Surprisingly this little bit of information comes from the NZ Herald
Fault
under Japan nuclear plant 'may be active'
Japan's
only working nuclear power plant sits on what may be a seismic fault
in the earth's crust, a geologist has warned, saying it is "very
silly" to allow it to continue operating.
11
November, 2012
Mitsuhisa
Watanabe says the earth's plates could move underneath the Oi nuclear
plant in western Japan, causing a catastrophe to rival last year's
atomic disaster at Fukushima - although some of his colleagues on a
nuclear advisory panel disagree.
"It
is an active fault. The plates shifted some 120,000 to 130,000 years
ago for sure," Watanabe, of Tokyo's Toyo University, told AFP.
"In
research that I have conducted on active faults in Japan and
overseas, structures built above them were all damaged" when
they moved and caused an earthquake, he said.
Watanabe,
a tectonic geomorphologist, is part of a five-member team tasked by
the Nuclear Regulation Authority with looking into the tectonic
situation underneath the plant, where the country's only working
reactors are.
Geomorphology
is the study of the evolution and configuration of landforms.
Under
government guidelines atomic installations cannot be sited on a fault
- the meeting place of two or more of the plates that make up the
earth's crust - if it is still classed as active, that is, one that
is known to have moved within the last 130,000 years.
A
positive finding would mean regulators must order the suspension of
operations at the plant in Fukui prefecture.
But
other scientists on the panel say it is too early to class it as an
"active" fault that might pose a risk to the plant, calling
for "a scientifically calm approach".
The
team's head, Kunihiko Shimazaki, who is also a member of Japan's
nuclear regulatory body, says the geological scarring they can see
was probably caused by little more than a long-ago landslide.
Instead
of the definitive green light that plant operator Kansai Electric
Power (KEPCO) was hoping for, the committee last week said only that
more work needs to be done.
"It's
desirable for all members to reach a conclusion by consensus,"
Shimazaki said.
However
Watanabe, asked if the government should allow KEPCO to continue
running the plant at Oi, said: "It would be a very silly
option."
"We
would have learned nothing from Fukushima. I'm afraid we would see a
repeat (of the disaster) one day."
He
maintains that the plant could be vulnerable to a sizeable
earthquake, which might "cause a very serious problem... similar
to the Fukushima one".
But
he stresses that the science thus far is simply not conclusive and
argues work should halt out of an abundance of caution.
"We
are not seeking to decommission the plant," Watanabe said. "We
should first stop operation and then carry out underground
investigation thoroughly before reaching a conclusion."
All
Japan's nuclear reactors were shut down in the months after the
disaster at Fukushima, when an earthquake-sparked tsunami knocked out
cooling systems and caused meltdowns that scattered radiation over a
large area.
Hundreds
of thousands were made homeless and tracts of prime agricultural land
were left unfarmable.
Despite
widespread public fears over the safety of nuclear power, Prime
Minister Yoshihiko Noda in June ordered the restarting of reactors at
Oi amid fears of a summer power shortage.
That
ended a brief nuclear-free period for a country that - until the
Fukushima disaster - had relied on atomic power for around a third of
its electricity needs.
The
move was welcomed by the influential business lobby, but was deeply
unpopular with a vocal anti-nuclear movement.
Regular
anti-nuclear protests continue to be held in Tokyo. Organisers claim
thousands, and sometimes tens of thousands of people take part,
demanding an end to nuclear generation.
A
protest billed as set to attract a million people was due to be held
near the prime minister's residence on Sunday, although participation
was thought unlikely to be anywhere near that figure.
With
a possible eye on the general election expected over the coming
months, the government announced in September it would work towards a
policy of phasing out nuclear power by 2040.
Critics
rounded on the announcement as both populist and "incoherent"
because it contained get-out clauses that would mean as-yet
unfinished nuclear plants would still come online.
Watanabe
said a heavy burden rests on those tasked with ensuring public
safety, citing the jail sentences handed out to six seismologists in
Italy after a court said their underestimation of the possible
effects of an earthquake had contributed to the death toll in the
central city of L'Aquila.
"We
have to sound the alarm as soon as we find the possibility of active
faults," he said. "The accident in Fukushima had really
never been imagined. Scientists must learn from that."
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