Nuclear
Crisis at Fukushima Could Spew Out More Than 15,000 Times as Much
Radiation as Hiroshima Bombing
Harvey
Wasserman
Image
of the Fukushima I Nuclear Power Plant on March 16, 2011 of the four
damaged reactor buildings.
26
January, 2013
We
are now within two months of what may be humankind's most dangerous
moment since the Cuban Missile Crisis.
There
is no excuse for not acting. All the resources our species can muster
must be focussed on the fuel pool at Fukushima Unit 4.
Fukushima's
owner, Tokyo Electric (Tepco), says that within as few as 60 days it
may begin trying to remove more than 1300 spent fuel rods from a
badly damaged pool perched 100 feet in the air. The pool rests on a
badly damaged building that is tilting, sinking and could easily come
down in the next earthquake, if not on its own.
Some
400 tons of fuel in that pool could spew out more than 15,000 times
as much radiation as was released at Hiroshima.
The
one thing certain about this crisis is that Tepco does not have the
scientific, engineering or financial resources to handle it. Nor does
the Japanese government. The situation demands a coordinated
worldwide effort of the best scientists and engineers our species can
muster.
Why
is this so serious?
We
already know that thousands of tons of heavily contaminated water are
pouring through the Fukushima site, carrying a devil's brew of
long-lived poisonous isotopes into the Pacific. Tuna irradiated with
fallout traceable to Fukushima have already been caught off the coast
of California. We can expect far worse.
Tepco
continues to pour more water onto the proximate site of three melted
reactor cores it must somehow keep cool.Steam plumes indicate fission
may still be going on somewhere underground. But nobody knows exactly
where those cores actually are.
Much
of that irradiated water now sits in roughly a thousand huge but
fragile tanks that have been quickly assembled and strewn around the
site. Many are already leaking. All could shatter in the next
earthquake, releasing thousands of tons of permanent poisons into the
Pacific. Fresh
reports
show that Tepco has just dumped another thousand tons of contaminated
liquids into the sea.
The
water flowing through the site is also undermining the remnant
structures at Fukushima, including the one supporting the fuel pool
at Unit Four.
More
than 6,000 fuel assemblies now sit in a common pool just 50 meters
from Unit Four. Some contain plutonium. The pool has no containment
over it. It's vulnerable to loss of coolant, the collapse of a nearby
building, another earthquake, another tsunami and more.
Overall,
more than 11,000 fuel assemblies are scattered around the Fukushima
site. 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.
Radioactive
hot spots continue to be found around Japan. There are indications of
heightened rates of thyroid damage among local children.
The
immediate bottom line is that those fuel rods must somehow come
safely out of the Unit Four fuel pool as soon as possible.
Just
prior to the 3/11/11 earthquake and tsunami that shattered the
Fukushima site, the core of Unit Four was removed for routine
maintenance and refueling. Like some two dozen reactors in the US and
too many more around the world, the General
Electric-designed pool into which that core now sits is 100 feet in
the air.
Spent
fuel must somehow be kept under water. It's clad in zirconium alloy
which will spontaneously ignite when exposed to air. Long used in
flash bulbs for cameras, zirconium burns with an extremely bright hot
flame.
Each
uncovered rod emits enough radiation to kill someone standing nearby
in a matter of minutes. A conflagration could force all personnel to
flee the site and render electronic machinery unworkable.
According
to Arnie Gundersen, a nuclear engineer with forty years in an
industry for which he once manufactured fuel rods, the ones in the
Unit 4 core are bent, damaged and embrittled to the point of
crumbling. Cameras have shown troubling quantities of debris in the
fuel pool, which itself is damaged.
The
engineering and scientific barriers to emptying the Unit Four fuel
pool are unique and daunting, says Gundersen. But it must be done to
100% perfection.
Should
the attempt fail, the rods could be exposed to air and catch fire,
releasing horrific quantities of radiation into the atmosphere. The
pool could come crashing to the ground, dumping the rods together
into a pile that could fission and possibly explode. The resulting
radioactive cloud would threaten the health and safety of all us.
Chernobyl's
first 1986 fallout reached California within ten days. Fukushima's in
2011 arrived in less than a week. A new fuel fire at Unit 4 would
pour out a continuous stream of lethal
radioactive poisons for centuries.
Former
Ambassador Mitsuhei Murata says full-scale releases from Fukushima
"would destroy the world environment and our civilization. This
is not rocket science, nor does it connect to the pugilistic debate
over nuclear power plants. This is an issue of human survival."
Neither
Tokyo Electric nor the government of Japan can go this alone. There
is no excuse for deploying anything less than a coordinated team of
the planet's best scientists and engineers.
The
clock is ticking. The hand of global nuclear disaster is painfully
close to midnight.
Harvey
Wasserman is Senior Editor of the Columbus Free Press and
www.frepress.org, where this was originally published. He edits
www.nukefree.org. where the petition for global intervention at
Fukushima is linked.
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