Huge
leak of tritium feared in Fukushima
Tokyo Electric Power Co. said Friday that an estimated 20 trillion to 40 trillion becquerels of tritium from the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant may have flowed into the Pacific Ocean since May 2011.
3
August, 2013
The
utility reported the estimate Friday to the Nuclear Regulation
Authority after recently admitting that toxic water from the
emergency cooling system set up after the nuclear crisis began on
March 11, 2011, is leaking into the sea.
Nevertheless,
Tepco said the size of the release is roughly in the allowed range of
22 trillion becquerels a year but acknowledged it didn’t take place
in a controlled manner. Tritium has a half-life of about 12 years.
Since
it doesn’t know when the leak began, the utility has assumed the
beginning was in May 2011, after it attempted to stop the toxic water
from entering the ocean when it was discovered in April 2011.
The
constant injection of water that is needed to keep the damaged
reactors cool after the core meltdowns of March 2011 are generating a
new radiation crisis at the plant that officials appear unable to
solve without tainting the ocean and marine life.
Japan
prepares for possible big earthquake
The
Japanese government has warned that the country may be hit by an
earthquake more damaging than the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami,
which killed 19,000 people and crippled the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear
power plant.
31
July, 2013
TOKYO:
Earthquakes frequently rock Japan and sometimes trigger fearful
tsunamis.
The
Japanese government has warned that the country may be hit by an
earthquake more damaging than the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami,
which killed 19,000 people and crippled the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear
power plant.
Channel
NewsAsia visited one of Japan's foremost quake and tsunami research
centres to find out what's being done to protect Japan from such a
worst case scenario.
A
nine-metre scroll is a stark reminder of the 1855 earthquake which
rocked the city of Edo, now known as Tokyo, hard. The 6.9-magnitude
quake was followed by fire, and killed some 10,000 people.
Many
major quakes and tsunamis have hit parts of Japan since.
And
since the 1995 Kobe earthquake which killed more than 6,000 people,
the government has set aside a huge budget to predict earthquakes.
But
experts today admit quakes cannot be accurately predicted.
Still,
that's not stopping them from collecting data to better understand
the earth's movements.
Mr
Atsushi Tanaka, Director of Centre for Integrated Disaster
Information Research at the University of Tokyo, said: "By
installing many underwater seismometers, we can deliver more research
reports, and collect data. We will continue to accumulate data."
Researchers
are also expanding their sphere of work to provide more holistic
information about the impact of quakes.
Mr
Tanaka added: "The research arena is expanding little by little.
What's in demand, economics, engineering, people in fields which were
not previously involved are now being brought in to do research. And
based on them, I believe policy decisions and consensus from
residents can be attained more smoothly."
The
Japanese government predicts a 9-magnitude earthquake in the Nankai
trough, in the southern Pacific side of the main Honshu island.
The
government plans to come up with an action plan, a mid-term report as
early as the end of July and it wants to write up plans for
reconstruction.
Another
concern in the event of another big one is a subsequent tsunami.
Professor
Yoshimitsu Tajima, Department of Civil Engineering at the University
of Tokyo, said: "The source of the quake is very close to the
coast. Therefore, we don't have much lead time."
Mr
Tajima is also exploring how tsunami walls can help, even though many
of those along the coast of Tohoku were destroyed by the tsunami two
years ago.
Professor
Tajima added: "Now we are looking at how seawalls can reduce
inundation or risk of fatalities, and at the same time once tsunami
starts to overflow, we also need to think of mitigation strategy
against disasters. In that sense not only constructions of sea wall,
we have to also look at how inundation flow behaves. Then based on
that, we can made design of entire city near the coast."
Various
cities and towns are preparing for the worst case scenario, which the
government believes could kill up to 320,000 people and bring
economic damage of more than US$2.2 trillion.
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