tried to underreport workers' radiation exposure

Image
FILE - In this Nov. 12, 2011 file photo, workers in protective suits and masks wait to enter the emergency operation center at the crippled Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power station in Okuma, Japan. Japanese labor officials said Sunday, July 22, 2012 that they are investigating subcontractors on suspicion they forced workers at the tsunami-hit nuclear plant to underreport their dosimeter readings so they could stay on the job longer. (AP Photo/David Guttenfelder, Pool, File)

By Mari Yamaguchi
Associated Press / July 22, 2012


TOKYO—Japanese authorities are investigating subcontractors on suspicion that they forced workers at the tsunami-hit nuclear plant to underreport the amount of radiation they were exposed to so they could stay on the job longer.

Labor officials said Sunday that an investigation had begun over the weekend following media reports of a cover-up at the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant, which suffered multiple meltdowns following the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami disasters.

A subcontractor of plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Co., or TEPCO, acknowledged having nine workers cover their dosimeters with lead plates late last year so the instrument would indicate a lower level of radiation exposure.

The investigation marks the first time the government has looked into the case, believed to be part of a widespread practice at the plant since it was hit by the worst atomic crisis since Chernobyl.

The government more than doubled the emergency radiation exposure limit soon after the accident, but lowered it back to the previous level in December. The law now sets the exposure limit at 50 millisieverts per year, or a five-year total of 100 millisieverts.

Dosimeter readings are crucial personal records that determine how much longer a worker can stay on a plant job. Work at highly contaminated areas could quickly eat up a worker's quota.

The issue reflects a growing concern among the government and TEPCO about how to secure a continuous flow of workers to finish cleaning up the plant. Officials say it will take about 40 years to decommission the plant's four wrecked reactors -- three with melted cores and another with a spent fuel pool in a shattered building.

Labor officials made onsite inspections at the Fukushima plant to examine dosimeter readings of the workers and other records, said Yasuhiro Kishi, an official at the Fukushima Labor Bureau.

Health and Labor Ministry officials repeatedly issued warnings to TEPCO during the first few months of the crisis about the company's lax oversight of workers' exposures. Officials have also said TEPCO had several workers share a dosimeter not just early in the crisis when the equipment was in short supply due to tsunami damage, but even after a full stock had been regained.

Takashi Wada, president of Fukushima-based subcontractor Build-Up, acknowledged this weekend that the dosimeter falsification had taken place. He said a supervisor of the group of nine workers came up with the idea when his dosimeter alarm went off during his short preview visit to the area where the workers were assigned.

"We should have never done that," Wada told an interview with TBS network broadcast Saturday.
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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby hanshan » Fri Jul 27, 2012 11:20 am

...

for those in BC this may already be common knowledge




http://tinyurl.com/d4w8gbt


Title: Issue 2326
Source: The Georgia Straight (Vancouver)
Date: Jul 19, 2012

h/t Jukka Tuisku

Cover: Nuclear Fishin’ — High radiation levels in some Pacific seafood concerns university doctors

Read the article here: Lead scientist surprised by Japan data: Fukushima plant still leaking radiation into ocean?

http://www.straight.com/article-735051/vancouver/japans-irradiated-fish-worry-bc-experts

Title: Post-Fukushima, Japan’s irradiated fish worry B.C. experts
Source: Vancouver Free Press
Author: Alex Roslin
Date: July 19, 2012

[...]

The numbers show that far from dissipating with time, as government officials and scientists in Canada and elsewhere claimed they would, levels of radiation from Fukushima have stayed stubbornly high in fish. In June 2012, the average contaminated fish catch had 65 becquerels of cesium per kilo. That’s much higher than the average of five Bq/kg found in the days after the accident back in March 2011, before cesium from Fukushima had spread widely through the region’s food chain.

In some species, radiation levels are actually higher this year than last.

[...]

The Canadian Food Inspection Agency [...] spokesperson Lisa Gauthier refused to make someone available to answer questions on fish monitoring.

[...]

Physician Tim Takaro

Burnaby MD Tim Takaro says he now avoids eating fish from the vicinity of Japan. “I would find another source for fish if I thought it was from that area,” said Takaro, an associate professor in Simon Fraser University’s faculty of health sciences.

“There are way too many questions and not enough answers to say everything is fine,” Takaro said in a phone interview.

Physician Erica Frank

A Canada Research Chair in UBC’s faculty of medicine and a past president of the Nobel Prize–winning U.S. group Physicians for Social Responsibility, another signatory of the statement—said she also avoids eating fish from Japan.

“I think it’s important to ask purveyors of Pacific food where it comes from,” she said.

[...]

It all leaves Vancouver doctor Frank bewildered by the government response here.

“It struck me as such a poor public-health decision not to monitor. This requires urgent action, but it just doesn’t seem to register on anyone’s radar,” she said.


Frank is now writing a book about the struggle to get authorities to monitor fish after Fukushima. She said she thinks of it as a murder mystery. “There are no bodies, but as a specialist in preventive medicine, I worry about increased mortality from the fish,” she said.

Stony Brook University’s Nicholas Fisher

Nicholas Fisher is one of the few U.S. scientists studying Fukushima’s impacts on migratory fish in the Pacific.

Fisher said he was surprised when told about the high cesium levels in the Japanese fisheries data. It makes him leery of eating fish from Japanese waters, he said.

“Those are high numbers. It would give me pause if I were eating fish in Japan.…Imported fish are also a concern,” said Fisher, a marine-sciences professor at New York’s Stony Brook University. Fisher added in a phone interview that the persistently high cesium numbers may be a sign that the Fukushima plant is still leaking radiation into the ocean.


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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby hanshan » Fri Jul 27, 2012 12:17 pm

...

Tokyo should have been immediately evacuated last March. At the time,
the fellow in charge couldn't make his mind. Ummm
(Of course, this presents a geographical conundrum...)

It seems probable reactor core #3 did indeed explode.

http://tinyurl.com/covelkn

‘Quite Something’: Extremely radioactive sample from Tokyo air filter —
150 times more uranium than expected — “This is from Fukushima” -Busby
(VIDEO)


Title: Dr Chris Busby: radioactivity in apartment in central Tokyo
Uploaded by: drdrwoland
Date: July 25, 2012

Apartment on 20th floor located 300 meters from the Tokyo Tower
A gamma spectrum of the sample scraped from the filter
According to the sample information at the bottom of the spectrum:
Taken June 15, 2012
Collected June 18, 2012
At 4:45 in

So what we can say about this sample is that its extremely radioactive… It contains high levels of uranium and lead-210 and cesium-137.

All substances which are inside an apartment on the 20th floor of a block 300 meters from the Tokyo Tower. Isn’t that quite something? It’s quite something.

Rhodium-102 this is a fission product from Fukushima.

There’s far too much uranium there, there’s about 3,000 becquerels per kilogram. There should be about 20.

So this is from Fukushima as well.

Which means there’s particles of Uranium floating around in Central Tokyo.

Scary stuff. Scary stuff.

It’d be interesting to know what the radiation health specialists think about these findings.


...
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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby Nordic » Mon Sep 03, 2012 3:25 am

http://enenews.com/tepco-releases-badly ... it-4-photo

Must See: Tepco releases badly altered image of Fukushima Unit 4 (PHOTO)

Image

Image
"He who wounds the ecosphere literally wounds God" -- Philip K. Dick
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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby hanshan » Mon Sep 03, 2012 12:35 pm

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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby StarmanSkye » Mon Sep 03, 2012 2:02 pm

:wallhead:
God those ruined reactor pictures are scary. Like looking at the den of Hell.

The degree of contamination by everything on this site is mind-numbing. I can't even imagine how freaky it would be working there. Apparently the reactors 1-4 are ALL incredibly radioactive, with the steam turbine bldgs ALONE showing up to one million fissions per second. The site is releasing a billion becquerals per day, thats a billion bilion fissions per second. All of the electrical connections are leaking as the rubber seals aren't designed for the heat and salt-water contamination. What a monumental FUBAR.

Latest update with Dr. Caldicot interviewing Arnie Gunderson discussing the problems TEPCO is trying to deal with, beginning with building a superstructure on top of the Unit 4 Reactor bldg, in which the top 2 floors have been removed to the operating floor, from 100 feet now to 60 feet, a flat working area that they can build-up to place a huge crane on that they can use to begin transfering fuel bundles into (under-water) a transfer cask to move it into improved storage. It will take 18 months to get the crane READY to transfer 600 tons of fuel bundles out of the damaged fuel pool.
Arnie: "They're very slow." First they have to reinforce the landward wall so they can begin building the building, which will take a year. There are about 9400 tons of dangerous used fuel they have to secure. The likely health consequences for the Japanese people are incalculable. 38,000 childrebn tested for thyroid abnormalities from radioactive iodine found 36% with tumorous nodules. This is 18 months post-incidence, whereas at Chernobyl children didn't develop nodules until about 3 years -- so the Fuku dose must have been immense. The ordinary rate in the population is about 1%. Also, large quantities of uranium gas is being found in Tokyo. Man, talk about an apocalyptic scenario ...

Hospitals are witholding test results so no accurate conclusions can be made. But that's industry-wide influence of the nuke lobby that is consistently underreporting exposure releases, dosage, numbers affected. Scientists who do so are protecting the interests of the political & financial state ahead of the population of people. That unfortunately is a growing trend even in the US, Australia & Europe -- through most of the world in fact.

Too much.

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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby hanshan » Mon Sep 03, 2012 3:37 pm

...

Hospitals are witholding test results so no accurate conclusions can be made. But that's industry-wide influence of the nuke lobby that is consistently underreporting exposure releases, dosage, numbers affected. Scientists who do so are protecting the interests of the political & financial state ahead of the population of people. That unfortunately is a growing trend even in the US, Australia & Europe -- through most of the world in fact


It's not a growing trend - it's SOP

...large quantities of uranium gas is being found in Tokyo


Japan... is just a dream...
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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby Nordic » Tue Sep 04, 2012 1:00 pm

I'm sure those helicopters flying all around San Francisco a few days ago had nothing to do with Fukishima.
"He who wounds the ecosphere literally wounds God" -- Philip K. Dick
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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby seemslikeadream » Mon Sep 10, 2012 10:26 am

Global help urged to avert reactor 4 pool fire
U.S. expert appalled by Tepco's attitude over 'sleeping dragon' risk

By ERIC JOHNSTON
Staff writer
KYOTO — The risk of a fire starting in reactor 4's spent-fuel pool at the Fukushima No. 1 plant continues to alarm scientists and government officials around the world, prompting a leading U.S. nuclear expert to urge Japan to tap global expertise to avert a catastrophe.

Go global: U.S. nuclear expert and opponent Arnie Gundersen addresses an audience Monday in Kyoto, after traveling to Japan to meet with Diet members and citizens' groups over conditions at the Fukushima No. 1 power plant. MICAH GAMPEL
Arnie Gundersen, a nuclear engineer and former executive in the nuclear power industry who is now one of its foremost critics in the United States, has been monitoring the No. 1 plant since the March 2011 triple meltdowns through his Vermont-based Fairewinds Energy Education nonprofit organization.

During a trip to Japan in late August and early September, Gundersen met with Diet members, lawyers and citizens' groups to discuss conditions at the wrecked power station and told an audience in Kyoto on Monday that fears over the spent-fuel pool in reactor 4 remain high.

"The spent-nuclear-fuel pool at Fukushima No. 1's unit 4 remains a sleeping dragon. The situation and possibility of a fuel pool fire in reactor 4 in the days (immediately) after the (March 2011) quake was the reason the U.S. government recommended that the evacuation zone be (set at) 80 km," said Gundersen, who served as an expert witness during the federal investigation into the 1979 Three Mile Island disaster in Pennsylvania.

This evacuation recommendation was based on studies the U.S. conducted more than a decade earlier at New York's Brookhaven National Laboratory, which is owned by the U.S. Department of Energy and researches atomic energy.

"In 1997, the laboratory did a study showing that if a nuclear-fuel pool were to boil dry, it would release enough radiation to cause the permanent evacuation of those living within an 80 km radius (of the complex).

"The Fukushima plant's reactor 4 (pool) has 1,500 fuel bundles. That's more cesium than was released into the atmosphere from all of the nuclear bombs ever exploded, (which total) more than 700 over a period of 30 years. That's also why the U.S. recommended an evacuation with an 80 km radius," Gundersen explained.

But even today, concerns persist among experts worldwide that reactor 4's pool is still at risk of boiling dry. If this were to occur, it would necessitate a massive and immediate evacuation of the surrounding area.

Nuclear fuel rods are extremely thin and clad with zircaloy, a zirconium alloy that contains a tiny amount of tin and other metals. But zircaloy burns if it is exposed to air, as shown in a test conducted at the Sandia National Laboratory in New Mexico just two weeks before the Great East Japan Earthquake devastated the Tohoku region.

The facility is wholly owned by Sandia Corp., a subsidiary of Lockheed Martin Corp., and undertakes research for the Department of Energy's National Nuclear Security Administration.

"Last week, I showed slides of the Sandia lab experiments to some Diet members. Afterward, Tokyo Electric Power Co. officials presented their plan to empty the nuclear fuel from the reactor pool," Gundersen said.

"I told Tepco that while I realized they hoped and believed that there will always be water in the nuclear fuel pool, I had to ask whether or not they had (already prepared and stationed) any chemicals to put out a nuclear fuel pool fire in the event they were wrong.

"Tepco's response was that there was nothing in the fuel pool that could burn, a statement I find appalling."

In July, Tepco announced it had removed two unused nuclear fuel assemblies from reactor 4's pool, the first of more than 1,500 that will have to be retrieved. If everything goes according to plan, the utility will begin extracting the remaining assemblies, used to store spent fuel rods, from December 2013 and complete the task within three years.

But the state of the fuel pool and the lack of preparations to deal with a possible fire has drawn intense criticism not just from experts like Gundersen but also from some senior officials in the U.S.

Sen. Ron Wyden, a member of the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources who visited Fukushima Prefecture in April, sent a letter to Japan's ambassador in Washington upon his return urging Tokyo to tap the expertise and knowhow of the United States and other countries to complete the cleanup work more quickly.

"Tepco's Dec. 21 remediation road map proposes to take up to 10 years to complete spent-fuel removal from all of the pools on the (Fukushima No. 1) site," Wyden wrote.

"Given the compromised nature of these structures due to the events of March 11, this schedule carries extraordinary and continuing risk if further severe seismic events were to occur.

"Many nations possess expertise in nuclear energy technology and its full breadth should be made available to Japan in dealing with" the Fukushima disaster, the letter said.

Later that month, 72 domestic antinuclear groups, along with former Ambassador to Switzerland Mitsuhei Murata and ex-U.N. diplomat Akio Matsumura, called on the United Nations to establish a nuclear security summit to specifically focus on the spent-fuel pool at reactor 4 and to also establish an independent assessment team to investigate the matter.

However, Gundersen said he is still awaiting signs from the Japanese government or Tepco officials indicating they're ready to canvass a broad range of experts around the world over how best to deal with not only the unit 4 situation, but the larger question of what to do with the Fukushima No. 1 plant.

"Japan's Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency and Tepco claim they are getting outside expertise from the International Atomic Energy Agency, but Article II of the IAEA's charter states its mission is to promote nuclear power. There is a real need for experts who think outside the box," Gundersen said.
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 » Mon Sep 10, 2012 11:18 am

"Tepco's response was that there was nothing in the fuel pool that could burn ... ".

Now THAT's chilling. Famous last words?
Honest to Christ, is THIS the kinda deluionary What-Me-Worry? head-up-ass arrogance is all that stands between the world and an out-of-control 20X Chernobyl-size nuclear living-hell nightmare "Real World -- Not Exercise!" extinction event?
Talk about the Mother of all Dirty Bombs!
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