Fukushima:
Massive Leaks Continuing On a Daily Basis … For Years On End
6
April, 2013
You
may have heard that Tepco - the operator of the stricken Fukushima
nuclear power plants - announced
a large
leak
of radioactive water.
You
may have heard that the cooling system in the spent fuel pools at
Fukushima has failed
for a second time in a month.
This
is newsworthy stuff ... but completely misses the big picture.
Japanese
experts say that Fukushima is currently releasing up to 93
billion becquerels of radioactive cesium
into the ocean each day.
How
much radiation is this?
A
quick calculation shows that it is about ten thousand times less than
the amounts released by Chernobyl during
the actual fire
at the Russian nuclear plant. But the Chernobyl fire only
last 10 days ... and the Fukushima release has been ongoing for more
than 2 years so far.
Indeed,
Fukushima has already spewed much more radioactive cesium
and iodine
than Chernobyl. The amount of radioactive cesium released by
Fukushima was some 20-30
times higher
than initially admitted.
Fukushima
also pumped out huge amounts of radioactive iodine
129
– which has a half-life of 15.7
million years.
Fukushima has also dumped up to 900
trillion becquerels of radioactive strontium-90
– which is a powerful internal emitter which mimics
calcium and collects in our bones
– into the ocean.
And
the amount of radioactive fuel at Fukushima dwarfs
Chernobyl
... and so could keep leaking for decades, centuries or millenia.
Tepco
graphics of the Fukushima plants even appear to show water directly
flowing
from the plant to the ocean. And see this.
The
bottom line is that the reactors have lost
containment.
There are not "some leaks" at Fukushima. "Leaks"
imply that the reactor cores are safely in their containment
buildings, and there is a small hole or two which need to be plugged.
But scientists don't
even know where the cores of the reactors are.
That's not leaking. That's even
worse than a total meltdown.
So
what are the consequences for people living outside of Fukushima
itself?

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