--
Within two weeks of the earthquake and tsunami I was making the exact
same points right here at Collapsenet. We have never stopped covering
Fukushima for just that reason. As with climate change, and global
economic corruption and Peak Oil, I have always maintained the
position that these are not national problems but nuclear problems.
And
an empathic refocus of human attention along these lines is the only
thing that can prevent us all from sharing the same fate. The
Japanese government cannot and will never be able to deal with
Fukushima alone. As we have shown here repeatedly the Japanese
government, buried in unrepayable debt cannot muster the resources,
manpower or skill necessary to even approach Reactor #2. TEPCO is in
the process of being nationalized.
And
in the meantime the fate of our entire species rest upon the rickety
supports holding up the spent fuel pool at Reactor #4. - MCR
Fukushima
crisis may become 'global catastrophe'
By
Elliott Freeman
26
April, 2012
A
nuclear watchdog official told RT News that the ongoing crisis at the
crippled Fukushima nuclear power plant in Japan could become a
"global catastrophe", echoing warnings from other experts.
Kevin
Kamps, a radioactive waste watchdog with Beyond
Nuclear, described the potential nightmare to "The Big
Picture" host Thom Hartmann, stating that if the pools of
nuclear fuel at the plant caught on fire, the area would become so
radioactive that the entire containment operation would have to be
permanently abandoned.
Mitsuhei
Murata, the former Japanese ambassador to Switzerland, also expressed
grave concerns about what would happen if the damaged building that
houses Reactor 4 collapsed. According to the
Huffington Post, he explained to the Swiss House of Councilors
last month that should such an event occur, it would adversely affect
the thousands of spent nuclear fuel rods nearby, which are
dangerously exposed to air.
Nuclear
expert Robert Alvarez, the former Senior Policy Adviser to the
Secretary of the U.S. Department of Energy, spelled
out the potential disaster in more specific -- and chilling --
terms in an email sent to renowned Japanese diplomat Akio Matsumura.
"If
an earthquake or other event were to cause the pool to drain, this
could result in a catastrophic radiological fire involving nearly 10
times the amount of [radioactive] Cs-137 released by the Chernobyl
incident," Alvarez stated.
However,
things could get much worse. According to Alvarez, if the 11,138
spent nuclear fuel rods contained in the facility also went up in
flames, it would unleash 85 times the amount of Cs-137 released by
the Chernobyl disaster.
In
addition, a recent study of the meltdown at Chernobyl offers a
sobering analysis of the situation, ENS News reports. According to
research compiled by Russian scientists and published in the New York
Academy of Sciences, the nuclear fallout from the Chernobyl disaster
killed
over one million people worldwide from 1986 to 2004. If the
worst-case scenario at Fukushima becomes a reality, the effects could
lead to millions of casualties around the globe.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.