5.3
magnitude earthquake near Fukushima nuclear plant
An earthquake measuring 5.3 on the Richter scale has been recorded near the crippled Fukushima nuclear plant. There are no reports of damage to destroyed facilities and no spike in radiation levels in the area.
RT,
19
September, 2013
The
earthquake took place at 17:25 GMT, according to United States
Geological Service (USGS) which measured the quake at 5.3. The Japan
Meteorological Agency, however, put the quake at magnitude 5.8.
Screenshot
from earthquake.usgs.gov
The
tremors were felt in 17 prefectures around Japan causing buildings to
shake in the capital Tokyo, 175 kilometers away, an Agence France
Presse reporter in the Japanese capital said.
The
epicenter was 20 km beneath the surface on the Pacific coast but only
around 50 miles from the Fukushima plant.
TEPCO,
the company in charge of the cleanup operations at the site has said
it is monitoring the plant and that so-far no irregularities have
been discovered, according to the local media.
There
has been no Tsunami alert after the quake. Less than an hour into
their initial report, the USGS gave the earthquake incident a green
pager, meaning that they don't expect any fatalities or economic
losses.
Japan
straddles 4 major tectonic plates, known as the "Ring of Fire"
the Pacific plate; North America plate; Eurasia plate; and Philippine
Sea plate, meaning that it is highly vulnerable to earthquakes and
tsunamis. About 90% of the world's earthquakes occur in the region.
Earlier
this month an earthquake measuring 6.9 struck the Izu Islands off
Japan and was felt 400 miles away in Tokyo, but no damage was
recorded at the Fukushima plant.
Just
hours before the quake, Shinzo Abe, the Japanese Prime Minister
ordered TEPCO to shut
down
all six reactors at Fukushima, including two, which were not damaged
in the 2011 disaster.
The
2011 disaster caused three reactors to melt and damaged a fuel
cooling pool at another. TEPCO officials have acknowledged that
radiation-contaminated groundwater has been seeping into the Pacific
Ocean since soon after the meltdowns and that attempts to collect and
store contaminated water have been unsuccessful.
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