Author Topic: Earthquake Japan  (Read 57398 times)

Offline mercury

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Re: Earthquake Japan
« Reply #2280 on: August 10, 2011, 10:57:05 AM »
Ah, should read the things I post properly...

No pressure no pressure  ;) ;D

Certainly not meant to  :wave

Offline RojoLeón

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Re: Earthquake Japan
« Reply #2281 on: August 10, 2011, 08:17:52 PM »


I guess the problem with a lot of the data is that, in the case of the reactor units, we can't go in due to fatally high levels of radiation being emitted. We can only get so close and therefore must make educated estimates. The other issue is the accuracy of the data being released.
Tepco have demonstrated their untrustworthyness and, the timing of their info releases compared to examples of subsequent discovery of non-disclosure make it hard to get an accurate picture.

As regards dealing with water bourn contamination (like aqueous cesium salts), there are methods for doing so: as suggested, removing layers of topsoil will catch a lot of it. Some will be carried down with water flow, beyond the reach of such measures. Pumping wells can be used to extract the goundwater in those affected regions with injection wells providing clean water to maintain the water balance. Is an expensive and long drawn out process: It's used to clean pollution spills of a variety of different types. Amongst other things, reverse osmosis membranes can then be used to filter out the contamination from the water.
Water flows underground. Typically, a cubic foot of water might move 1-10 ft per day through an unconfined, gravel aquifer. Some will move towards watersheds (lakes or river systems). This flow data (along with the characteristics and composition of the groundwater systems) will be on public record with the relevant water authority.

For my part, a lot of the problem is that the agencies in charge of regulation are in bed with the industry itself. I'm not sure there is a perfect world where there aren't any vested interests but it makes the picture opaque (as you say) when they are seen to be covering previous breaches in safety and the government is moving the goalposts to increase 'safe' exposure limits. It's all for money: protect investment and protect against legal liability.

(edit to fix, copy - paste mess)
« Last Edit: August 11, 2011, 06:58:36 PM by RojoLeón »
We arranged civilization in which most crucial elements profoundly depend on science and technology We also arranged things so that almost no one understands science and technology This is a recipe for disaster We might get away with it for a while but sooner or later this combustible mix of ignorance and power is going to blow up in our faces CSgn

Offline RojoLeón

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Re: Earthquake Japan
« Reply #2282 on: September 28, 2011, 01:24:56 AM »
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-09-26/fukushima-desolation-worst-since-nagasaki-as-population-flees.html

Fukushima Desolation Worst Since Nagasaki as Population Flees From Fallout

Beyond the police roadblocks that mark the no-go zone around Japan’s wrecked Fukushima nuclear plant, six-foot tall weeds invade rice paddies and vines gone wild strangle road signs along empty streets.

Takako Harada, 80, returned to an evacuated area of Iitate village to retrieve her car. Beside her house is an empty cattle pen, the 100 cows slaughtered on government order after radiation from the March 11 atomic disaster saturated the area, forcing 160,000 people to move away and leaving some places uninhabitable for two decades or more.

“Older folks want to return, but the young worry about radiation,” said Harada, whose family ran the farm for 40 years. “I want to farm, but will we be able to sell anything?”

What’s emerging in Japan six months since the nuclear meltdown at the Tokyo Electric Power Co. plant is a radioactive zone bigger than that left by the 1945 atomic bombings at Hiroshima and Nagasaki. While nature reclaims the 20 kilometer (12 mile) no-go zone, Fukushima’s $3.2 billion-a-year farm industry is being devastated and tourists that hiked the prefecture’s mountains and surfed off its beaches have all but vanished.

The March earthquake and tsunami that caused the nuclear crisis and left almost 20,000 people dead or missing may cost 17 trillion yen ($223 billion), hindering recovery of the world’s third-largest economy from two decades of stagnation.
Compensation Costs

A government panel investigating Tokyo Electric’s finances estimated the cost of compensation to people affected by the nuclear disaster will exceed 4 trillion yen, Kyodo News reported today, without saying how it got the information. The stock fell 6.2 percent to 243 yen, the lowest since June 13.

The bulk of radioactive contamination cuts a 5 kilometer to 10 kilometer-wide swath of land running as far as 30 kilometers northwest of the nuclear plant, surveys of radiation hotspots by Japan’s science ministry show. The government extended evacuations beyond the 20-kilometer zone in April to cover this corridor, which includes parts of Iitate village.

No formal evacuation zone was set up in Hiroshima after an atomic bomb was dropped on the city on Aug. 6, 1945, though as the city rebuilt relatively few people lived within 1 kilometer of the blast epicenter, according to the Hiroshima Atomic Bomb Museum. Food shortages forced a partial evacuation of the city in the summer of 1946.
Chernobyl Explosion

On April 26, 1986, an explosion at the Chernobyl reactor hurled 180 metric tons of nuclear fuel into the atmosphere, creating the world’s first exclusion zone of 30 kilometers around a nuclear plant. A quarter of a century later, the zone is still classed as uninhabitable. About 300 residents have returned despite government restrictions.

The government last week said some restrictions may be lifted in outlying areas of the evacuation zone in Fukushima, which translates from Japanese as “Lucky Isle.” Residents seeking answers on which areas are safe complain of mixed messages.

“There are no simple solutions,” Timothy Mousseau, a professor of biological sciences at the University of South Carolina, said. Deciding whether life should go on in radiation tainted areas is a “question of acceptable risks and trade offs.”

To Mousseau, one thing is clear.
‘Consequences’

“There will be consequences for some of the people who are exposed to levels that are being reported from the Fukushima prefecture,” Mousseau said by e-mail from Chernobyl, where he is studying radiation effects.

Japan abandoned any ambition to develop atomic weapons after the 1945 bombings. Two decades later, the nation embraced nuclear power to rebuild the economy after the war in the absence of domestic oil and gas supplies.

Tokyo Electric’s decision in the 1960s to name its atomic plant Fukushima Dai-Ichi has today associated a prefecture of about 2 million people that’s almost half the size of Belgium with radiation contamination. In contrast, Chernobyl is the name of a small town near the namesake plant in what today is Ukraine.

The entire prefecture has been stained because of the link, according to Governor Yuhei Sato.

“At Fukushima airport you don’t see Chinese and Korean visitors like before because of negative associations,” he said.
Stigmatized

The fear of radiation was prevalent after the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings and it stigmatized the survivors, known as hibakusha, or people exposed to radiation. Many hibakusha concealed their past for fear of discrimination that would prevent them finding work or marriage partners, according to the Japan Confederation of A-and H-bomb Sufferers Organization.

Some people believed A-bomb survivors could emit radiation and others feared radiation caused genetic mutations, said Evan Douple, Associate Chief of Research at the Radiation Effects Research Foundation in Hiroshima.

An examination of more than 77,000 first-generation children in Hiroshima and Nagasaki after the bombings found no evidence of mutations, he said.

While radiation readings are lower in Fukushima than Hiroshima, Abel Gonzales, the vice-chair of the International Commission on Radiological Protection, said similar prejudices may emerge.

“Stigma. I have the feeling that in Fukushima this will be a very big problem,” Gonzales said in a symposium held in Fukushima City on the six-month anniversary of the disaster.
Bullying

Some children that fled Fukushima are finding out what Gonzales means.

Fukushima schoolchildren were being bullied at their new school in Chiba prefecture near Tokyo for “carrying radiation,” the Sankei newspaper reported in April, citing complaints made to education authorities. An 11-year-old Fukushima boy was hospitalized in Niigata prefecture after being bullied at his new school, Kyodo News reported April 23.

Produce from Fukushima’s rich soil is also being shunned. Peaches, the prefecture’s biggest agricultural product after rice, have halved in price this year. Beef shipments from the prefecture were temporarily suspended and contamination concerns stopped the town of Minami Soma from planting rice, according to local authorities.
Fallow Land

Some land around the Fukushima reactors will lie fallow for two decades or more before radiation levels fall below Japan’s criteria for evacuation, the government said Aug. 26.

Radiation risks in the 20 kilometer zone forced the evacuation of about 8 percent, or 160,000, of some 2 million people who live in Fukushima. Almost 56,000 were sent to areas outside Fukushima, prefecture spokesman Masato Abe said by phone. More than 8,000 left on their own accord because of radiation fears, Abe said.

Inside the evacuation areas, levels of radiation higher than the government’s criteria for evacuation have been recorded at 89 of 210 monitoring posts. At 24 of the sites, the reading was higher than the level at which the International Atomic Energy Agency says increases the risk of cancer.

Japan Atomic Energy Institute researcher Toshimitsu Homma used Science Ministry data to compare the geographic scale of the contamination in Fukushima with Chernobyl.

He estimates the no-go zone in Fukushima will cover 132 square kilometers, surrounded by a permanent monitoring area of 264 square kilometers, assuming Japan follows the criteria set by the Soviet Union in 1986.

The two areas combined equal about half the size of the five boroughs that comprise New York City. In the case of Chernobyl, the two zones cover a land mass 25 times greater, according to Homma’s figures.
Intermittent Information

While scientists knew back in March that radiation contamination would create an uninhabitable zone in Fukushima, information to the public has come intermittently, said Hiroaki Koide, a nuclear physics scientist at Kyoto University.

“Many people in Fukushima have to face the reality that they cannot go back to their homes for decades,” Koide said.

Masaki Otsuka said it may be worse than that.

“I don’t think I can ever go back to my house, because it was just 4 kilometers from the Dai-Ichi reactors,” the 51-year- old pipe welder said in an interview at an evacuation center in Azuma, Fukushima city, where he has lived for six months.

People’s distrust of politicians and scientists, as well as conflicting commentary, makes it harder for residents to decide whether to stay or leave, said Michiaki Kai, a professor in environmental health science at Oita University of Nursing and Health Sciences.
Official Contradictions

Similar circumstances affected residents near Chernobyl and those close to the nuclear accident at Three Mile Island in the U.S. in 1979.

“Contradiction in some official statements, and the appearance of non-scientifically based ‘expert’ voices, confused and added stress to the local populations in each case,” said Evelyn Bromet, distinguished professor in the department of psychiatry at Stony Brook State University of New York.

“Lies got told, contradictions got told. In the end it’s easier to believe nobody,” Bromet said in an interview, citing mental health studies she did on people in the areas.

What radiation hasn’t ruined, the earthquake and tsunami devastated. Fukushima prefecture welcomed 56 million domestic and overseas visitors in 2009, equal to 44 percent of Japan’s population.
Surfing Canceled

The coastal town of Minami Soma this year canceled its annual qualifying stage for the world surfing championship, part of a waterfront that lured 84,000 beachgoers in July and August last year, said Hiroshi Tadano, head of the town’s economic division. This year, nobody visited the beaches in the two months.

“Most of the beaches are destroyed,” Tadano said. “And of course, radiation played its part.”

The area’s biggest festival, Soma Noma Oi, a re-enactment of samurai battles, attracted 200,000 visitors last year. This year 37,000 came. Of the 300 horses typically used in the event, 100 were drowned in the tsunami and another 100 were evacuated due to radiation, Tajino said.

Minami Soma resident Miyaguchi, 54, lost his home and parents in the tsunami. He quit his job at Tokyo Electric, leaving him unemployed and housed in an evacuation center.

Still, he has no plans to move away. “Most people who wanted to move away have done so, but I can’t live in big cities like Tokyo,” he said, declining to give his first name.

The future of Fukushima is in the hands of residents like Miyaguchi and Harada who say they want to stay and work to reclaim their land from disaster.

A giant banner in the playground of the closed Haramachi elementary school in Minami Soma makes that a promise: “To all of you wherever you are, we say we won’t give up.”
We arranged civilization in which most crucial elements profoundly depend on science and technology We also arranged things so that almost no one understands science and technology This is a recipe for disaster We might get away with it for a while but sooner or later this combustible mix of ignorance and power is going to blow up in our faces CSgn

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Re: Earthquake Japan
« Reply #2283 on: November 2, 2011, 05:55:28 PM »
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/15550270

Xenon discovered in filter at Fukushima ..... New worrying development which suggests that all is not well in at least one of the reactors..

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Offline RojoLeón

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Re: Earthquake Japan
« Reply #2284 on: November 2, 2011, 07:34:20 PM »
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/15550270

Xenon discovered in filter at Fukushima ..... New worrying development which suggests that all is not well in at least one of the reactors..

Tepco Detects Nuclear Fission at Fukushima Dai-Ichi Station

http://news.businessweek.com/article.asp?documentKey=1376-LU10Q56KLVS101-25B42PBBAAGTL9H5JPAVA41NPT

 Nov. 2 (Bloomberg) -- Tokyo Electric Power Co. detected signs of nuclear fission at its crippled Fukushima atomic power plant, raising the risk of increased radiation emissions. No increase in radiation was found at the site and the situation is under control, officials said.

The company, known as Tepco, began spraying boric acid on the No. 2 reactor at 2:48 a.m. Japan time to prevent accidental chain reactions, according to an e-mailed statement today. The detection of xenon, which is associated with nuclear fission, was confirmed today by the Japan Atomic Energy Agency, the country's atomic regulator said.

“Given the signs, it's certain that fission is occurring,” Junichi Matsumoto, a general manager at Tepco who regularly talks to the media, told reporters in Tokyo today. There's been no large-scale or sustained criticality and no increase in radiation, he said.

Fission taking place in the reactor can lead to increases in radiation emissions and raises concerns about further leaks after another radioactive hot spot was discovered in Tokyo on Oct. 29. It's possible there are similar reactions occurring in the No. 1 and No. 3 reactors, the other cores damaged at the station, Matsumoto said.

“Melted fuel in the No. 2 reactor may have undergone a sustained process of nuclear fission or re-criticality,” Tetsuo Ito, the head of Kinki University's Atomic Energy Research Institute, said by phone. “The nuclear fission should be containable by injecting boron into the reactor to absorb neutrons.”

Loss of Cooling

Trade and Industry Minister Yukio Edano delivered a warning to Hiroyuki Fukano, the head of the Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency, because the information on the discovery of xenon wasn't passed to the prime minister's office in a timely manner, Chief Cabinet Secretary Osamu Fujimura told reporters today.

Shares of Tepco declined 2.6 percent to close at 302 yen on the Tokyo Stock Exchange. They've fallen 86 percent since the disaster. The benchmark Nikkei 225 Stock Average was down 2.2 percent.

Eight months after the March 11 earthquake and tsunami wrecked the Fukushima Dai-Ichi plant, causing a loss of cooling and the meltdowns of three reactors, Tepco is trying to prevent further leakage of radiation that has spread across the world.

The incident, the worst atomic disaster since Chernobyl in 1986, was responsible for the biggest discharge of radioactive material into the ocean in history, according to a study from a French nuclear safety institute.

Evaluating Reactions

“We are evaluating whether there are many reactions or not or whether its stopped,” Matsumoto said. The incident won't affect its schedule of bringing the plant under control by the end of this year, Matsumoto said.

Yasuhiro Sonoda, a member of the ruling Democratic Party of Japan, on Oct. 31 drank a glass of filtered water from the Fukushima plant to demonstrate the situation is being brought under control.

Sonoda denied reporters' claims it was a publicity stunt. “I drank it because there shouldn't be any concerns about the water,” he said. “I didn't intend to say it's completely safe by drinking it.”

No significant changes in temperatures and pressures of the reactor and radiation levels at the site have been detected, said Hiroyuki Usami, a spokesman for Tepco.

Reactor Readings

The temperature of the bottom of the No. 2 reactor pressure vessel was 76 degrees Celsius (167 Fahrenheit) at 5 a.m. today, compared with 77.4 degrees a day earlier and 77.5 degrees two days ago, according to Tepco's data. Radiation levels taken near the west gate of the plant have been stable at about 11 microsieverts per hour for the past few days, the data shows

Should fissioning have occurred the injection of boron will have stopped it, said Tadashi Narabayashi, a former reactor safety researcher at Toshiba Corp. and now a nuclear engineering professor at Hokkaido University.

Fissioning involves the splitting of atoms, which, in the case of certain uranium isotopes, can lead to an uncontrolled reaction and emittance of radiation.

Tepco and the government have said they are on track to bring the damaged reactors into a safe state known as cold shutdown by the end of the year.

Nuclear fission would be taking place in a “very restricted part” of the reactor, said Koganeya. The regulator believes fuel accumulated at the bottom of the pressure vessel and containment vessel is unlikely to start melting again, he said.

Damaged Reactors

Fukushima sustained major damage at four of its six reactor buildings at the Dai-Ichi plant, including the three core meltdowns and possible damage to a spent fuel pool.

The radioactive cesium that flowed into the sea from the plant was 20 times the amount estimated by Tepco, according to the Institute for Radiological Protection and Nuclear Safety, which is funded by the French government.

The oceanic study estimates 27,000 terabecquerels of radioactive cesium 137 leaked into the sea from the plant. The

Fukushima station may have emitted more than twice the amount of radiation than estimated by the Japanese government at the height of the Fukushima accident, according to another study by the Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics journal.


Tepco has declined to comment on both studies.

Fucks sake  :(
We arranged civilization in which most crucial elements profoundly depend on science and technology We also arranged things so that almost no one understands science and technology This is a recipe for disaster We might get away with it for a while but sooner or later this combustible mix of ignorance and power is going to blow up in our faces CSgn

Offline redbyrdz

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Re: Earthquake Japan
« Reply #2285 on: November 2, 2011, 09:29:12 PM »
hmmm.... don't like the sound of that. So the reactor has become critical again? I thought they had soaked it in boric acid before anyway. Where has it gone?
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Offline farawayred

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Re: Earthquake Japan
« Reply #2286 on: November 3, 2011, 04:05:16 PM »
This is not really unexpected. Melted fractions of the core will clump together and a chain reaction can start at any time for many years, and they know it:
Nuclear fission would be taking place in a “very restricted part” of the reactor, said Koganeya. The regulator believes fuel accumulated at the bottom of the pressure vessel and containment vessel is unlikely to start melting again, he said.

After a partial meltdown, the reactor is treated as a 'black box', no one really knows what fraction has melted and what shape the melt has. The shape is important for containing the chain reaction - flatter shape makes it more controllable, rounder shape - less so. It is also unclear whether spraying boric acid will help at all. It definitely helps to suffocate the chain reaction by absorbing the extra neutrons in a reactor that hasn't melted, but whether it can penetrate the melted pockets is anyone's guess. Xenon is e definite chain reaction indicator, but Xe is a gas and can diffuse through porous fuel melts (which resembles pumice) and get out. The water with boric acid prevents the fission from growing, but it will stop it only if the water can reach the fissioning melt. And if it does, they have to pump in boric acid every once in a while for years.

As I said, that is not unexpected and is a manageable situation. (Considering Tepco's record, 'manageable' may be a scary word, but since the Government got involved their arm's been twisted to doing the right things.) There shouldn't be any effects to the outside world (meaning outside the site).



« Last Edit: November 3, 2011, 04:07:17 PM by farawayred »
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Offline MichaelA

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Re: Earthquake Japan
« Reply #2287 on: November 3, 2011, 11:19:07 PM »
Thanks for that clear and precise explanation farawayred. Yet again RAWK provides me with more detail than the BBC. :)
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Offline Mad Men

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Re: Earthquake Japan
« Reply #2288 on: November 7, 2011, 11:40:20 AM »
Faraway,

Would you say it's safe for tourist to visit Tokyo and the surrounding areas at this point in time?
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Offline penfold102

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Re: Earthquake Japan
« Reply #2289 on: November 7, 2011, 03:11:04 PM »
Faraway,

Would you say it's safe for tourist to visit Tokyo and the surrounding areas at this point in time?

I bloody hope so - I've just moved back to Tokyo
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Offline farawayred

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Re: Earthquake Japan
« Reply #2290 on: November 7, 2011, 04:12:50 PM »
Faraway,

Would you say it's safe for tourist to visit Tokyo and the surrounding areas at this point in time?
Regarding direct effects, yes, without a question. I would be cautious if you are going within 50 km or so of Fukushima and that depends on how the wind was blowing when the radiation was carried around. But I'm sure there are well established charts of the radiation contamination out there.

I can't answer about food contamination, because it depends on where the food comes from, what measures they take to clean it, and how closely it's monitored by the government. Penfold would be better suited to answer that, he's based there. My overall impression is that the government is doing a good job to control the radioactive contamination in the food.
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Offline farawayred

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Re: Earthquake Japan
« Reply #2291 on: November 7, 2011, 04:33:27 PM »
I bloody hope so - I've just moved back to Tokyo
Hi, mate, good to hear from you again on this thread!

I wanted to ask you a question in a PM, but I thought it's pertinent to this thread. I'm in the U.S. and here I came across interesting information about the Japanese government trying to beef up tourism after Fukushima. I didn't get the details, but my understanding is that there would be a drawing for free airfare tickets to Tokyo (all other expenses covered by the tourist) and the winners would be asked to write their experience on certain blog sites. Have you heard anything of that kind? If you have or if you come across in the future, would you please post the info in this thread? I'd love to try mu luck... Thanks in advance!

There is a Spacecraft Charging Technology conference in May down south in Kitakyushu, which I was planning to attend, but in this economy my chances are slim to none... Though I'll fight tooth and nail to go back to Japan, I love the country...
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Re: Earthquake Japan
« Reply #2292 on: November 12, 2011, 12:37:31 AM »
Hi, mate, good to hear from you again on this thread!

I wanted to ask you a question in a PM, but I thought it's pertinent to this thread. I'm in the U.S. and here I came across interesting information about the Japanese government trying to beef up tourism after Fukushima. I didn't get the details, but my understanding is that there would be a drawing for free airfare tickets to Tokyo (all other expenses covered by the tourist) and the winners would be asked to write their experience on certain blog sites. Have you heard anything of that kind? If you have or if you come across in the future, would you please post the info in this thread? I'd love to try mu luck... Thanks in advance!

There is a Spacecraft Charging Technology conference in May down south in Kitakyushu, which I was planning to attend, but in this economy my chances are slim to none... Though I'll fight tooth and nail to go back to Japan, I love the country...


http://www.jnto.go.jp/eng/

Keep an eye on this site for updates, the government are giving away 1000 free plane tickets for tourists next year.
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Re: Earthquake Japan
« Reply #2293 on: November 13, 2011, 03:10:06 PM »


http://www.jnto.go.jp/eng/

Keep an eye on this site for updates, the government are giving away 1000 free plane tickets for tourists next year.
The head count will be Interesting on the plane on the way back.
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Offline RojoLeón

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Re: Earthquake Japan
« Reply #2294 on: November 15, 2011, 07:23:07 AM »
Here's a couple of links with pics and a copy of an INPO report into Fukishima.

http://cryptome.org/0005/daiichi-inpo.pdf

http://cryptome.org/eyeball/daiichi-111211/daiichi-111211.htm

And a weird one about radioactive Iodine being deteted accross europe?

http://www.iaea.org/newscenter/pressreleases/2011/prn201124.html

Prob not Japan it's from
We arranged civilization in which most crucial elements profoundly depend on science and technology We also arranged things so that almost no one understands science and technology This is a recipe for disaster We might get away with it for a while but sooner or later this combustible mix of ignorance and power is going to blow up in our faces CSgn

Offline penfold102

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Re: Earthquake Japan
« Reply #2295 on: November 15, 2011, 03:56:22 PM »
Hi, mate, good to hear from you again on this thread!

I wanted to ask you a question in a PM, but I thought it's pertinent to this thread. I'm in the U.S. and here I came across interesting information about the Japanese government trying to beef up tourism after Fukushima. I didn't get the details, but my understanding is that there would be a drawing for free airfare tickets to Tokyo (all other expenses covered by the tourist) and the winners would be asked to write their experience on certain blog sites. Have you heard anything of that kind? If you have or if you come across in the future, would you please post the info in this thread? I'd love to try mu luck... Thanks in advance!

There is a Spacecraft Charging Technology conference in May down south in Kitakyushu, which I was planning to attend, but in this economy my chances are slim to none... Though I'll fight tooth and nail to go back to Japan, I love the country...

I saw the article for that in the Independent just before I moved back. I think it's one for those who want to travel about which is why the whole online blog thing is on there. I thought you were living here too?

Gotta say having got back to Japan there is very little info about Fukushima around Tokyo. I saw that they have opened the plant up to journalists on the BBC news site but that was the last thing I heard. I want to thank all the nuclear boffins on here who have kept me up to date on what's really going on. I was weighing up what was gonna be best for me but truth be told I missed this country so much that there was only going to be one decision. If anyone on here manages to get one of those free flights to Japan you are very welcome to stay at mine whilst in Tokyo - I'll even take you to a decent Liverpool bar on matchnight!!
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Offline Andy @ Allerton

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Re: Earthquake Japan
« Reply #2296 on: November 15, 2011, 04:26:08 PM »
I saw the article for that in the Independent just before I moved back. I think it's one for those who want to travel about which is why the whole online blog thing is on there. I thought you were living here too?

Gotta say having got back to Japan there is very little info about Fukushima around Tokyo. I saw that they have opened the plant up to journalists on the BBC news site but that was the last thing I heard. I want to thank all the nuclear boffins on here who have kept me up to date on what's really going on. I was weighing up what was gonna be best for me but truth be told I missed this country so much that there was only going to be one decision. If anyone on here manages to get one of those free flights to Japan you are very welcome to stay at mine whilst in Tokyo - I'll even take you to a decent Liverpool bar on matchnight!!

Nice one :)
Football has reached the ninth gate of farce and pathetic, unbelievable trite nonsense. It's supposed to be a game and it's turned into pantomime, hype, quilts and bellends.

Offline farawayred

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Re: Earthquake Japan
« Reply #2297 on: November 15, 2011, 08:26:58 PM »
I saw the article for that in the Independent just before I moved back. I think it's one for those who want to travel about which is why the whole online blog thing is on there. I thought you were living here too?

Gotta say having got back to Japan there is very little info about Fukushima around Tokyo. I saw that they have opened the plant up to journalists on the BBC news site but that was the last thing I heard. I want to thank all the nuclear boffins on here who have kept me up to date on what's really going on. I was weighing up what was gonna be best for me but truth be told I missed this country so much that there was only going to be one decision. If anyone on here manages to get one of those free flights to Japan you are very welcome to stay at mine whilst in Tokyo - I'll even take you to a decent Liverpool bar on matchnight!!
That's a great offer! If I ever find money to go the the conference in May I'll PM you with details, but it would be great if we have the chance to meet over a beer in a Liverpool bar, matchday or not... 

I just visited Japan, never lived there (I'm based in LA). I've been at a conference in Nagano and toured around with my family - Tokyo, Nikko, Kanazawa, Kyoto, Nara, Himeji, Hiroshima, Miyajima, and even did a shukubo at Mt. Koyasan. We all developed a soft spot for Japan and we also have a lot of colleagues and friends there. Perhaps it's very different when one lives there, but I loved everything about the country and its people. So I understand your decision to go back.
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Offline RojoLeón

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Re: Earthquake Japan
« Reply #2298 on: November 29, 2011, 05:51:23 PM »
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2011-11-22/japan-land-contaminated-by-radiation/3686324/?site=melbourne

Radiation covers 8pc of Japan

By North Asia correspondent Mark Willacy

Updated November 22, 2011 12:12:55

Japan's science ministry says 8 per cent of the country's surface area has been contaminated by radiation from the crippled Fukushima nuclear plant.

It says more than 30,000 square kilometres of the country has been blanketed by radioactive caesium.

The ministry says most of the contamination was caused by four large plumes of radiation spewed out by the Fukushima nuclear plant in the first two weeks after meltdowns.
...more at link

http://ajw.asahi.com/article/behind_news/social_affairs/AJ201111240030


TEPCO: Radioactive substances belong to landowners, not us  :lmao  ??? :o

November 24, 2011

By TOMOHIRO IWATA / Asahi Shimbun Weekly AERA

During court proceedings concerning a radioactive golf course, Tokyo Electric Power Co. stunned lawyers by saying the utility was not responsible for decontamination because it no longer "owned" the radioactive substances.

“Radioactive materials (such as cesium) that scattered and fell from the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant belong to individual landowners there, not TEPCO,” the utility said.

That argument did not sit well with the companies that own and operate the Sunfield Nihonmatsu Golf Club, just 45 kilometers west of the stricken TEPCO plant in Fukushima Prefecture.

The Tokyo District Court also rejected that idea.

But in a ruling described as inconsistent by lawyers, the court essentially freed TEPCO from responsibility for decontamination work, saying the cleanup efforts should be done by the central and local governments... more at link

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2067166/Fukushima-nuclear-plant-boss-Masao-Yoshida-hospital-NOT-radiation.html?ito=feeds-newsxml

Boss of Japan's Fukushima nuclear plant rushed to hospital (but authorities say it's NOT to do with radiation) Hmm..

Last updated at 3:23 PM on 28th November 2011

The head of Japan’s Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant which suffered the world’s worst atomic accident in 25 years earlier this year has been admitted to hospital, it emerged today.

Masao Yoshida, 56, who was in charge when a massive earthquake and tsunami struck on March 11, will be replaced in his post as director from Thursday, plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Company (Tepco) confirmed.         

An official declined to give details of Mr Yoshida’s illness, but told a news conference there was no indication it was caused by radiation exposure.
We arranged civilization in which most crucial elements profoundly depend on science and technology We also arranged things so that almost no one understands science and technology This is a recipe for disaster We might get away with it for a while but sooner or later this combustible mix of ignorance and power is going to blow up in our faces CSgn

Offline RojoLeón

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Re: Earthquake Japan
« Reply #2299 on: December 6, 2011, 11:45:49 PM »
http://www.shimbun.denki.or.jp/en/news/20111206_01.html

TEPCO releases results of investigation of Fukushima accident causes

TOKYO --Tokyo Electric Power Co., Inc. (TEPCO) released December 2 the results of its internal investigation into the causes of the Fukushima I nuclear power station accident that had become the world's largest nuclear disaster. Regarding the accident management plan that had been developed prior to the accident, the plant operator concluded that there was no problem with the plan, which had been accepted by the government as being appropriate. The utility also stated that it had responded to impacts of the tsunami to the extent possible...

http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5iYcPSFAmQXGR_12I98oxBEo2eqkw?docId=CNG.858b1c9b4e61e65eb7764010c93e843b.291

Fukushima radioactive water 'leaked into Pacific'

(AFP) – 11 hours ago

TOKYO — Highly radioactive waste water from a crippled Fukushima nuclear plant has leaked to the Pacific, its operator said Tuesday, promising to prevent similar incidents.

Tokyo Electric Power Co. (TEPCO) said it believes 150 litres (40 US gallons) of waste water including highly harmful strontium, linked with bone cancers, has spread to the open ocean.

The announcement came a day after TEPCO said it found 45 tonnes of waste water pooled around the leaky water-treatment system at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant.

TEPCO said Monday it believed about 300 litres of waste water have escaped and run into a nearby gutter that leads to the ocean before crews could contain the leaks.

The water leaked to the sea is believed to contain 26 billion becquerels of radioactive materials, TEPCO said.

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/12/05/world/asia/more-leaks-from-fukushima-daiichi-nuclear-plant.html?_r=2

More Radioactive Water Leaks at Japanese Plant
Published: December 4, 2011

TOKYO — At least 45 tons of highly radioactive water have leaked from a purification facility at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power station, and some of it may have reached the Pacific Ocean, the plant’s operator said Sunday.


http://www.arirang.co.kr/News/News_View.asp?nseq=123235&code=Ne2&category=2

Melted Fuel Near Point of Reaching Bottom Container, Barrier Needed

The operator of the crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant revealed Wednesday that melted nuclear fuel has nearly reached the bottom steel wall under the concrete.
Following the March 11 earthquake and tsunami, all of the fuel inside the No. 1 reactor melted after cooling functions failed with a substantial amount of the fuel melting through the reactor pressure vessel and dripping into the outer container.
On Wednesday, Tokyo Electric Power Company, said the melted fuel has eroded the concrete base of the reactor container by up to 65 centimeters.
If the erosion expands another 37 centimeters, it would be hitting the steel wall.
However, TEPCO's analysis is rough at best because it is a prediction of the current situation inside the reactor based on its temperature change and injection of cooling water...

"TEPCO's analysis says we have 30 centimeters of the concrete base left to prevent the melted fuel to hit the bottom. But I am not confident that we have that much space left. We have to be prepared for the worst case scenario."

http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/dy/national/T111201006092.htm

All N-fuel may have fallen to outer vessel / TEPCO: Up to 68 tons likely melted in No. 1 reactor, eroding concrete of containment unit

Only 37 centimeters of concrete remains between the fuel and the vessel's outermost steel wall in the most damaged area, TEPCO said.

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/12/01/world/asia/meltdown-in-japan-may-have-been-worse-than-thought.html

Study Shows Worse Picture of Meltdown in Japan

TOKYO — Molten nuclear fuel may have bored into the floor of at least one of the reactors at the stricken Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, the complex’s operator said Wednesday, citing a new simulation of the accident that crippled the plant in March.

The simulation suggested that the meltdown may have been more severe than had previously been thought. 

We arranged civilization in which most crucial elements profoundly depend on science and technology We also arranged things so that almost no one understands science and technology This is a recipe for disaster We might get away with it for a while but sooner or later this combustible mix of ignorance and power is going to blow up in our faces CSgn

Offline RojoLeón

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Re: Earthquake Japan
« Reply #2300 on: December 7, 2011, 08:15:42 AM »
http://www.mnn.com/earth-matters/wilderness-resources/stories/rare-merging-tusnami-contributed-to-japan-destruction

Rare 'merging tusnami' contributed to Japan destruction
The double wave tsunami was a 'one-in-10-million' occurrence, with undersea ridges and mountains deflecting the initial wave and creating two fronts.
By OurAmazingPlanetMon, Dec 05 2011 at 6:07 PM EST
 
The magnitude-9.0 Tohoku-Oki temblor, the fifth-most powerful quake ever recorded, triggered a tsunami that doubled in intensity over rugged ocean ridges, amplifying its destructive power at landfall, as seen in data from NASA and European radar satellites that captured at least two wave fronts that day.
 
The fronts merged to form a single, double-high wave far out at sea. This wave was capable of traveling long distances without losing power. Ocean ridges and undersea mountain chains pushed the waves together along certain directions from the tsunami's origin.
 
The discovery, presented today at the annual meeting of the American Geophysical Union in San Francisco, helps explain how tsunamis can cross ocean basins to cause massive destruction at some locations while leaving others unscathed. The data raise hope that scientists may be able to improve tsunami forecasts.
 
"It was a one-in-10-million chance that we were able to observe this double wave with satellites," said study team member Y. Tony Song, of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., who presented with team member C.K. Shum of The Ohio State University.
 
Right place, right time
"Researchers have suspected for decades that such 'merging tsunamis' might have been responsible for the 1960 Chilean tsunami that killed about 200 people in Japan and Hawaii, but nobody had definitively observed a merging tsunami until now,” Song said in a statement. "It was like looking for a ghost. A NASA-French Space Agency satellite altimeter happened to be in the right place at the right time to capture the double wave and verify its existence."
 
The NASA-Center National d'Etudes Spaciales Jason-1 satellite passed over the tsunami on March 11, as did two other satellites — the NASA-European Jason-2 and the European Space Agency's EnviSAT. All three carry radar altimeters, which measure sea-level changes to an accuracy of a few centimeters. Each satellite crossed the tsunami at a different location, measuring the wave fronts as they occurred. [Video: Japan Tsunami's Effects]
 
The researchers think ridges and undersea mountain chains on the ocean floor deflected parts of the initial tsunami wave away from each other to form independent jets shooting off in different directions, each with its own wave front.
 
Better risk maps
The sea floor topography nudges tsunami waves in varying directions and can make its destruction appear random. For that reason, hazard maps that try to predict where tsunamis will strike rely on sub-sea topography. Previously, these maps considered only topography near a particular shoreline. This study suggests scientists may be able to create maps that take into account all undersea topography, even sub-sea ridges and mountains far from shore.
 
"We can use what we learned to make better forecasts of tsunami danger in specific coastal regions anywhere in the world, depending on the location and the mechanism of an undersea quake," Shum said.
 
Song and his team were able to verify the satellite data through model simulations based on independent data, including GPS data from Japan and buoy data from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Deep-Ocean Assessment and Reporting of Tsunamis program.
 
"Tools based on this research could help officials forecast the potential for tsunami jets to merge," Song said. "This, in turn, could lead to more-accurate coastal tsunami-hazard maps to protect communities and critical infrastructure."

We arranged civilization in which most crucial elements profoundly depend on science and technology We also arranged things so that almost no one understands science and technology This is a recipe for disaster We might get away with it for a while but sooner or later this combustible mix of ignorance and power is going to blow up in our faces CSgn

Offline Upanishad

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Re: Earthquake Japan
« Reply #2301 on: December 8, 2011, 11:26:55 PM »
Fukushima radioactive water 'leaked into Pacific'

(AFP) – 11 hours ago

TOKYO — Highly radioactive waste water from a crippled Fukushima nuclear plant has leaked to the Pacific, its operator said Tuesday, promising to prevent similar incidents.

Tokyo Electric Power Co. (TEPCO) said it believes 150 litres (40 US gallons) of waste water including highly harmful strontium, linked with bone cancers, has spread to the open ocean.

Really really shocking this now, I read that the half life for Strontium is 29 years, so the stuff will be floating around in the oceans and food chains for a generations.

"Radioactive strontium accumulates in the bones once inside a body due to its similar properties to calcium and releases radiation for a long time. One type of strontium -- strontium 90 -- has a half-life of 29 years."

http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:RjpROZq6SMQJ:www3.nhk.or.jp/daily/english/20111206_30.html+strontium+half+life+29+tepco&cd=1&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=uk
Voyager-1 is on course to approach a star called AC +793888, but it will only get to within two light-years of it and it will be tens of thousands of years before it does so.

Offline RojoLeón

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Re: Earthquake Japan
« Reply #2302 on: December 8, 2011, 11:39:57 PM »


None of is is good - It just keeps giving and giving.

http://mdn.mainichi.jp/perspectives/news/20111208p2a00m0na006000c.html

Gov't to place TEPCO under its control in bid to split company

The government intends to place Tokyo Electric Power Co. (TEPCO) under its control in a bid to take the initiative in reforming the crisis-hit utility and carrying through fundamental reform of its energy policy...

..TEPCO has been in a serious financial crisis since an accident at its tsunami-hit Fukushima No. 1 Nuclear Power Plant on March 11. The government's Nuclear Damage Liability Facilitation Fund has effectively kept the company afloat in order to ensure a stable supply of electric power and payments of compensation to those affected by the nuclear crisis, and to avoid confusion in the market.

Still, the company's board is struggling to rehabilitate itself. It will be required to decommission and dismantle the crippled nuclear reactors and decontaminate areas tainted with radioactive substances leaking from the plant, which is estimated to cost the utility trillions of yen.

TEPCO is aiming to dispose of its assets, slash its personnel expenses, sharply raise its electricity charges and resume operations at its Kashiwazaki-Kariwa Nuclear Power Plant in Niigata Prefecture amid desperate efforts to secure enough profits to cover such expenses...

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/12/07/world/asia/japans-huge-nuclear-cleanup-makes-returning-home-a-goal.html?_r=2&pagewanted=all

Japan Split on Hope for Vast Radiation Cleanup

...Critics counter that the effort to clean Fukushima Prefecture could end up as perhaps the biggest of Japan’s white-elephant public works projects — and yet another example of post-disaster Japan reverting to the wasteful ways that have crippled economic growth for two decades.

So far, the government is following a pattern set since the nuclear accident, dismissing dangers, often prematurely, and laboring to minimize the scope of the catastrophe. Already, the trial cleanups have stalled: the government failed to anticipate communities’ reluctance to store tons of soil to be scraped from contaminated yards and fields.

And a radiation specialist who tested the results of an extensive local cleanup in a nearby city found that exposure levels remained above international safety standards for long-term habitation.

Even a vocal supporter of repatriation suggests that the government has not yet leveled with its people about the seriousness of their predicament.

“I believe it is possible to save Fukushima,” said the supporter, Tatsuhiko Kodama, director of the Radioisotope Center at the University of Tokyo. “But many evacuated residents must accept that it won’t happen in their lifetimes.”

To judge the huge scale of what Japan is contemplating, consider that experts say residents can return home safely only after thousands of buildings are scrubbed of radioactive particles and much of the topsoil from an area the size of Connecticut is replaced.

Even forested mountains will probably need to be decontaminated, which might necessitate clear-cutting and literally scraping them clean.

The Soviet Union did not attempt such a cleanup after the Chernobyl accident of 1986, the only nuclear disaster larger than that at Fukushima Daiichi. The government instead relocated about 300,000 people, abandoning vast tracts of farmland.

Many Japanese officials believe that they do not have that luxury; the evacuation zone covers more than 3 percent of the landmass of this densely populated nation...

...Trial cleanups have been delayed for months by the search for a storage site for enough contaminated dirt to fill 33 domed football stadiums. Even evacuated communities have refused to accept it.

And Tomoya Yamauchi, the radiation expert from Kobe University who performed tests in Fukushima City after extensive remediation efforts, found that radiation levels inside homes had dropped by only about 25 percent. That left parts of the city with levels of radiation four times higher than the recommended maximum exposure.

“We can only conclude that these efforts have so far been a failure,” he said...

http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Japan/ML09Dh01.html

Returnees fear Fukushima's invisible touch

...At City Hall, Koshin Ogai, a young tax official, shared his fears. Ogai, originally from Osaka in western Japan, moved here a few years ago after marrying a local woman but sent his wife and their two children to his parents after explosions at the Fukushima first spread the fear of radiation. "I don't permit them to come back," he said. "I don't think the record here is safe."

But what about all those assurances about the levels of radioactivity having fallen well within safe limits, I asked him. His answer was prompt. "The government is a liar." ...

http://www.greenpeace.org/international/en/news/Blogs/nuclear-reaction/living-with-fukushima-citys-radiation-problem/blog/38305/

Living with Fukushima City's radiation problem

While walking through the highly contaminated outskirts of Fukushima City last week, I suddenly realized that this capital of the prefecture is as far from the Fukushima nuclear disaster site as my hometown is from Borssele where the only Dutch nuclear power plant in the Netherlands is located —about 60 km. While people in the 20 km exclusion zone around the Fukushima disaster site have been evacuated, the residents of this densely populated city have already waited nine months for decontamination of their houses, gardens and parks without getting any official government support for relocation, not even for children and pregnant women.

We spent four days in Fukushima City doing a radiation survey in the neighbourhoods of Watari and Onami. People there have been left to cope alone in a highly contaminated environment by both the local and national governments. Our radiation experts found hot spots of up to 37 microSieverts per hour in a garden only a few meters away from a house and an accumulation of radioactivity in drainage systems, puddles and ditches. Overall, the radiation levels in these neighbourhoods are so high that people receive an exposure to radiation just from external sources that is ten times the annual allowed dose. How high their internal exposure is from eating contaminated food and inhaling or ingesting radioactive particles remains unknown, since no government program is keeping track of this.

 Parks are the most contaminated areas in Fukushima City. Some are marked with signs: “Due to radioactive contamination, don’t spend more than one hour per day in this park.” Even on sunny days last week, the parks where empty. Mothers are smart enough to not let their children play on the playgrounds in these parks, not even for an hour. Even inside their houses, they have to worry about radiation. We measured the rooms of an elderly lady’s house who is expecting her grandchildren for Christmas. She wanted to know what the safest place was for her grandchildren to sleep. 

People in Fukushima City are worried about their health, especially families with children and pregnant women. We walked around with dosimeters and radiation detection equipment and were aware of what we are exposed to and of the risk we were taking. The residents of Fukushima City had one government survey at their house last July, if any at all. Detected hotspots where left unmarked, no instructions were given on how to behave in a radioactive environment. Since then, only 35 of the thousands of houses that need to be decontaminated have been cleaned by the government. 

The decontamination done by the local authorities is both uncoordinated and thoroughly inadequate. The subcontractors they are using are badly instructed, risking their own health and spreading the radioactive contamination instead of removing it. We found radioactive run-off water from a decontamination process leaking directly into the environment. And because there is no storage site for radioactive waste from decontamination work, the waste is buried directly on people’s property, sometimes only a few meters away from their houses.

The Japanese government doesn’t know how to deal with the massive contamination caused by the nuclear disaster. Instead of protecting people from radiation, they are downplaying the risks by increasing the allowed radiation levels far above international standards. And professors like Dr. Yamashita, who make statements like ‘If you smile, the radiation will not affect you’ are being employed as official advisors on radiation health risk.

In short, it is clear that the situation in Fukushima is rapidly spinning out of control, and if the national government does not take full responsibility for the protection of its population, the people affected by the triple meltdown at Fukushima Daiichi will continue to suffer for a long time to come.

Ike Teuling is a Greenpeace radiation expert

We arranged civilization in which most crucial elements profoundly depend on science and technology We also arranged things so that almost no one understands science and technology This is a recipe for disaster We might get away with it for a while but sooner or later this combustible mix of ignorance and power is going to blow up in our faces CSgn

Offline RojoLeón

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Re: Earthquake Japan
« Reply #2303 on: December 10, 2011, 06:47:33 PM »
http://www3.nhk.or.jp/nhkworld/english/movie/feature_nuclear.html

Nuclear Watch: Cold Shutdown & Beyond (Video at link)

http://www.boston.com/news/world/asia/articles/2011/12/09/japan_pm_crippled_nuke_plant_stable_by_years_end/

Japan PM: Crippled nuke plant stable by year's end

TOKYO—Work to stabilize Japan's tsunami-hit nuclear power plant is on track and the government plans to declare it stable by the end of the year as planned, the prime minister said Friday.

Temperatures of the three melted reactor cores have fallen below the boiling point and radiation leaks have significantly subsided, Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda said.

Those are the two key conditions to achieve what Japanese nuclear officials call "cold shutdown conditions," a milestone in the effort to stabilize and eventually close the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant altogether.

"We're about ready to draw a conclusion," Noda told a news conference Friday, marking the end of the current parliamentary session.

Some nuclear experts, however, question that claim because the nuclear fuel moved as it melted, so its condition and locations are little known.

The March 11 earthquake and tsunami that set off the radiation crisis at Fukushima Dai-ichi also heavily damaged the plant, and the damage and radiation concerns have limited how much information can be obtained about spent fuel rods and reactor cores...
We arranged civilization in which most crucial elements profoundly depend on science and technology We also arranged things so that almost no one understands science and technology This is a recipe for disaster We might get away with it for a while but sooner or later this combustible mix of ignorance and power is going to blow up in our faces CSgn

Offline Emerald Red

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Re: Earthquake Japan
« Reply #2304 on: December 11, 2011, 08:25:08 AM »
Blatter oversees Japan recovery

11 December 2011
FIFA president Sepp Blatter saw ongoing recovery efforts first-hand in a visit to Japan's disaster-struck northern region of Tohoku.

Blatter observed a soccer match between local youths at the Matsushima Football Center in Miyagi prefecture on Saturday that took place on an artificial pitch repaired with FIFA funding.

"I'm glad I came," Blatter said. "Through football, we're able to re-affirm the value of life."

http://www.soccerway.com/news/2011/December/11/blatter-oversees-japan-recovery/

Offline RojoLeón

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Re: Earthquake Japan
« Reply #2305 on: December 11, 2011, 05:43:25 PM »
http://www.independent.co.uk/environment/nature/japan-uses-tsunami-victims-cash-to-shield-whalers-from-activists-6274458.html

Horrible, horrible bastards...

Japan uses tsunami victims' cash to shield whalers from activists

£19m from fund set up to rebuild coast stricken by triple disaster is diverted to help fishing fleet
 
Japan caused outrage yesterday as authorities confirmed it is diverting millions of pounds tagged for the reconstruction of its tsunami-devastated coast to protect its annual Antarctic whale-hunt.

Roughly 2.28bn yen (£19m) from a reconstruction fund for areas badly hit by the crippling 11 March earthquake, tsunami and ensuing nuclear disaster will be used to beef up security for the Japanese whaling fleet, which left port under heavy guard this week.

The money is part of about 500bn yen in "fisheries-related spending" green-lighted by parliament last month. Japan's Fisheries Agency justified the decision by saying that "safer hunts" would ultimately help whaling towns along the coast to recover.

"Many people in [those areas] are waiting for Japan's commercial whaling operations to resume," said the agency's spokesman Tatsuya Nakaoku. The agency said that some of the money is earmarked to allow the fleet to "stably carry out its whaling research".

Conservationists immediately condemned the plan. "Not only is the whaling industry unable to survive without large increases in government handouts, now it's siphoning money away from the victims of the 11 March triple disaster, at a time when they need it most," said Junichi Sato, executive director of Greenpeace Japan. "This is a new low for the shameful whaling industry and the callous politicians who support it".

Japan was forced to suspend commercial whaling in 1987 but exploits a loophole in international rules to launch what it calls "scientific whaling expeditions" to the Southern Ocean. The meat from the roughly 1,000 whales killed during the cull is sold to partly pay for the expeditions. A further $10m in public money is used to support the campaign every year.

The whalers cut short their hunt this year after weeks of harassment by the US-based Sea Shepherd Conservation Society, which claimed a major environmental victory. The whalers returned to port reportedly with about a fifth of the planned catch. Japan also blamed its reduced haul of 507 whalesduring its 2009-10 Antarctic hunt on the harrying of its fleet.

The whaling boats left in secrecy on Tuesday from Shimonoseki in southern Japan, guarded by an unspecified number of coast guard officers, a patrol ship and other "security measures," according to local media reports. The fleet's target catch is said to be about 930 minke whales. Sea Shepherd is preparing to again confront the fleet and warned of an "escalation". "Last year we chased them all the way to South America and that's when they decided to go home early," said Paul Watson, head of the society. "We've already defeated them economically. Now we have to defeat them politically."

Mr Watson said the money being used to protect the fleet came from public donations to help the victims of the earthquake and tsunami, a claim denied by Japan's government, and Green-peace Japan.
We arranged civilization in which most crucial elements profoundly depend on science and technology We also arranged things so that almost no one understands science and technology This is a recipe for disaster We might get away with it for a while but sooner or later this combustible mix of ignorance and power is going to blow up in our faces CSgn

Offline RojoLeón

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Re: Earthquake Japan
« Reply #2306 on: December 13, 2011, 08:43:26 AM »
http://www.japantimes.co.jp/text/eo20111213a1.html

Real cause of nuclear crisis

Tokyo Electric Power Co. (Tepco), the operator of the stricken Fukushima No. 1 Nuclear Power Station, has been insisting that the culprit that caused the nuclear crisis was the huge tsunami that hit the plant after the March 11 earthquake. But evidence is mounting that the meltdown at the nuclear power plant was actually caused by the earthquake itself.

According to a science journalist well versed in the matter, Tepco is afraid that if the earthquake were to be determined as the direct cause of the accident, the government would have to review its quake-resistance standards completely, which in turn would delay by years the resumption of the operation of existing nuclear power stations that are suspended currently due to regular inspections.

The journalist is Mitsuhiko Tanaka, formerly with Babcock-Hitachi K.K. as an engineer responsible for designing the pressure vessel for the No. 4 reactor at the ill-fated Fukushima nuclear plant.

He says if the earthquake caused the damage to the plumbing, leading to a "loss-of-coolant accident (LOCA)" in which vaporized coolant gushed into the containment building from the damaged piping, an entirely new problem — "vulnerability to earthquake resistance of the nuclear reactor's core structure" — would surface and that this will require a total review of the government's safety standards for nuclear power plants in Japan, which is quite frequently hit by earthquakes.

Such a review will require a number of years of study, making it impossible to restart the now suspended nuclear power stations next year as Tepco hopes.

What puzzles Tanaka most is why the emergency condensers, which turn vaporized coolant (steam) into water and are supposed to lower both the pressure and temperature of the reactor, were not operating at the time of the accident although the condensers have the capability of functioning even when electricity becomes unavailable.

It is highly probable, he says, that the plumbing linked with the condensers was damaged by the earthquake, causing water or vapor to leak out, thus leading to the nonfunctioning of the condensers.

In a report released on May 23, Tepco said it stopped the emergency condensers after the quake occurred but before the tsunami hit the plant so that the temperature of the pressure vessel would not change by more than 55 degrees Celsius per hour. This, it said, was strictly in accordance with the instructions contained in the operating manual.

When a Diet committee looking into the incident asked Tepco to submit a copy of the manual, most pages of the documents so submitted were "blacked out," as the company alleged they contained trade secrets which it did not want to go into the public domain.

Totally dissatisfied, the committee issued another order to Tepco to submit the whole manual in its original form, to which the company complied on Oct. 24. This led journalist Tanaka to come to the conclusion that the utility was not telling the truth.

He said the 55-C-per-hour is a figure used in ordinary plants in a non-emergency situation to keep piping in a good condition and that the figure should not be used in an emergency. He pointed out that the manual says that the figure is something that should be followed in operations just prior to a cold shutdown of a reactor, not immediately after a problem has arisen.

At a news conference on May 15, Tepco said that according to its simulation, the meltdown at the No. 1 reactor of the nuclear power plant happened about 15 hours after the earthquake because the tsunami destroyed all electricity supply sources and the water level in the reactor lowered rapidly. But Tanaka says that the simulation is far different from the actually measured water level and pressure.

A rapid increase in the pressure inside the containment vessel is especially unnatural. Although the simulation report says that the pressure inside the containment vessel shot up to more than seven times standard atmospheric pressure around 5:40 a.m. on March 12, or about 15 hours after the quake, the fact is that the pressure had already risen to six times the standard at 12:12 a.m. on March 12 — five to six hours before the time given by the simulation report.

Simulation data calculated by a computer can be manipulated easily depending on the types of input. Tanaka suspects that Tepco cooked up simulation results to suit its own purposes in an attempt to deceive the public.

Atsuo Watanabe, former designer of containment vessels at Toshiba Corp., said on Oct. 26 that the most fundamental cause of the Fukushima plant fiasco probably lay in the blind acceptance of the safety standards adopted in the United States, which did not take into consideration all potential consequences from earthquakes.

The reactors damaged at Fukushima were of the GE Mark 1 type designed and built by General Electric Co. He pointed out that in the U.S., there is no need to consider the combination of an earthquake and a loss-of-coolant accident caused by broken piping, adding that it is reasonable to assume that the earthquake and loss of coolant occurred simultaneously at Fukushima No. 1.

Perhaps it was against such a background that Tepco blacked out crucial matters in the operational manual of the reactors, as there are 10 other GE Mark 1 type reactors in Japan.

These and other scientific findings have given rise to serious suspicion of Tepco's claim that the crisis at the nuclear power plant was caused by the tsunami, and not by the earthquake. And a view that blames the tremor as the true culprit is becoming more and more trusted.

It is imperative that the special investigative committee recently created within the Diet undertake thorough inquiry into the real cause of the accidents. The panel must force those Tepco employees who have worked on the spot to testify, even though the company has so far obstinately opposed such testimonies.

Should the government decide to permit the resumption of nuclear power stations in various parts of the country by blindly accepting assertions coming from Tepco, the whole nation would face uneasiness in preventing another calamity in the future and would fail to fulfill its accountability to the whole world, which is watching whether Japan will conduct a thorough investigation to determine the true cause of the Fukushima disaster.

We arranged civilization in which most crucial elements profoundly depend on science and technology We also arranged things so that almost no one understands science and technology This is a recipe for disaster We might get away with it for a while but sooner or later this combustible mix of ignorance and power is going to blow up in our faces CSgn

Offline RojoLeón

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Re: Earthquake Japan
« Reply #2307 on: December 19, 2011, 02:38:59 AM »
http://calgary.ctv.ca/servlet/an/local/CTVNews/20111216/japan-earthquake-debris-tofino-111216/20111216/?hub=CalgaryHome


Japan tsunami flotsam begins washing ashore in B.C.

Bottles, cans and lumber from the tsunami that devastated Japan in March began washing up on British Columbia shores this week, more than a year earlier than oceanographers had initially predicted.

Winds and currents have carried the items -- emblazoned with Japanese characters -- nearly 21,000 kilometres across the Pacific Ocean. They began washing up in the Tofino area on Vancouver Island's west coast earlier this week.

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/battle-to-control-fukushima-has-just-stored-up-dangers-6277669.html

Battle to control Fukushima has just 'stored up' dangers

The operator of the Fukushima nuclear plant is expected to declare today that its crippled reactors have been stabilised
, nine months after an earthquake and tsunami triggered the world's worst nuclear accident in 25 years.

But critics, including a journalist who worked undercover at the plant, have rubbished the claims by Tokyo Electric Power Co (Tepco) that the crisis is over. And Japan's government admitted this week that dismantling the reactors and the 260-tonne lethal cargo of nuclear fuel will take up to 40 years.

..Mr Suzuki, for his part, paints an appalling picture of managerial callousness at the plant, claiming that after the first explosion on 12 March Tepco sent out a message to labour-dispatch companies saying: "Send us people who don't mind dying."

In the first few days of panic, workers were not issued radiation-measuring equipment and were not properly logged in, he said. "There's no way to track down the people who were at the site in March and April."

Workers are under pressure to extend their time working in radioactive conditions and have learned to cheat exposure-measuring dosimeters by putting them back to front and wearing them in their socks, he said. "Tepco does not instruct us to take these measures, but it sets tasks that force people to cheat with these dosimeters. Everyone understands this."..

http://news.businessweek.com/article.asp?documentKey=1376-LVTDCN6S972B01-2H4F0FT6S8AABG0QH7TGEIAVU9

Fukushima Dismantling to Start as Cold Shutdown Announced

Japan's Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda said the Fukushima nuclear reactors have been brought to a state of cold shutdown, a disputed milestone that will likely allow the return of some evacuees and eventual dismantling of the plant.

 Gunderson said that declaring the cold shutdown at Fukushima risks further eroding people's faith in the government's ability to regulate the nuclear power industry.

“I actually think it's going to blow up in their face,” he said. “In the eyes of the Japanese public, the last thing they need to do is exaggerate. And this is an exaggeration.”

http://mdn.mainichi.jp/mdnnews/news/20111216p2a00m0na002000c.html

'Absolutely no progress being made' at Fukushima nuke plant, undercover reporter says

Conditions at the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant are far worse than its operator or the government has admitted, according to freelance journalist Tomohiko Suzuki, who spent more than a month working undercover at the power station.

"Absolutely no progress is being made" towards the final resolution of the crisis, Suzuki told reporters at a Foreign Correspondents' Club of Japan news conference on Dec. 15. Suzuki, 55, worked for a Toshiba Corp. subsidiary as a general laborer there from July 13 to Aug. 22, documenting sloppy repair work, companies including plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Co. (TEPCO) playing fast and loose with their workers' radiation doses, and a marked concern for appearances over the safety of employees or the public.

For example, the no-entry zones around the plant -- the 20-kilometer radius exclusion zone and the extension covering most of the village of Iitate and other municipalities -- have more to do with convenience that actual safety, Suzuki says.

"(Nuclear) technology experts I've spoken to say that there are people living in areas where no one should be. It's almost as though they're living inside a nuclear plant," says Suzuki. Based on this and his own radiation readings, he believes the 80-kilometer-radius evacuation advisory issued by the United States government after the meltdowns was "about right," adding that the government probably decided on the current no-go zones to avoid the immense task of evacuating larger cities like Iwaki and Fukushima.

The situation at the plant itself is no better, where he says much of the work is simply "for show," fraught with corporate jealousies and secretiveness and "completely different" from the "all-Japan" cooperative effort being presented by the government.

"Reactor makers Toshiba and Hitachi (brought in to help resolve the crisis) each have their own technology, and they don't talk to each other. Toshiba doesn't tell Hitachi what it's doing, and Hitachi doesn't tell Toshiba what it's doing."

Meanwhile, despite there being no concrete data on the state of the reactor cores, claims by the government and TEPCO that the disaster is under control and that the reactors are on-schedule for a cold shutdown by the year's end have promoted a breakneck work schedule, leading to shoddy repairs and habitual disregard for worker safety, he said.

"Working at Fukushima is equivalent to being given an order to die," Suzuki quoted one nuclear-related company source as saying. He says plant workers regularly manipulate their radiation readings by reversing their dosimeters or putting them in their socks, giving them an extra 10 to 30 minutes on-site before they reach their daily dosage limit. In extreme cases, Suzuki said, workers even leave the radiation meters in their dormitories.

According to Suzuki, TEPCO and the subcontractors at the plant never explicitly tell the workers to take these measures. Instead the workers are simply assigned projects that would be impossible to complete on time without manipulating the dosage numbers, and whether through a sense of duty or fear of being fired, the workers never complain.

Furthermore, the daily radiation screenings are "essentially an act," with the detector passed too quickly over each worker, while "the line to the buzzer that is supposed to sound when there's a problem has been cut," Suzuki said.

Meanwhile much of the work -- like road repairs -- is purely cosmetic, and projects directly related to cleaning up the crisis such as decontaminating water -- which Suzuki was involved in -- are rife with cut corners, including the use of plastic piping likely to freeze and crack in the winter.

"We are seeing many problems stemming from the shoddy, rushed work at the power plant," Suzuki says.

Despite the lack of progress and cavalier attitude to safety, Suzuki claims the cold shutdown schedule has essentially choked off any new ideas. The crisis is officially under control and the budget for dealing with it has been cut drastically, and many Hitachi and Toshiba engineers that have presented new solutions have been told there is simply no money to try them.

In sum, Suzuki says what he saw (and photographed with a pinhole camera hidden in his watch) proves the real work to overcome the Fukushima disaster "is just beginning." He lost his own inside look at that work after it was discovered he was a journalist, though officially he was fired because his commute to work was too long.

"The Japanese media have turned away from this issue," he laments, though the story is far from over.


http://www.nytimes.com/2011/12/17/world/asia/japans-prime-minister-declares-fukushima-plant-stable.html

Japan’s Prime Minister Declares Fukushima Plant Stable

http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/world_now/2011/12/japan-march-11-ewarthquake-and-tsunami-fukushima-daiichi-nuclear-power-plant-damage-and-radiation-le.html

Japan: crucial stage reached in nuclear plant shutdown

The reactors at the Fukushima Daiichi plant have reached a state of cold shutdown, Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda told Cabinet members in an announcement intended to reassure Japan and the rest of the world that the nation is moving beyond its nuclear nightmare.

But critics say that continuing harm is being caused by the plant, stricken by what many call the worst nuclear disaster since Chernobyl, and that it will still take decades to fully decommission the facility.

Officials had predicted they would reach the cold shutdown state by early 2012, and Tokyo’s support of the claim by the plant’s operator, Tokyo Electric Power Co., that the reactors have reached a crucial point is one more step toward finally encasing the plant in concrete as a precaution.

A 12-mile off-limits zone around the plant is expected to remain in effect for years, Japanese authorities acknowledge.

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-japan-distrust-20111218,0,7635674.story


Japan less likely to trust officials, main media, since disaster

Mainstream media dutifully reported that story. But not Shiraishi's "Our Planet TV," which soon broadcast a live interview with five Japanese reporters in Futaba City, a community near the stricken plant. The reporters, who had covered the Chernobyl disaster, told a very different tale.

"They held up Geiger counters showing the level of radiation was almost beyond calculation," said Shiraishi, a former network TV journalist who co-founded the Internet venture in 2001, hosts the show and reports many of its stories. "They'd never seen anything like it."

For Shiraishi and others, that broadcast was a turning point, a moment many see as marking a profound shift in the trust younger Japanese place in government and media. Since that show, "Our Planet TV" viewership has shot up from about 1,000 to more than 100,000 as people have begun to seek alternative sources of information.

http://www.odt.co.nz/your-town/dunedin/191279/family-finds-dunedin-safe-haven-disaster

Family finds Dunedin safe haven from disaster

It was a strange time. On TV, people from other countries were saying we [Fukushima residents] should leave Fukushima. The [Japanese] Government said the radiation was OK, but we feel it was not OK.

"It was very frightening.

"[Family and friends] say you are stupid for leaving because there is nothing wrong here, the Government says it is safe.

"Others say, 'You are leaving to save yourself, what about us'?"

While she feels some guilt for leaving, she does not regret her decision.

She and the boys have been suffering ongoing health problems since the catastrophe, including diarrhoea, chest complaints and swollen glands, and many of her friends and family back in Fukushima have similar symptoms.


She said doctors in Japan insisted the illnesses were not caused by exposure to radioactive fallout from the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant.
We arranged civilization in which most crucial elements profoundly depend on science and technology We also arranged things so that almost no one understands science and technology This is a recipe for disaster We might get away with it for a while but sooner or later this combustible mix of ignorance and power is going to blow up in our faces CSgn

Offline penfold102

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Re: Earthquake Japan
« Reply #2308 on: January 1, 2012, 02:27:13 PM »
We had quite a big earthquake here in Japan today. Was just sleeping off the remnants of my drunken stupor from the New Years celebrations when I woke to quite a large and prolonged shudder - I'd go as far to say that this was the biggest one I have felt since March 11th. Needless to say, it sobered me up pretty damn quickly.

Happy New Year to everyone from Japan, and thank you to those on this thread who did so much to inform and reassure me in 2011.
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Offline redbyrdz

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Re: Earthquake Japan
« Reply #2309 on: January 1, 2012, 07:45:35 PM »
Happy new year!

You're not wrong about the earthquake, 6.8 according to the USGS - there are bound to be bigish (5-6) aftershocks. The list has a couple of 5 magnitude foreshocks the last few days, from the same location.
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Offline farawayred

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Re: Earthquake Japan
« Reply #2310 on: January 5, 2012, 09:11:20 PM »
Happy New Year!

I've been away on vacation to the South and we were in New Orleans when my daughter told me that Facebook was full of Japan earthquake news (I had my communications with the world cut). The first thing that crossed my mind was how you and my Japanese friend are doing there. It was a pretty significant earthquake, although by Japanese standards 6.8 is not that uncommon (I was in Arkansas when the news were reporting a 3.3 quake there that wouldn't have a mention in California!). Glad to hear that you are fine, but I'm sure the scare factor after the March earthquake must have been something else. Cheers!
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Re: Earthquake Japan
« Reply #2311 on: January 6, 2012, 02:18:20 AM »
We had quite a big earthquake here in Japan today. Was just sleeping off the remnants of my drunken stupor from the New Years celebrations when I woke to quite a large and prolonged shudder - I'd go as far to say that this was the biggest one I have felt since March 11th. Needless to say, it sobered me up pretty damn quickly.

Happy New Year to everyone from Japan, and thank you to those on this thread who did so much to inform and reassure me in 2011.

Time to mail my old drinking buddies at the Rising Sun pub in Shinjuku-ku and see how they're all doing.
I'm really hoping Sturridge busts out the wacky dip when he scores.

Offline RojoLeón

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Re: Earthquake Japan
« Reply #2312 on: January 12, 2012, 08:13:49 PM »
http://www.alaskadispatch.com/article/tsunami-trash-begins-washing-ashore-far-north-kodiak

Tsunami trash begins washing ashore as far north as Kodiak
Doug O'Harra, Ben Anderson | Dec 27, 2011

Debris from the Japanese tsunami has apparently reached Kodiak, with several large oyster farm floats discovered by local beachcombers and fishermen Dave Kubiak and Alexus Kwatchka, according to a story by KMXT radio.

Washington-based oceanographer Curtis Ebbesmeyer, an expert in tracking ocean flotsam, sent photographs of the floats to the national media in Japan and was told they were authentic. “They were washed out in the tsunami from oyster-grower farms,” Ebbesmyer told KMXT.

At least seven black floats have already been found in Washington state over the past few months, Ebbesmeyer announced during a lecture a few weeks ago. (Watch it here.) Ever since a magnitude 9.0 megathrust earthquake struck northern Japan on March 11, Ebbesmeyer and other scientists have been following a massive raft of waste on its slow journey toward North America. The material could ensnare marine life, pollute beaches and possibly include human remains -- or even radioactive material from nuclear power plants damaged during the disaster.

“This is unprecedented in recorded human history to have tsunami debris actually be able to be tracked across the ocean,” Ebbesmeyer told KMXT. “We’re dealing with an immense event with hundreds of millions of tons of debris on the water. The true dimensions of what’s going is probably not appreciated even now.”

Peter Murphy, with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Marine Debris Division, said that while the NOAA hasn't been able to confirm the floats as being from the Japanese tsunami, they welcome beachcombers and non-government scientists to evaluate unusual items washing ashore on beaches.

Local beachcombers can be helpful in discerning what's out of the ordinary on their beach, Murphy said, since "marine debris is already a significant problem in the world's oceans," making it hard to identify if a piece of debris originated from the Japanese tsunami.

"It’s very difficult to fingerprint debris back to its original owner or origin," Murphy said.

The NOAA had created a computer model predicting the way tsunami debris might travel across the ocean, but it didn't show debris going as far north as Kodiak Island. Murphy said that the model represents individual pieces of debris, and the number of variables involved in predicting the path of the debris makes it extremely difficult to predict accurately right away.

He couldn't say whether debris might be making its way even further north, toward the Kenai Peninsula and Cook Inlet or the southern side of the Alaska Peninsula.

"There's a significant amount of variability," Murphy said, adding that information like that obtained from the Kodiak floats and Ebbesmeyer's contributions in confirming their origins are helpful to refine the models.

"The thing with the models is we have the starting location, then additionally the different parameters" for predicting the path of a specific piece of debris, Murphy said. "The more inputs we have, the more weather information that’s going to help the models, and as we can get ground truth and verify models, the better they'll be."

To help reach that end, the NOAA has created an email address where people who spot unusual debris that's washed ashore -- disasterdebris@NOAA.gov -- can report what they see. Murphy said to include as much information as possible, especially pictures if they can.

"That will help us better understand what people are seeing," Murphy said.


http://tvnz.co.nz/world-news/diseased-seals-in-alaska-tested-radiation-4669702

Diseased seals in Alaska tested for radiation

Published: 2:24PM Wednesday December 28, 2011 Source: Reuters

Scientists in Alaska are investigating whether local seals are being sickened by radiation from Japan's crippled Fukushima nuclear plant.

Scores of ring seals have washed up on Alaska's Arctic coastline since July, suffering or killed by a mysterious disease marked by bleeding lesions on the hind flippers, irritated skin around the nose and eyes and patchy hair loss on the animals' fur coats.

Biologists at first thought the seals were suffering from a virus, but they have so far been unable to identify one, and tests are now underway to find out if radiation is a factor.

"We recently received samples of seal tissue from diseased animals captured near St Lawrence Island with a request to examine the material for radioactivity," said John Kelley, Professor Emeritus at the Institute of Marine Science at the University of Alaska Fairbanks.

"There is concern expressed by some members of the local communities that there may be some relationship to the Fukushima nuclear reactor's damage," he said.

The results of the tests would not be available for "several weeks," Kelley said.

Water tests have not picked up any evidence of elevated radiation in US Pacific waters since the March earthquake and tsunami in Japan, which caused multiple fuel meltdowns at the Fukushima plant and forced tens of thousands of people to evacuate the surrounding area.

Scientists from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and the US Fish and Wildlife Service have been seeking the cause of the diseased seals for weeks, but have so far found no answers.

We arranged civilization in which most crucial elements profoundly depend on science and technology We also arranged things so that almost no one understands science and technology This is a recipe for disaster We might get away with it for a while but sooner or later this combustible mix of ignorance and power is going to blow up in our faces CSgn

Offline RojoLeón

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Re: Earthquake Japan
« Reply #2313 on: January 12, 2012, 08:27:46 PM »
Two Fukushima plants in cold shutdown? Daiichi and Daini;

http://www.tepco.co.jp/en/news/topics/11122601-e.html


December 26, 2011
Tokyo Electric Power Company

We sincerely express our apologies for great inconvenience and worry caused by our nuclear power plant accident to the people in the area near the power plant as well as the people in the entire society.

Today the Prime Minister declared the cancellation of nuclear emergency situation at Fukushima Daini Nuclear Power Station.

With regard to Fukushima Daini Nuclear Power Station, the declaration of nuclear emergency situation was issued on March 12, 2011 in accordance with article 15, clause 1 of Act on Special Measures Concerning Nuclear Emergency Preparedness. However, as a result of countermeasures taken against emergency situation, all the units reached the state of cold shutdown by March 15.
Then we have made every effort in keeping the stable cold shutdown by multiplexing heat removal and cooling facilities. We consider that these efforts led to the cancellation of emergency situation.
We would like to express our gratitude to all the people who supported us.
Hereafter, in accordance with the restoration plan based on Act on Special Measures Concerning Nuclear Emergency Preparedness, we will achieve further stabilization of the plant through restoring the facilities for keeping cold shutdown.


http://mdn.mainichi.jp/mdnnews/news/20120112p2g00m0dm035000c.html

Gov't tells TEPCO to prepare repair plan for Fukushima Daini equipment

TOKYO (Kyodo) -- The Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency told Tokyo Electric Power Co. on Wednesday to prepare a report by the end of January on how to repair equipment at its Fukushima Daini nuclear power plant damaged by the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami, a senior agency official said.

The report is needed to "further ensure" the plant will remain in a stable state of cold shutdown, Kenji Matsuoka, chief of the disaster prevention section at the agency, said at a press conference, denying it is aimed at requiring the utility, known as TEPCO, to prepare for restarting the plant.

A cold shutdown is defined as a condition in which the bottom part of a reactor pressure vessel is kept below 100 C and exposure from the release of radioactive substances is being significantly contained.

The Fukushima Daini nuclear power plant was not so fatally damaged as the nearby Fukushima Daiichi plant by the magnitude-9.0 earthquake and subsequent tsunami. In December, the government lifted its declaration of a state of emergency at the Fukushima Daini plant.

But facilities at the plant, including the emergency power generator and the cooling system for spent nuclear fuel pools, have been damaged, according to the agency.

(Mainichi Japan) January 12, 2012

http://www.japantimes.co.jp/text/fl20120108x3.html

Fukushima lays bare Japanese media's ties to top

By DAVID MCNEILL
Special to The Japan Times

Is the ongoing crisis surrounding the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power plant being accurately reported in the Japanese media?

No, says independent journalist Shigeo Abe, who claims the authorities, and many journalists, have done a poor job of informing people about nuclear power in Japan both before and during the crisis — and that the clean-up costs are now being massively underestimated and underreported.

"The government says that as long as the radioactive leak can be dammed from the sides it can be stopped, but that's wrong," Abe insists. "They're going to have to build a huge trench underneath the plant to contain the radiation — a giant diaper. That is a huge-scale construction and will cost a fortune. The government knows that but won't reveal it."

The disaster at the Fukushima plant operated by Tokyo Electric Power Co. (Tepco) again revealed one of the major fault lines of Japanese journalism — that between the mainstream media and the mass-selling weeklies and their ranks of freelancers.

The mainstream media has long been part of the press-club system, which funnels information from official Japan to the public. Critics say the system locks the country's most influential journalists into a symbiotic relationship with their sources, and discourages them from investigation or independent lines of analysis.

Once the crisis began, it was weekly Japanese magazines that sank their teeth into the guardians of the so-called nuclear village — the cozy ranks of polititicians, bureaucrats, academics, corporate players and the media who promote nuclear power in this country.

Shukan Shincho dubbed Tepco's management "war criminals." Shukan Gendai named and shamed the most culpable of Japan's goyō gakusha (unquestioning pronuclear scientists; aka academic flunkies).

Meanwhile, the Asahi Shimbun newspaper's well-respected weekly magazine AERA revealed that local governments manipulated public opinion in support of reopening nuclear plants. The same magazine's now-famous March 19, 2011, cover story showing a masked nuclear worker and the headline "Radiation is coming to Tokyo" was controversial enough to force an apology and the resignation of at least one columnist (though the headline was in fact correct).

Others explored claims of structural bias in the mainstream press.

Japan's power-supply industry, collectively, is Japan's biggest advertiser, spending ¥88 billion (more than $1 billion) a year, according to the Nikkei Advertising Research Institute. Tepco's ¥24.4 billion alone is roughly half what a global firm as large as Toyota spends in a year.

Many journalists were tied to the industry in complex ways. A Yomiuri Shimbun science writer was cited in "Daishinsai Genpatsu Jiko to Media" ("The Media and the Nuclear Disaster"; Otsuki Shoten, 2011) as working simultaneously for nuclear-industry watchdogs, including the Central Research Institute of Electric Power Industry (sic). Journalists from the Nikkei and Mainichi Shimbun newspapers have also reportedly gone on to work for pronuclear organizations and publications.

Before the Fukushima crisis began, Tepco's advertising largesse may have helped silence even the most liberal of potential critics. According to Shukan Gendai, the utility spent roughly $26 million on advertising with the Asahi Shimbun. Tepco's quarterly magazine, Sola, was edited by former Asahi writers.

The financial clout of the power-supply industry, combined with the press-club system, surely helped discourage investigative reporting and keep concerns about nuclear power and critics of plants such as the aging Fukushima complex and Chubu Electric Power Co.'s Hamaoka facility in Omaezaki, Shizuoka Prefecture, which sits astride numerous faults, well below the media radar.

Throughout the Fukushima crisis, the mainstream media has relied heavily on pronuclear scientists' and Tepco's analyses of what was occurring. After the first hydrogen blast of March 12, the government's top spokesman, Yukio Edano, told a press conference: "Even though the reactor No. 1 building is damaged, the containment vessel is undamaged. ... On the contrary, the outside monitors show that the (radiation) dose rate is declining, so the cooling of the reactor is proceeding."

Any suggestion that the accident would reach Chernobyl level was, he said, "out of the question."

Author and nuclear critic Takashi Hirose noted afterward: "Most of the media believed this. It makes no logical sense to say, as Edano did, that the safety of the containment vessel could be determined by monitoring the radiation dose rate. All he did was repeat the lecture given him by Tepco."

As media critic Toru Takeda later wrote, the overwhelming strategy throughout the crisis, by both the authorities and big media, seems to be to reassure people, not alert them to possible dangers.

By late March, the war in Libya had knocked Japan from the front pages of the world's newspapers, but there was still one story that was very sought after: life inside the 20-km evacuation zone around the Fukushima atomic plant.

Thousands of people had fled and left behind homes, pets and farm animals that would eventually die. A small number of mainly elderly people stayed behind, refusing to leave homes that often had been in their families for generations. Not surprisingly, there was enormous global interest in their story and its disturbing echoes of the Chernobyl catastrophe 25 years earlier.

Yet not a single reporter from Japan's big media filed from inside the evacuation zone — despite the fact that it was not yet illegal to be there. Some would begin reporting from the area much later after receiving government clearance — the Asahi Shimbun newspaper sent its first dispatch on April 25, when its reporters accompanied the commissioner-general of the National Police Agency. Later, they would explain why they stayed away and — with the exception of government-approved excursions — why they continue to stay away.

News photo
Smoke signals: The leaking Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power plant on March 20, 2011. Critics accuse Japan's mainstream media of failing to properly report the ongoing crisis. KYODO PHOTO

"Journalists are employees and their companies have to protect them from dangers," explained Keiichi Sato, a deputy editor with the News Division of Nippon TV.

"Reporters like myself might want to go into that zone and get the story, and there was internal debate about it, but there isn't much personal freedom inside big media companies. We were told by our superiors that it was dangerous, so going in by ourselves would mean breaking that rule. It would mean nothing less than quitting the company."

The cartel-like behavior of the leading Japanese media companies meant they did not have to fear being trumped by rivals. In particularly dangerous situations, managers of TV networks and newspapers will form agreements (known as hōdō kyōtei) in effect to collectively keep their reporters out of harm's way.

Teddy Jimbo, founder of the pioneering Internet broadcaster Video News Network, explains: "Once the five or six big firms come to an agreement that their competitors will not do anything, they don't have to be worried about being scooped or challenged."

Frustrated by the lack of information from around the plant, Jimbo took his camera and dosimeters into the 20-km zone on April 2 and uploaded a report on YouTube that scored almost 1 million views. He was the first Japanese reporter to present TV images from Futaba and other abandoned towns (though images from the zone, shot during government-approved incursions, later appeared on mainstream TV news programs).

"For freelance journalists, it's not hard to beat the big companies because you quickly learn where their line is," Jimbo said. "As a journalist I needed to go in and find out what was happening. Any real journalist would want to do that." He later sold some of his footage to three of the big Japanese TV networks: NHK, NTV and TBS.

Says Abe: "The government's whole strategy for bringing the plant under control will have to be revised. The evacuees will never be able to return. They can't clean up the radiation. Will the media report this? I'm waiting for that."
We arranged civilization in which most crucial elements profoundly depend on science and technology We also arranged things so that almost no one understands science and technology This is a recipe for disaster We might get away with it for a while but sooner or later this combustible mix of ignorance and power is going to blow up in our faces CSgn

Offline RojoLeón

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Re: Earthquake Japan
« Reply #2314 on: January 16, 2012, 05:14:59 PM »
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/16/business/global/independent-panel-to-start-inquiry-into-japans-nuclear-crisis.html?_r=2

Panel Challenges Japan’s Account of Nuclear Disaster

TOKYO — A powerful and independent panel of specialists appointed by Japan’s Parliament is challenging the government’s account of the accident at a Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, and will start its own investigation into the disaster — including an inquiry into how much the March earthquake may have damaged the plant’s reactors even before the tsunami.
Amit Bhargava/Bloomberg News

Kiyoshi Kurokawa, who leads the inquiry, vowed that it would have no sacred cows.

The bipartisan panel with powers of subpoena is part of Japan’s efforts to investigate the nuclear calamity, which has displaced more than 100,000 people, rendered wide swaths of land unusable for decades and spurred public criticism that the government has been more interested in protecting vested industry interests than in discovering how three reactors were allowed to melt down and release huge amounts of radiation.

Several investigations — including inquiries by the plant operator, Tokyo Electric Power, and the government — have blamed the scale of the tsunami that struck Japan’s northeastern coast in March, knocking out vital cooling systems at the plant.

But critics in Japan and overseas have called for a fuller accounting of whether Tokyo Electric Power, or Tepco, sufficiently considered historically documented tsunami risks, and whether it could have done more to minimize the damage once waves hit the plant.

Questions also linger as to the extent of damage to the plant caused by the earthquake even before the tsunami hit. Any evidence of serious quake damage at the plant would cast new doubt on the safety of other reactors in quake-prone Japan. Tsunamis are far less frequent.

In his first interview since the panel was appointed last month, Kiyoshi Kurokawa, chairman of the new Fukushima Nuclear Accident Independent Investigation Commission, said his investigation would have no sacred cows.

Mr. Kurokawa, a former leader of Tokyo University’s medical department and a professor at the National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies, has lined up a prominent team, including the Nobel laureate Koichi Tanaka. The committee will have its first full meeting on Monday.

“For Japan to regain global credibility, we need an investigation into the disaster that is completely independent,” Mr. Kurokawa said. He said he was aware of questions raised about quake damage to the plant, and that the committee “would investigate that issue vigorously.”

“The lessons Japan can learn are globally relevant, because such a disaster can happen again,” he said.

Mr. Kurokawa’s committee has garnered attention because some members have been openly critical of Japan’s nuclear policy, including Katsuhiko Ishibashi, a seismologist who has long warned of the risks Japan’s volatile geology poses to its 54 nuclear reactors.

The panel includes Mitsuhiko Tanaka, a former nuclear engineer at Babcock Hitachi who has argued that the quake was likely to have damaged reactors at the plant to the extent that meltdowns would have occurred without the tsunami. Tepco disputes that view. Mr. Tanaka worked on the design of the reactors.

The panel is also the first such group of outside specialists to be named by Japan’s Parliament, supported by members of the ruling Democratic Party and its main opposition, the Liberal Democratic Party.

“If the panel can truly distance itself from political pressure, then it could be a powerful exercise,” said Yoichi Tao, a visiting professor in physics at Kogakuin University who has been working with Fukushima residents to clean up the radioactive fallout. “They must make sure that having bipartisan support does not mean they have to listen to everyone.”


http://www.montrealgazette.com/news/After+Fukushima+fish+tales/5994237/story.html

After Fukushima, fish tales
 
By ALEX ROSLIN, Special to The Gazette January 13, 2012
 


An aerial view of debris floating in the Pacific Ocean off the coast of Honshu in March after a 9.0 magnitude earthquake and tsunami struck northern Japan: The garbage patch is estimated to be twice the size of Texas.
 
After the world’s worst nuclear accident in 25 years, authorities in Canada said people living here were safe and faced no health risks from the fallout from Fukushima.

They said most of the radiation from the crippled Japanese nuclear power plant would fall into the ocean, where it would be diluted and not pose any danger.

Dr. Dale Dewar wasn’t convinced. Dewar, a family physician in Wynyard, Sask., doesn’t eat a lot of seafood herself, but when her grandchildren come to visit, she carefully checks seafood labels.

She wants to make sure she isn’t serving them anything that might come from the western Pacific Ocean.

Dewar, the executive director of Physicians for Global Survival, a Canadian anti-nuclear group, says the Canadian government has downplayed the radiation risks from Fukushima and is doing little to monitor them.

“We suspect we’re going to see more cancers, decreased fetal viability, decreased fertility, increased metabolic defects – and we expect them to be generational,” she said.

And evidence has emerged that the impacts of the disaster on the Pacific Ocean are worse than expected.

Since a tsunami and earthquake destroyed the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant last March, radioactive cesium has consistently been found in 60 to 80 per cent of Japanese fishing catches each month tested by Japan’s Fisheries Agency.

In November, 65 per cent of the catches tested positive for cesium (a radioactive material created by nuclear reactors), according to a Gazette analysis of data on the fisheries agency’s website. Cesium is a long-lived radionuclide that persists in the environment and increases the risk of cancer, according to the United States Environmental Protection Agency, which says the most common form of radioactive cesium has a half-life of 30 years.

The Canadian Food Inspection Agency, which monitors food safety, says it is aware of the numbers but says the amounts of cesium detected are small.

“Approximately 60 per cent of fish have shown to have detectable levels of radionuclides,” it said in an emailed statement.

“The majority of exported fish to Canada are caught much farther from the coast of Japan, and the Japanese testing has shown that these fish have not been contaminated with high levels of radionuclides.”

But the Japanese data shows elevated levels of contamination in several seafood species that Japan has exported to Canada in recent years.

In November, 18 per cent of cod exceeded a new radiation ceiling for food to be implemented in Japan in April – along with 21 per cent of eel, 22 per cent of sole and 33 per cent of seaweed.

Overall, one in five of the 1,100 catches tested in November exceeded the new ceiling of 100 becquerels per kilogram. (Canada’s ceiling for radiation in food is much higher: 1,000 becquerels per kilo.)

“I would probably be hesitant to eat a lot of those fish,” said Nicholas Fisher, a marine sciences professor at the State University of New York at Stony Brook.

Fisher is researching how radiation from Fukushima is affecting the Pacific fishery. “There has been virtually zero monitoring and research on this,” he said, calling on other governments to do more radiation tests on the ocean’s marine life.

“Is it something we need to be terrified of? No. Is it something we need to monitor? Yes, particularly in coastal waters where concentrations are high.”

Contamination of fish in the Pacific Ocean could have wide-ranging consequences for millions.

The Pacific is home to the world’s largest fishery, which is in turn the main source of protein for about one billion people in Asia alone.

In October, a U.S. study – co-authored by oceanographer Ken Buesseler, a senior scientist at the non-profit Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in Woods Hole, Mass., – reported Fukushima caused history’s biggest-ever release of radiation into the ocean – 10 to 100 times more than the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear catastrophe.

“It’s completely untrue to say this level of radiation is safe or harmless,” said Gordon Edwards, president of the Canadian Coalition for Nuclear Responsibility.

Edwards, who is also a math professor at Vanier College, said Fukushima has highlighted how lackadaisical Canadian authorities are about radiation risks – the result, he says, of the influence of Canada’s powerful nuclear industry.

“The reassurances have been completely irresponsible. To say there are no health concerns flies in the face of all scientific evidence,” said Edwards, who has advised the federal auditor-general’s office and Ontario government on nuclear-power issues.

Other Fukushima impacts have been unexpected, too. The first debris swept into the sea by the tsunami reportedly started to wash ashore on the west coast in mid-December, a year earlier than scientists and authorities predicted.

Residents of Vancouver Island, Alaska and the U.S. Pacific coast have said they’ve found large quantities of bottles, cans, lumber and floats.

The debris is part of 18 million tonnes of debris from Japan floating across the Pacific – taking up an area thought to be twice the size of Texas.

The impact of the debris on the Pacific is unclear. Much of it is expected to eventually join an already massive patch of existing garbage floating in the Pacific gyre.

The arrival of the debris on the west coast also appears to have caught Canadian authorities off guard.

“What debris are you talking about?” Health Canada spokesman Gary Holub asked when contacted for a comment this week.

“Debris from Japan is not expected on the west coast of Canada for another year.”

He asked a reporter to email him media stories about the debris. Later, Holub emailed a statement saying “there has been no official confirmation that the source of this debris is from the tsunami in Japan.”

He said, “It is ‘highly unlikely’ the debris will be radioactive and that Health Canada will await scientific data before deciding whether to test any of it.”

It’s also unclear how the debris will impact fish in the Pacific.

But there is a good chance Canadians have already eaten some of the types of fish most likely to be contaminated with cesium, based on the Japanese fisheries data.

Japan exported $76 million of food products to Canada in 2010, including $13 million of fish and crustaceans. No figures were available for 2011.

The Gazette analyzed the Japanese fisheries data for 22 seafood species that Japan has exported to Canada in recent years.

Some cesium was found in 16 of these 22 species in November, the last full month for which data was available.

Cesium was especially prevalent in certain of the species:

73 per cent of mackerel tested

91 per cent of the halibut

92 per cent of the sardines

93 per cent of the tuna and eel

94 per cent of the cod and anchovies

100 per cent of the carp, seaweed, shark and monkfish

Some of the fish were caught in Japanese coastal waters. Other catches were made hundreds of kilometres away in the open ocean.

There, the fish can also be caught by fishers from dozens of other nations that ply the waters of the Pacific.

Yet, Japan is the only country that appears to be systematically testing fish for radiation and publicly reporting the results.

CFIA is no longer doing any testing of its own. It did some radiation tests on food imports from areas of Japan around the stricken nuclear plant in the weeks after the Fukushima accident.

Only one of the 169 tested products showed any radiation. CFIA stopped doing the tests last June, saying they weren’t needed.

“The quantities of radioactive material reaching Canada are very small and within normal ranges,” CFIA spokesperson Lisa Gauthier said in an emailed statement.

“They do not pose any health risk to Canadians, the food we eat or the plants and animals in Canada.”

In August, CFIA also tested a dozen samples of fish caught in B.C. coastal and inland waters. None of those tests found any radiation.

CFIA said it has no plans to do any other radiation tests on fish in the Pacific or imports from other nations that fish in the ocean, including Japan.

CFIA now relies on Japanese authorities to screen Japanese food exported to Canada.

But Japan’s monitoring of food has come under a storm of criticism from the Japanese public after food contaminated with radiation was sold to consumers.

A Canadian seafood industry official was surprised when told CFIA doesn’t plan any more tests of Pacific fish.

“It is certainly our expectation that the CFIA will test again this year,” said Christina Burridge, executive director of the B.C. Seafood Alliance.

The alliance is an umbrella of Pacific seafood harvesting associations whose member firms generate about $700 million in yearly revenues.

Burridge said CFIA promised her group last spring it would test Pacific salmon and tuna returning to B.C. fishing grounds in 2012 and 2013 because of the possibility those fish could have migrated close to Japan.

“We all agreed that if there was any risk of contamination, it would be in 2012 and 2013,” she said.

She wouldn’t comment on the Japanese fisheries data, which she hadn’t seen previously. But she said of the data: “It would reinforce our expectation that the CFIA would test this year.

“We want to be able to assure our customers that our expectation that there will be no increase in detectable levels (of radiation) is true,” she said.

She said she based this expectation on “a general belief that contamination will be limited to the coastal waters off Japan.”

But despite this belief and the importance of the Pacific fishery, few studies exist on how Fukushima affected marine life.

One of those studies found that fish and crustaceans caught in the vicinity of Fukushima in late March had 10,000 times more than so-called safe levels of radiation. The study, published last May in the journal Environmental Science & Technology, also said macroalgae had 19,000 times the safe level.

Those levels were measured before the Japanese utility that runs the crippled nuclear plant dumped 11,000 tonnes of radioactive water into the Pacific in April and additional leaks that have released hundreds of tonnes more.

But since that early study, little research has been published on the topic.

“People want to know what’s happening with the cesium and how much is in the fish, but we don’t know. It’s frustrating,” said oceanographer Buesseler.

“It’s disconcerting how big of an event Fukushima was and how little data are out there. No one has taken responsibility for studying this in a single agency (in the U.S.), even though we also have reactors on the coast and other events could happen,” he said.

SUNY’s Fisher agrees: “In the U.S., it’s very difficult to acquire funding to do that work. A lot of people are very frustrated. Funding agencies are already spread incredibly thin, and they were not prepared for this,” he said.

After governments refused to provide funds, Buesseler, Fisher and other scientists secured funds from a private foundation for a research voyage in the Pacific to gather radiation data on fish, plankton and water.

Fisher can’t discuss his findings because they aren’t published yet. He expects to send them for publication in coming weeks.

Buesseler has already reported some results from the 15-day cruise last May and June.

He co-authored the study in October that said cesium levels in the Pacific had gone up an astonishing 45 million times above pre-accident levels. The levels then declined rapidly for a while, but after that, they unexpectedly levelled off.

In July, cesium levels stopped declining and remained stuck at 10,000 times above pre-accident levels.

It meant the ocean wasn’t diluting the radiation as expected. If it had been, cesium levels would have kept falling. The finding suggested radiation was still being released into the ocean long after the accident in March, Buesseler said in an interview.

“It implies the groundwater is contaminated or the facility is still leaking radiation.”

The Japanese fisheries data seems to support this conclusion. Far from declining, contamination levels in some species were flat or even rose last fall, including species that Japan exports to Canada like skipjack tuna, cod, sole and eel.

In November, the average Japanese catch had 111 becquerels of cesium per kilogram – above the new radiation ceiling of 100 becquerels per kilo that Japan has announced it will implement for food this spring.

The November level declined from a peak level of 373 becquerels per kilo last April. But it was an increase from the October average of 78 becquerels per kilo.

Such persistently elevated levels of radiation warrant more monitoring and research, Fisher said. “It’s not something we can easily dismiss.”

Continuing radiation leaks from Fukushima could be to blame, he said. Another culprit, he said, may be a phenomenon called biomagnification – the tendency for radiation concentrations to increase in species that are farther up the food chain.

About 2.7 per cent of the fish catches also exceeded Japan’s existing ceiling for food of 500 becquerels per kilo. That was also up from one per cent in October.

In November, 0.8 per cent of Japanese catches exceeded Canada’s ceiling of 1,000 becquerels per kilo, up from 0.2 per cent in October.

But food with radiation below these limits can still pose health risks, Edwards believes. “There is no safe level of radiation. They should be making every effort to monitor food.”

http://mdn.mainichi.jp/perspectives/news/20120114p2a00m0na001000c.html

A-bomb survivors' dark experiences must not be repeated for Fukushima crisis victims

Last year was a turning point for Terumi Tanaka, secretary-general of the Japan Confederation of A- and H-Bomb Suffers Organizations (Nihon Hidankyo), who turns 80 this year. Following the outbreak of the crisis at the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant, Nihon Hidankyo incorporated a call for Japan to end reliance on nuclear power into its platform.

Tanaka is a scientist, though his road to becoming one was quite rough. His youth overlapped with World War II and the chaotic days following Japan's defeat.

Tanaka was exposed to radiation from the atomic blast on Aug. 9, 1945, when he was enrolled at Nagasaki Junior High School. Tanaka survived, but his family had no relatives they were able to rely on. His mother and three siblings fell on hard times, so with dreams of studying physics, he worked for five years unloading cargo at a port to earn enough to get into a university in Tokyo. He obtained a scholarship and worked as a private teacher while studying nuclear physics.

After graduation, Tanaka became a materials engineering researcher at Tohoku University and helped develop nuclear reactor materials. Many science and engineering students at the time were drawn to nuclear power and several of his classmates became experts in the field. "I didn't want to be just victimized by nuclear energy. I wanted to utilize it positively," he said in a speech to the Japan National Press Club last year.

Nihon Hidankyo incorporated a phrase calling for the utilization of atomic energy for the happiness and prosperity of humanity in its inaugural declaration in 1956. Tanaka and other members of the organization had believed this did not contradict its calls for the abolition of nuclear weapons. But the Fukushima nuclear crisis changed that view.

Tanaka and other members of Nihon Hidankyo wondered how lessons learned from the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki should be used to deal with the Fukushima crisis. They visited the national government and the Fukushima Prefectural Government in late May 2011, 2 1/2 months after the meltdowns, and asked that residents near the nuclear plant be given disaster victim certificates and health management books, and undergo regular health checkups throughout their lives.

Atomic bombing survivors were left abandoned under the U.S. occupation following the war because damage caused by the bombing was classified information. Adding insult to injury, survivors were also subjected to prejudice and discrimination by their fellow Japanese due in great part to the lack of information, until they were guaranteed free health checkups under a law enacted in 1957.

Tanaka had initially intended to hold a news conference after visiting the Fukushima Prefectural Government, but prefectural officials balked at the idea for fear that a visit by atomic bombing survivors might illicit widespread fear. In response, Tanaka and his companions abandoned the news conference idea. It brought home to him how difficult it is to join hands and share information with victims of the nuclear crisis.

However, the long dearth of information and assistance following the atomic bombing caused pain to those who should have been helped, and hid what had happened to them. The problems drag on still. Class action lawsuits brought by atomic bombing survivors demanding that their health problems be recognized as atomic-bomb related diseases were all only finally resolved last year, and a new distribution map of nuclear fallout-laden black rain was released recently. The entire picture of damage caused by the atomic bombings is far from being clarified.

The prefectural government and other entities are providing health management for residents near the crippled nuclear power station, doing follow-up surveys and giving relevant information to local residents. It is their steady efforts to prevent a gap in information and countermeasures from opening that will help stop prejudice and fear, as is shown by the long and bitter experience of atomic-bombing survivors. (By Kenji Tamaki, Expert Senior Writer)
We arranged civilization in which most crucial elements profoundly depend on science and technology We also arranged things so that almost no one understands science and technology This is a recipe for disaster We might get away with it for a while but sooner or later this combustible mix of ignorance and power is going to blow up in our faces CSgn

Offline RojoLeón

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Re: Earthquake Japan
« Reply #2315 on: January 29, 2012, 08:40:15 PM »
http://www.news.ucdavis.edu/search/news_detail.lasso?id=10131

How sea water could corrode nuclear fuel

January 26, 2012

Japan used seawater to cool nuclear fuel at the stricken Fukushima-Daiichi nuclear plant after the tsunami in March 2011 -- and that was probably the best action to take at the time, says Professor Alexandra Navrotsky of the University of California, Davis.

But Navrotsky and others have since discovered a new way in which seawater can corrode nuclear fuel, forming uranium compounds that could potentially travel long distances, either in solution or as very small particles. The research team published its work Jan. 23 in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

“This is a phenomenon that has not been considered before,” said Alexandra Navrotsky, distinguished professor of ceramic, earth and environmental materials chemistry. “We don’t know how much this will increase the rate of corrosion, but it is something that will have to be considered in future.”

Japan used seawater to avoid a much more serious accident at the Fukushima-Daiichi plant, and Navrotsky said, to her knowledge, there is no evidence of long-distance uranium contamination from the plant.

Uranium in nuclear fuel rods is in a chemical form that is “pretty insoluble” in water, Navrotsky said, unless the uranium is oxidized to uranium-VI — a process that can be facilitated when radiation converts water into peroxide, a powerful oxidizing agent.

Peter Burns, professor of civil engineering and geological sciences at the University of Notre Dame and a co-author of the new paper, had previously made spherical uranium peroxide clusters, rather like carbon “buckyballs,” that can dissolve or exist as solids.

In the new paper, the researchers show that in the presence of alkali metal ions such as sodium — for example, in seawater — these clusters are stable enough to persist in solution or as small particles even when the oxidizing agent is removed.

In other words, these clusters could form on the surface of a fuel rod exposed to seawater and then be transported away, surviving in the environment for months or years before reverting to more common forms of uranium, without peroxide,  and settling to the bottom of the ocean. There is no data yet on how fast these uranium peroxide clusters will break down in the environment, Navrotsky said.

Navrotsky and Burns worked with the following co-authors: postdoctoral researcher Christopher Armstrong and project scientist Tatiana Shvareva, UC Davis; May Nyman, Sandia National Laboratory, Albuquerque, N.M.; and Ginger Sigmon, University of Notre Dame. The U.S. Department of Energy supported the project.


http://www.smh.com.au/environment/japan-warned-of-mass-rescue-in-nuclear-crisis-20120126-1qjpz.html

Japan warned of mass rescue in nuclear crisis

TOKYO: The Japanese government's worst-case scenario at the height of the nuclear crisis last year warned that tens of millions of people, including Tokyo residents, would need to leave their homes, according to a report obtained by the Associated Press. But fearing widespread panic, officials kept the report secret.

The recent emergence of the 15-page internal document may add to complaints in Japan that the government withheld too much information about the world's worst nuclear accident since Chernobyl.

It also casts doubt as to whether the government was prepared to cope with what could have been an evacuation of unprecedented scale.

The report was submitted to the then prime minister Naoto Kan and his advisers on March 25, two weeks after the earthquake and tsunami devastated the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant, causing three reactors to melt down and generating hydrogen explosions that blew away protective structures.

Emergency workers ultimately were able to bring the reactors under control, but at the time, it was unclear whether emergency measures would succeed.

Mr Kan commissioned the report, compiled by the Atomic Energy Commission of Japan, to examine what options the government had if those efforts failed. Authorities evacuated 59,000 residents within 20 kilometres of the Fukushima plant, with thousands more were evacuated from other towns later. The report said there was a chance far larger evacuations could be needed.

The report looked at several ways the crisis could escalate: explosions inside the reactors, complete meltdowns and the structural failure of cooling pools for spent nuclear fuel.

It said each contingency was possible at the time it was written and could force all workers to flee, meaning the situation at the plant would unfold on its own, unmitigated.

Using matter-of-fact language, diagrams and charts, the report said if meltdowns spiralled out of control, radiation levels could soar.

In that case, it said evacuation orders should be issued for residents within a 17 kilometre radius of the plant and ''voluntary'' evacuations offered for everyone living within 250 kilometres.

That area would have included Tokyo and its suburbs, with a population of 35 million, and other large cities such as Sendai, with 1 million people, and Fukushima with 290,000 people.

The report further warned contaminated areas might not be safe for ''several decades''.

''We cannot rule out further developments that may lead to an unpredictable situation at Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant, where there has been an accident, and this report outlines a summary of that unpredictable situation,'' says the document, written by Shunsuke Kondo, head of the commission, which oversees nuclear policy.

After Mr Kan received the report, he and other Japanese officials publicly insisted there was no need to prepare for wider-scale evacuations.

The new Japanese government continues to refuse to make the document public.

The Associated Press obtained it on Wednesday through a government source, who insisted on anonymity because the document was still categorised as internal.

The cabinet minister in charge of the nuclear crisis, Goshi Hosono, implicitly acknowledged the document's existence earlier this month, but said the government had felt no need to make it public.

''It was a scenario based on hypothesis, and even in the event of such a development, we were told that residents would have enough time to evacuate,'' Mr Hosono said.

''We were concerned about the possibility of causing excessive and unnecessary worry if we went ahead and made it public. That's why we decided not to disclose it.''


http://www.japantimes.co.jp/text/nn20120122a1.html

Cabinet kept alarming nuke report secret
Fearful of scaring public, existence of document was denied for months
Kyodo

The government buried a worst-case scenario for the Fukushima nuclear crisis that was drafted last March and kept it under wraps until the end of last year, sources in the administration said Saturday.

After the document was shown to a small, select group of senior government officials at the prime minister's office in late March, the administration of then Prime Minister Naoto Kan decided to quietly bury it, the sources said.

"When the document was presented (in March), a discussion ensued about keeping its existence secret," a government source said.

In order to deny its existence, the government treated it as a personal document of Japan Atomic Energy Commission Chairman Shunsuke Kondo, who authored it, until the end of December, the sources said.

It was only then that it was actually recognized as an official government document, they said.

"The content was so shocking that we decided to treat it as if it didn't exist," a senior government official said.

A private-sector panel investigating the disaster at the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant intends to examine whether the government tried to manipulate information during its handling of the crisis.

The panel plans to interview Kan and Goshi Hosono, minister in charge of the nuclear crisis and Kan's former adviser, among others.

Kondo drew up the document at Kan's request and is dated March 25, 2011. The document forecast that in a worst-case scenario the plant's crippled reactors would intermittently release massive quantities of radioactive materials for about a year.

The projection was based on a scenario in which a hydrogen explosion would tear through the No. 1 reactor's containment vessel, forcing all workers at the plant to evacuate because of the ensuing lethal radiation levels.

The document said that in such an event, residents within a radius of 170 km of the power station, and possibly even further away, would be forced to evacuate. Those living within a radius of between 170 km and 250 km of the plant, including Tokyo, could chose to evacuate voluntarily. The wrecked power station is about 220 km northeast of the capital.

Kan admitted in September that a worst-case scenario for the disaster had been drawn up. After parts of it were leaked in December, his successor, Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda, decided to start treating it as a Cabinet Office document.

"Because we were told there would be enough time to evacuate residents (even in a worst-case scenario), we refrained from disclosing the document due to fear it would cause unnecessary anxiety (among the public)," Hosono, the nuclear crisis minister, said at a Jan. 6 news conference.
Ministry not keeping track

The health ministry has not been keeping track of radiation that workers at the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant are exposed to while off-site or off duty, ministry officials said Saturday, prompting concerns that current systems to check exposure may be inadequate.

The health ministry also doesn't check radiation doses that workers are exposed to during decontamination efforts around the wrecked No. 1 plant.

The ministry currently only keeps track of radiation exposure for the plant's employees when they are engaged in work around the facility.


http://mdn.mainichi.jp/mdnnews/news/20120124p2g00m0dm144000c.html

Minutes of past gov't meetings on Fukushima crisis to be created

TOKYO (Kyodo) -- Japanese industry minister Yukio Edano on Tuesday apologized for the government's failure to take minutes of meetings of a taskforce dealing with the Fukushima nuclear crisis and said that he has instructed the Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency to compile them soon based on notes taken by meeting attendees.

Edano said at a press conference that although the meetings were held in emergency situations soon after the accident at the Fukushima Daiichi power plant, the government should have created minutes as soon as possible considering the public interest in the matter and the significant social impact that the handling of the accident has.

"As then-Chief Cabinet Secretary and the current Economy, Trade and Industry Minister, I apologize," he said.

The government taskforce was set up on March 11, when a massive earthquake struck wide areas of northeastern and eastern Japan and ensuing tsunami ravaged Pacific coastal areas of northeastern Japan, triggering the nuclear accident at the Fukushima Daiichi power plant.

Various crisis management decisions were made at the taskforce's meetings, such as setting of the evacuation zone and policies for conducting decontamination work after the leakage of radioactive materials from the crippled power plant.

The nuclear safety agency serves as a secretariat for the taskforce. The industry ministry has the agency under its wing.

"I will have (the agency) make utmost effort" to have the minutes ready for release "next month at the latest," Edano said.


http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5iS4lAId7b1ElcHEQeO45cZDFQg1g?docId=CNG.7d1cad19d0af712d828443311e0f2ec0.171

US ex-diplomat pulls no punches on Japan

By Shaun Tandon (AFP) – 3 days ago

WASHINGTON — US diplomats typically are unfailingly polite and reverential towards their countries of expertise and, upon retirement, go away quietly into research or business. Not so with Kevin Maher.

Since he was unceremoniously removed from his position last year, the veteran US diplomat on Japan has gone on the offensive with biting criticism on issues from Tokyo's political paralysis to the Fukushima nuclear disaster.

To his own surprise, he has found an eager audience. A book he wrote in Japanese, "The Japan That Can't Decide," has sold more than 100,000 copies and for weeks topped the country's best-seller list for non-fiction paperbacks.

Maher's main thesis is that Japan -- which has had six new prime ministers since 2006 -- has been crippled by a failure of its politicians to accept responsibility and, hence, to make hard decisions.

Maher pointed to the crisis at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant, which was devastated by the March 11 tsunami, and dismissed the government's declaration last month that it had stabilized the leaking reactors.

"It's not stable," Maher said recently at the Heritage Foundation in Washington. "Tokyo is safe, but Fukushima Daiichi is in really bad shape."

The State Department sacked Maher as its Japan desk chief just a day before the historic 9.0-magnitude earthquake but he stayed on for another month to coordinate the US disaster response.

Maher said that the US government was privately terrified over the unfolding crisis. He accused Japan's then prime minister, Naoto Kan, of evading responsibility and trying to pass the problem over to the plant's operator, the Tokyo Electric Power Co.

"I remember sitting on a task force many a time thinking, 'Who the hell is in control in Japan?' The government's not doing anything. Kan made one trip and flew up and got in the way and came back," Maher said.

Maher said that he watched in horror as he saw television footage of a sole helicopter dropping water on the stricken plant.

"Is that the best Japan can do?" Maher said. "Frankly what happened is the US government called in the Japanese ambassador and said, look, you have to take this stuff seriously. We don't know what's going to happen."

Maher said that the United States was even looking at whether it would have to evacuate some 100,000 Americans, although it soon became clear that Tokyo was not in harm's way.

Maher's earlier strident critiques led to his downfall. While in office, he spoke to students about Okinawa -- home to half of the 47,000 US troops in Japan -- and accused local leaders of playing on mainland Japanese guilt to "extort" concessions. Japanese media accounts of his remarks stirred outrage.

Maher, 57, who has worked on Japan for three decades and has a Japanese wife, called the controversy "water under the bridge" and said he was making a good living as a consultant.

Nonetheless, he criticized the two officials he said were behind his dismissal -- then deputy secretary of state Jim Steinberg and Ambassador to Japan John Roos.

"They just wanted to get this out of the press and decided that the best thing was not to address whether these press reports were actually true or not but just to remove me from my position," Maher said.

Despite his criticism, Maher -- like current US officials -- sees bright spots in Japan's latest prime minister, Yoshihiko Noda, who is pushing forward controversial plans to raise taxes and join talks on a US-backed trade pact.

Maher said he has received little backlash over his book. He believed he won over potentially hostile readers with a message that Japan worked well in the past and needed to return to its traditions.

"We used to have an image back in the '80s, if a Japanese corporation had a problem, you were worried that the chairman would go to commit seppuku," he said, referring to ritual suicide.

"He would take responsibility even if it was not a mistake that he made. But now it's reversed in Japan," he said.

Maher said he was surprised when he visited Okinawa to promote his book.

"There were four demonstrators. When I was consul general in Okinawa, I could always get 40."

http://boingboing.net/2012/01/22/foreign-journalist-claims-corr.html

Foreign journalist claims corruption, brutality, death threats from Japanese airport officials


Christopher Johnson, a Canadian journalist residing (until recently) in Japan published a ghastly account of his return to Tokyo after a short pre-Christmas trip. He was flagged at the border (he implies that this is related to his coverage of Fukushima), held, threatened, and shaken down for bribes before being detained without counsel or a phone call. He says he was eventually deported, though not before being ordered to sign a falsified confession and being threatened by an official at gunpoint, who demanded that he purchase a hyper-inflated plane ticket, which, Johnson believes, included a kickback for the official.

    This time, he came back with a young, stocky guy. He was wearing a blue uniform. “Do you see this gun?” he said in Japanese, turning around to show me a weapon in its holster. “I have the legal authority to use this if you refuse to get on that flight. Now are you going to buy that ticket?”

    I was angry now. They are forcing me at gunpoint to buy an overpriced ticket.

    The [guards] ushered me out of the room and through the airport. They still had my bag, my passport, my wallet, credit cards, everything. I had no choice. They whisked me through the airport like a criminal. I didn’t have to line-up for x-ray machines or immigration. [They] pushed me through VIP lines, ahead of pilots and flight attendants.
« Last Edit: January 29, 2012, 08:45:23 PM by RojoLeón »
We arranged civilization in which most crucial elements profoundly depend on science and technology We also arranged things so that almost no one understands science and technology This is a recipe for disaster We might get away with it for a while but sooner or later this combustible mix of ignorance and power is going to blow up in our faces CSgn

Offline RojoLeón

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Re: Earthquake Japan
« Reply #2316 on: February 2, 2012, 01:17:34 AM »
http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/02/01/japan-nuclear-leak-idUSL4E8D18D020120201

Major new leak at Japan's nuclear plant - Kyodo

Feb 2 (Reuters) - More than 8 tonnes of water have leaked from Japan's stricken nuclear power plant after a frozen pipe burst inside a reactor buiding, but none of the water is thought to have escaped the complex, Kyodo news agency said on Thursday.

Kyodo, quoting the Fukushima plant's operator Tokyo Electric Power Co (Tepco), said the water had leaked from the No.4 reactor when a pipe "dropped off" but that the liquid had all been contained inside the reactor building.

The plant, on the coast north of Tokyo, was wrecked by a huge earthquake and tsunami in March last year, triggering the evacuation of around 80,000 people in the world's worst nuclear crisis in 25 years. The major leak follows the discovery and plugging of smaller leaks at the same reactor last weekend.

Kyodo quoted Tepco officials as saying the latest leak had been found late on Tuesday night and was stopped by closing a valve. The report did not make completely clear if the leaked water was radioactive but implied it, noting that water inside the No.4 reactor was being used to cool spent fuel rods.

"The total amount of leakage from the reactor was initially estimated to be 6 litres, but the utility revised the figure later Wednesday, adding that the leakage appears to have started at around 5 p.m. (0800 GMT) Monday," Kyodo said.

"The utility plans to check whether there are similar cases in the other crippled reactors," it added. (Reporting by Mark Bendeich; Editing by Kavita Chandran)


http://english.kyodonews.jp/news/2012/02/139493.html

TEPCO says 8.5 tons of water leaked from Fukushima No. 4 reactor

TOKYO, Feb. 1, Kyodo

Tokyo Electric Power Co. said Wednesday that 8.5 tons of radioactive water leaked from the No. 4 reactor of the crisis-hit Fukushima Daiichi power plant because a pipe connected to the reactor dropped off, but added that the liquid has not flowed outside the reactor building.

At the time of the devastating earthquake and tsunami last March 11, the reactor's fuel rods were in its spent fuel pool due to maintenance work that was taking place. The water contains radioactive materials as it is mixed up with water that is in contact with the fuel in the spent fuel tank.

According to the utility known as TEPCO, water was found to have leaked onto the floor of the No. 4 unit building at 10:30 p.m. Tuesday. The leak was stopped at 10:43 p.m. by closing a valve, officials said.

http://ajw.asahi.com/article/0311disaster/analysis/AJ201202010024

POINT OF VIEW/ Mariko Takahashi: Hatoyama's questionable Nature article

    Previous ArticleUnknown banker becomes DPJ's point man in energy policy

February 01, 2012
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Writing in the Dec. 15 issue of Nature magazine, former Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama and Lower House member Tomoyuki Taira, both from the ruling Democratic Party of Japan, called for the disaster-stricken Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power plant to be nationalized.

The commentary in Britain's prestigious scientific journal represented an extremely rare case of Japanese politicians making an appeal to a global audience.

I hope many scientists read the article. I'm sure many of them must have felt bewildered, because so many of the statements lacked any scientific basis.

The article said that "re-criticality," "nuclear explosions" and "meltdowns" may each have taken place. It pointed out that information disclosure by Tokyo Electric Power Co. (TEPCO), the plant operator, was woefully insufficient.

Thus, the authors argued that nationalization of the nuclear power plant was "inevitable." By doing so, they said information could be gathered more openly.

The British Parliament has a body called the Parliamentary Office of Science and Technology (POST), which is tasked with drawing up reports on science and technology. David Cope, the POST director who visited Japan in January, said the Hatoyama and Taira paper was "strange."

Cope said he could not understand why they were arguing that nuclear explosions may have taken place. Hydrogen was present, and it triggered the hydrogen explosions, he said.

He indirectly countered the authors' view that the plant must be nationalized. In his opinion, the most important thing was to have an independent and powerful regulatory body.

The term "re-criticality" refers to the re-emergence of a sustained nuclear fission chain reaction. That word was a staple for much debate after TEPCO said in late March last year that it had detected radioactive chlorine-38, whose presence indicates re-criticality.

But experts said it was inconceivable. Some asserted that TEPCO's measurement was flawed. TEPCO finally reviewed the data and acknowledged that the measurement was wrong.

With regard to that development, Hatoyama and Taira said: "Through NISA, we obtained and re-analyzed TEPCO's data, which were measured with a germanium semiconductor detector. We concluded that chlorine-38 was indeed present, and at a level close to that initially reported." But they did not present any proof for that argument.

No matter whether their argument is right or wrong, jumping to a conclusion without producing any proof goes against the rules of science.

I also don't quite understand why the authors were so eager to argue that nuclear explosions may have taken place.

Although it remains unclear what precisely the authors meant by "nuclear explosions," the word usually refers to a fast progression of a nuclear fission chain reaction, like when an atomic bomb explodes. If that had taken place, the nuclear reactor vessels would have been blown to pieces, and the way radioactive substances were spewed out would have been quite different from what we have seen.

An editorial in the same Nature issue questioned the lack of an independent scientific voice to advise the Japanese government.

Japan has no equivalent of Britain's POST. I think the very quality of the Hatoyama and Taira article is evidence that creating such a body is essential.

<a href="http://www.youtube.com/v/wNDqbiciDiA?version=3&amp;amp;hl=en_US&amp;amp;rel=0" target="_blank" class="new_win">http://www.youtube.com/v/wNDqbiciDiA?version=3&amp;amp;hl=en_US&amp;amp;rel=0</a>

Reactor 1 on left of screen, reactor 3 (the one with the unstable MOX fuel) on the right.
{edit: just to bear in mind that the buildings are 4 stories tall and the pylons infront of them are approx 10 stories tall - just to give you a sense of perspective about how high the cloud on the right rises, and how far it's debris are being thrown. Officially they are both hydrogen explosions.)

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970204226204576604013365441594.html
Quote
TOKYO—Trace amounts of plutonium were found as far as 28 miles from the damaged Fukushima Daiichi nuclear-power plant, the first time that the dangerous element released from the accident was found outside of the immediate area of the plant.

The science ministry report issued Friday comes just as the government lifted one of its evacuation advisories, underscoring the difficulty of restoring normalcy and assuring the safety of residents around the crippled plant.

The government also reported a rare detection of strontium, another highly dangerous element, far from the crippled reactor, in one spot as far away as 50 miles.
« Last Edit: February 2, 2012, 01:23:36 AM by RojoLeón »
We arranged civilization in which most crucial elements profoundly depend on science and technology We also arranged things so that almost no one understands science and technology This is a recipe for disaster We might get away with it for a while but sooner or later this combustible mix of ignorance and power is going to blow up in our faces CSgn

Offline tomred

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Re: Earthquake Japan
« Reply #2317 on: February 2, 2012, 07:22:58 AM »
This nationalization of TEPCO/injection of public funds is basically the DPJ's capitulation to the banks. Instead of letting the company go bankrupt, which would cause a hit to the banks as its creditors, the public is being made to pay the compensation. On the positive side, at least the DPJ closed Hamaoka and Edano does seem to be a bit less pro-nuclear industry than some of his predecessors (Kaieda, for example) and the LDP.

Japan is a shambles at the moment--you only need to look at the Olympus fiasco to realize that.

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Re: Earthquake Japan
« Reply #2318 on: February 23, 2012, 09:37:56 PM »
Just watching a documentary on BBC2 about the Fukushima Nuclear power plant. Some bad, mad and sad decisions went down that day.
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Re: Earthquake Japan
« Reply #2319 on: February 23, 2012, 09:44:52 PM »
***Note to self - Hydrogen is bad***
@ Veinticinco de Mayo The way you talk to other users on this forum is something you should be ashamed of as someone who is suppose to be representing the site.
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