Fukushima
Anti-Radiation Fence Has Hole In It, TEPCO Says
Workers at Japan's crippled Fukushima nuclear plant Thursday spotted a hole in one of the barriers intended to keep radioactive particles contained in the harbour, the operator said.
26
September, 2013
Tokyo
Electric Power set up silt fences in the harbour next to the plant,
including one covering each outlet at reactor units 1-4, which were
damaged in the 2011 tsunami, and another on the egress of reactors
5-6 which remain intact.
A
silt fence is a device to trap sediment before water flows into the
sea.
The
fence around the undamaged reactors was found to be holed, a TEPCO
spokesman said.
"Radiation
levels in this area's seawater are very low, and no contaminated
water tanks are placed near reactors 5-6," he said.
The
monster tsunami swamped the six-reactor nuclear plant on March 11,
2011, knocking out cooling systems and sending units 1-3 into
meltdown. Explosions and a fire destroyed the building of unit 4.
Reactors
5-6 are located a short distance from the crippled units.
Radioactive
contamination of the sea has emerged as one of the major concerns
after the nuclear accident, with TEPCO using thousands of tonnes of
water to tame the reactors and keep them cool.
The
utility says they are now stable but need more water every day to
keep them cool and to prevent them running out of control again.
Much
of that now-contaminated water is being stored in temporary tanks at
the plant, and TEPCO has so far revealed no clear plan for its
disposal. Some of the tanks have sprung leaks.
Prime
Minister Shinzo Abe insisted at a meeting of Olympic chiefs this
month that adverse effects from contamination were limited to the
0.3-square-kilometre harbour.
His
reassurances, given at the meeting of the International Olympic
Committee in Buenos Aires, were seen as key to Tokyo's successful bid
to host the 2020 Olympic Games.
Fukushima
Disaster Reaches Epic Proportions
Within
as few as 60 days, Tepco will begin trying to remove more than 1500
spent fuel rods from a badly damaged area of the nuclear reactor.
26
September, 2013
Consuming cesium-tainted
fish is
probably about to be one of your least concerns. Most
of us were already aware of the generalities of Fukushima’s defunct
nuclear reactor seeping tons of toxic and radioactive iodone, cesium,
and strontium-89 and 90 into the Pacific Ocean. We perhaps said a
prayer and vowed to start consuming fish from other oceans. Now,
there is news of Fukushima’s damaged Unit 4 pool, that a Yale
professor warns “is
in perilous danger and could threaten all of humanity for thousands
of years.”
This
is one of the biggest crises we’ve faced as a human race, as some
have put it, since the disarming of the Soviet Union or the Cuban
Missile Crisis. We need every activist to call for immediate action
and all resources to be provided to the Fukushima plant without
further finger pointing at the plant’s owner, Tokyo Electric
(Tepco) in order for this calamity to be averted.
Within
as few as 60 days, Tepco will begin trying to remove more than 1500
spent fuel rods from a badly damaged area of the nuclear reactor:
“[...]
Much more serious is the danger that the spent fuel rod pool at the
top of the nuclear plant number four will collapse in a storm or an
earthquake, or in a failed attempt to carefully remove each of the
1,535 rods and safely transport them to the common storage pool 50
meters away. Conditions in the unit 4 pool, 100 feet from the
ground, are perilous, and if any two of the rods touch it could
cause a nuclear reaction that would be uncontrollable. The radiation
emitted from all these rods, if they are not continually cool and
kept separate, would require the evacuation of surrounding areas
including Tokyo. Because of the radiation at the site the 6,375 rods
in the common storage pool could not be continuously cooled; they
would fission and all of humanity will be threatened, for thousands
of years.”
Tepco
has alluded to the fact that they don’t have the resources or
expertise to try to remove these fuel rods safely, even though early
on they tried
to downplay the
seriousness of the Fukushima event. The company already
faces bankruptcy,
but there is a much larger matter at hand. If the rods are not
removed properly, more than 400 tons of fuel in that pool could spew
out more than 15,000
times the
radiation that was released at Hiroshima.
We can’t leave this to Tepco and the Japanese government to
handle. It is no longer a ‘foreign’ issue, but a worldwide
concern to be taken extremely seriously.
Forget
about just eating irradiated fish in California, or having to give
up your favorite sushi joint, Tepco is playing with the devil’s
fire now. There are three other mutilated reactors that have to be
kept cool. The company continues to pour more water, which becomes
toxic with radiation as it pours through the reactor cores. Steam
plumes seen on site may even indicate that the process of nuclear
fission is still taking place underground. No one even really knows
where the cores are located. That irradiated water has already been
pouring into some very fragile tanks to keep it from further spewing
into the Pacific Ocean, and many scientists say that were this water
to be leaked, it would not disperse fast enough to remain ‘safe’
for ocean life, and have nearly cataclysmic affects for the world at
large.
Furthermore,
the water currently swishing through the site, like so much
washing-machine waste is undermining the overall structural
integrity of the units, including Unit 4. Just a few meters from
Unit 4, now sit more than 6000 fuel assemblies in a common pool. It
has no containment and is completely vulnerable, is there was a
small earthquake or a tiny tsunami, or the current rods were
extracted without meticulous care, then we could expect nuclear fall
out like we’ve never seen on this planet.
“According
to long-time expert and former Department of Energy official Robert
Alvarez, there is more than 85
times as much lethal cesium on site as was released at Chernobyl.”
Arnie
Gunderson, a nuclear engineer with more than 40 years of experience
in the field says that the fuel rods are possibly damaged, bent and
crumbling beyond repair. Nonetheless, the safe removal of those fuel
rods is the most immediate concern. It won’t just be
children in Japan suffering from thyroid disease and radiation
poisoning otherwise. If you know scientists in this field who might
be able to help, or you can urge your president or politicians to
support this cause, please do so. Time is, quite literally, of the
essence.
TEPCO
'finds crack' in Fukushima’s water tank after huge sea leak
Workers
from Japan’s TEPCO Fukushima Daiichi plant have located a crack in
the bottom of a tank that may have leaked 300 tons of radioactive
water in August, Japanese media reports. This comes as the company
seeks to reopen another nuclear plant
RT,
26
September, 2013
The
water that was being pumped into the tank at the Fukushima Daiichi
nuclear plant could have caused the existing gap to expand and likely
led to the massive leak, TV channel NHK reported. The leak which
sparked the crisis came from one of the 1,000 above-ground storage
tanks built inside the plant by Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO).
The company promised to continue their investigations.
Moreover,
silt fences intended to prevent soil containing radioactive
substances from slipping into the ocean were found to be damaged on
Thursday. The damage was found close to the buildings of the fifth
and sixth units, NHK reported. Both were on cold shutdown for planned
maintenance, thereby managing to avoid meltdowns.
A
TEPCO spokesman said that the area was not a danger zone. “Radiation
levels in this area's seawater are very low, and no contaminated
water tanks are placed near reactors 5 and 6,” he told AFP.
The
fence is also designed to prevent radioactive material emerging from
damaged units 1, 2, 3 and 4, where another separate fence is set up.
It was damaged in April by rough waves and bad weather.
AFP
Photo / Japan PoolAFP Photo / Japan Pool
All
of Japan’s 50 nuclear reactors were shut down following the 2011
earthquake and tsunami which wreaked havoc at Fukushima and sparked a
nuclear crisis in which meltdowns occurred in three reactors. It was
considered to be the world’s worst nuclear accident since the
Chernobyl disaster in 1986.
Following
the devastation, the public outcry over the persistent usage of
nuclear power in Japan has prompted protests, drawing thousands in
some cases.
Some
rallies have drawn links and comparisons to the nuclear bombs at
Hisoshima and Nagasaki, dropped by the US on Japan in 1945, at the
end of World War II. These have been dismissed by officials as
distasteful, and perhaps even histrionic.
“Our
position, and this is a position we can never compromise on, is that
nuclear weapons are an absolute evil,” Hiroshima Mayor Kazumi
Matsui said in an impassioned interview with AP at City Hall. “I
oppose connecting the two, simply because they both involve
radiation.”
The
Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombs killed some 140,000 people, and while
nobody has yet been known to die from exposure to the Fukushima
radiation, the disaster, which involved a massive earthquake and
tsunami, caused the deaths of nearly 20,000 people.
Additionally,
the long-term health toll is yet to be seen. The Japanese government
has already detected 44 confirmed and suspected cases of thyroid
cancer among 217,000 children (aged 18 and under) who have been
checked in Fukushima.
Despite
the protests and opposition, there are still plans in place to
restart plants.
Protesters
hold banners during a protest rally against nuclear power plants,
following the March 2011 Fukushima meltdown-disasters, in Tokyo on
June 2, 2013. (AFP Photo / Rie Ishii)Protesters hold banners during a
protest rally against nuclear power plants, following the March 2011
Fukushima meltdown-disasters, in Tokyo on June 2, 2013. (AFP Photo /
Rie Ishii)
On
Thursday, TEPCO received approval to restart the Kashiwazaki Kariwa
plant in the western Niigata prefecture, which has been central to
the company’s turnaround plans following the Fukushima disaster in
2011.
The
governor of the prefecture said that he was allowing the utility to
apply for safety approval, despite previous statements declaring that
TEPCO was not fit to run a nuclear plant.
“The
Kashiwazaki Kariwa nuclear power plant may be halted but it is a
living facility, and safety must be ensured at the plant,” Governor
Hirohiko Izumida said in a statement faxed to Reuters. It was
released a day after a well-publicized appeal from the president of
TEPCO.
However,
the final judgment on whether getting the plant will be back up and
running again is still being withheld.
Prime
Minister Shinzo Abe returned to power last year, and is a firm
proponent of nuclear power. It is thought that under his watch, idled
reactors may be restarted again. However, TEPCO itself is behind
schedule with its own plans, and since the disaster has had to deal
with the knowledge that radioactive water has been leaking into the
Pacific Ocean ever since the accident.
Abe
has told TEPCO to outline a timeframe for handling the leaks. TEPCO
is currently preparing to test a new filtration system, beginning
Friday. The company’s plans to install more efficient cleaners have
been challenged by the NHK channel.
While
the company would like to increase capacity for cleaning from 500
tons of water per day to 1,500 tons per day, the system is apparently
not capable of removing radioactive tritium from contaminated water.
Can
you imagine! Make people ill to maintain calm.
Fukushima
Prefecture resumes selling seafood products to local markets
JDP,
26
September, 2013
Fish
and other marine products are now available at local shops
inFukushima
Prefecture as
offshore test-fishing was shown to be safe from contamination by the
local fisheries cooperative. The test was made on Wednesday while
selling of the marine products resumed early Thursday.
Although
there are doubts on food safety as Tokyo Electric Power Co. (TEPCO)
continues to report leaks of radioactive water, the local fisheries
cooperative was determined
to prove that
seafood products in the region are safe from radioactive
contamination. Based on the cooperative’s test on 100 fish, only
five showed traces of radioactive materials, but each was less than a
tenth of the government’s limit, which is 100 becquerels. With such
results, the prefecture’s Matsukawa Port in Soma saw fishermen and
wholesalers seeking marine products early Thursday.
Some
of the seafood and other products also made their way to shops in the
city of Soma. Customers who braved purchasing products from the
Fukushima waters were satisfied with the test certificates attached
to the packages. One of the customers was a 79-year old who preferred
local products. He said that he does so because they are fresh and
have gone through tests to guarantee safe consumption. Seafood
products from Fukushima will be sold in Sendai in Miyagi Prefecture
on Friday whileTokyo will
have them sold the following day.
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