Japan's
Fukushima Nuclear Plant Has a Serious Rat Problem
“Three
times is a trend, friends”
22
April, 2013
A
cooling fuel pool was shut down for a few hours Monday at Japan's
embattled Fukushima nuclear power plant so workers could remove two
dead rats. It was the third time in a little over a month that
cooling equipment had to be shut down for rat related issues — and
right now there are more radioactive rodent recurrences than answers.
Three
times is a trend, friends. Japan
Today reports Tokyo
Electric Power Company (TEPCO) shut down one of the cooling systems
Monday to remove two more dead rats and install a net to stop the
recurring rodent problem — hopefully. On March 20, TEPCO lost
power to its cooling system for 29 hours after
a rat short-circuited a switchboard and caused the shutdown. At the
time, the utility company released an hilarious and/or disgusting
photo of the fried rat (right). That little guy had seen better days.
And then a few weeks later construction
of a rodent-catching net halted power for
another two hours after they bungled that process, too — details
have yet to emerged from the investigation into that particular roden
shutdown.
The
rat problem has led to some of the biggest cooling outages since an
earthquake caused major outages to the plant two years ago. If a
cooling system is offline for too long the nuclear fuel rods emit
strong radioactive energy. Since the earthquake, Fukushima has
been plagued with troubles, including a
lingering cancer risk,
a heaping of blame
for childhood obesity,
and mutating
butterflies.
So:
The first net either didn't work or the rodents are radioactive,
have buzz-saws for teeth, and are chewing through whatever
industrial material designed to keep them at bay, right? Probably
not. So far the rodents have not been of unusual size. The first one
was only about six inches long. That's at least half the size of some
New York City subway rats
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