More
Typhoons
Approaching, Landslides &
Earthquakes At Fukushima
Daiichi
22
October, 2013
This
is just not a good week at the plant and not looking to get any
better
Former
workers at the plant Happy & Sunny were both tweeting about a
possible small landslide at Fukushima Daiichi last week. They said
TEPCO refused to report it. We have not been able to obtain
additional confirmation on the incident. It is not unusual for
something like this to happen. The plant has a number of areas where
the land was cut down but only has turf to prevent erosion. They did
mention it may have blocked or partially blocked one of the roads.
“Uh-oh? I did not press! It was learned for the first time to see tweets of Sunny’s. I’ve had also place the road much would have been blocked, was depressed (> _ <) after law could face there had collapsed …. Next week, I wonder if the public? Typhoon No. 27 is also a worry about next week, and slope is likely to collapse still, and I wonder … I’m worried about.”
“~
N. Will not understand me collapse of the slope I was hesitation like
to say in an easy-to-understand ,
bank is gone and landslides, it could do a Roadblock sediment
collapsed is accidentally blocked the road (^ _ ^ (> _ <) main
Because it is a road, and was glad of car workers not involved. You
could do a worry because there is a full bank are other premises.”
Issued
at
|
Occurred
at
|
Region
Name
|
Magnitude
|
---|---|---|---|
10:18
JST 22 Oct 2013
|
Fukushima-ken
Oki
|
M5.3
|
|
12:33
JST 21 Oct 2013
|
Tokachi-chiho
Nambu
|
M4.6
|
|
10:07
JST 20 Oct 2013
|
Ibaraki-ken
Oki
|
M4.4
|
|
00:14
JST 20 Oct 2013
|
Miyagi-ken
Oki
|
M4.9
|
|
11:08
JST 19 Oct 2013
|
Miyagi-ken
Oki
|
M4.0
|
|
13:32
JST 17 Oct 2013
|
Fukushima-ken
Oki
|
M4.1
|
Two
storms are approaching the mainland of Japan. Typhoon
Francisco and Typhoon
Lekima.
The current tracking shows them eventually going side by side on the
east side of Japan’s mainland. This could create an unusual
situation where Lekima could slow down Francisco’s easterly exit
from over northeast Japan. This could be extremely problematic if the
storm stalls over the area around Fukushima Daiichi as it would
continue to dump large volumes of rain. This graphic by the Asahi
Shimbun shows the potential for these typhoons to team up.
Both
storms also are fairly strong right now. Francisco may be down to a
tropical storm by the time it hits Fukushima while Lekima will be a
category 1 further out to sea. Various weather agencies still have
varied predictions for Francisco with some showing it rolling up the
middle of the Japanese mainland while others show it further out into
the Pacific.
Adding
to all of these problems, there was enough general rainfall at the
plant to cause the tank weirs to overflow, sending
contaminated water leaking out of the plant.
With the plant already struggling with overflowing water, another
storm is quite unwelcome. If TEPCO plans on keeping these leaky tanks
in operation into next year’s storm season they should invest in
covers for the tank groups to lower the amount of rainwater that ends
up contaminated by entering the tank enclosures. They already have a
variety of these industrial tent structures on site.
For
Tepco and Japan’s Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant, toxic water
stymies cleanup
Two
and a half years after a series of nuclear meltdowns, Japan’s
effort to clean up what remains of the Fukushima Daiichi power plant
is turning into another kind of disaster.
22
October, 2013
The
site now stores 90 million gallons of radioactive water, more than
enough to fill Yankee Stadium to the brim. An additional 400 tons of
toxic water is flowing daily into the Pacific Ocean, and almost every
week, the plant operator acknowledges a new leak.
That
operator, Tokyo Electric Power Co., known as Tepco, was put in charge
of the cleanup process more than two years ago and subsequently given
a government bailout as its debts soared. The job of dismantling the
facility was supposed to give Tepco an opportunity to rebuild
credibility.
But
many lawmakers and nuclear industry specialists say that Tepco is
perpetuating the kinds of mistakes that led to the March 2011
meltdowns: underestimating the plant’s vulnerabilities, ignoring
warnings from outsiders and neglecting to draw up plans for things
that might go wrong. Those failures, they say, have led to the
massive buildup and leakage of toxic water.
“Tepco
didn’t play enough of these what-if games,” said Dale Klein, a
former chairman of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, who
recently joined a Tepco advisory panel. “They didn’t have enough
of that questioning attitude” about their plans.
The
leaks into the ocean are far less toxic than the radioactive plumes
that emanated from the plant after the 2011 earthquake and tsunami,
forcing 160,000 people to move out of the vicinity. Thanks to that
quick evacuation, experts say, there are no expectations of a
Chernobyl-style spike in cancer cases — although the government is
conducting thyroid checks of thousands of children. But the flow of
contaminated water amounts to a slow-burning environmental disaster
with implications for Japan’s wildlife and its food chain.
The
problems have prompted the central government to step in with about
$500 million to fund new countermeasures, including a subterranean
“ice wall” designed to keep groundwater from flowing into
irradiated buildings.
The
latest government-led actions are particularly galling for some who
say Tepco should have taken similar measures earlier. One lawmaker,
Sumio Mabuchi, who was also an adviser to then-Prime Minister Naoto
Kan, says Tepco, deep in debt, neglected to take important steps
against the groundwater two years ago because of concerns about its
bottom line. Tepco’s president, Naomi Hirose, testified in
parliament last month that the company hasn’t “scrimped” on the
cleanup, though he did say that Tepco is “majorly at fault” for
its failure to manage the groundwater buildup.
The
40-year decommissioning is expected to cost 10 trillion yen, or about
$100 billion — roughly two years’ worth of Tepco’s revenue —
and the company says it is trying to save up and cut other costs. But
for many Japanese, the company’s assurances inspire little
confidence. Two members of Japan’s national legislature, speaking
on the condition of anonymity to share what they describe as
sensitive details, say Tepco continues to spend irresponsibly on
lobbying politicians, offering them free trips to nuclear sites that
include meals and lodging in hot springs resorts. A Tepco spokesman
said the company does not offer such trips.
AN
IMPROVISED BATTLE
The
coastal Daiichi plant is on an old riverbed, its back yard a line of
forested hills and mountains. Even before the 2011 disaster, rainfall
from across the region would funnel toward the plant. Such inflow was
rarely a problem, because a piping system collected groundwater and
spit it into the ocean. Minor leaks would sometimes form in buildings
built below sea level, but even that water, uncontaminated, was easy
to pump out and dump.
The
9.0-magnitude earthquake and 46-foot tsunami wave of March 11, 2011,
threw the plant’s groundwater system out of whack. Damaged pipes no
longer corralled the inflow, meaning that the plant lost its first
line of defense against water streaming in from the hillsides. Worse,
the plant had become a disaster site, and any water that flowed under
or through the area picked up toxicity of its own. Groundwater that
made its way into the reactor buildings also mixed with a separate
channel of intensely contaminated water that had been used to douse
and cool the reactors.
No
longer could the groundwater simply be discarded into the ocean.
The
first months of the disaster were chaotic, an improvised battle that
involved firetrucks, helicopters, robots and workers trying to cool
melted nuclear fuel. As the emergency calmed and the groundwater
problem emerged, Tepco was left with two options: It could either
block the groundwater from entering the site, or it could pump the
groundwater out and store whatever had leaked into buildings.
Tepco
opted for the latter — a mistake, many outside researchers say.
Atsunao Marui, a groundwater expert and member of a government-led
panel that advises Tepco, said the company was slow to assess just
how rapidly groundwater from mountains was flooding the buildings. At
the time of the disaster, Tepco didn’t have a single groundwater
specialist among its 40,000 employees, Marui said.
Tepco
also declined a June 2011 request from Mabuchi, the lawmaker and
adviser to the prime minister, to build a special wall extending 100
feet underground around the reactor and turbine buildings, sealing
them off from the groundwater flow. Tepco initially agreed to the
project, Mabuchi said, but backed out because of concerns about the
estimated cost of 100 billion yen, or $1 billion.
“We
are already in a very severe financial situation,” Tepco wrote to
Japan’s Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry in a letter shared
with The Washington Post. “And by taking on an additional 100
billion yen, the market could evaluate that we are one step closer to
insolvency. That is something we’d like to avoid.”
In
the following months, Tepco never considered alternative options to
cut off the groundwater, according to minutes from more than 10 hours
of meetings, during which the company and a cabinet-formed team of
advisers planned a “road map” for decommissioning the facility.
Tepco’s
plan, discussed in one of the meetings, was to pump toxic water from
the reactor and turbine rooms and then cleanse it of radionuclides —
isotopes that radioactively decay — using systems that worked like
high-end Brita filters. The company would then have “clean water”
that could be stored in tanks.
But
Tepco’s attempts to create clean water have been repeatedly
derailed. Two systems have proved successful in filtering cesium. But
others have been plagued by mechanical troubles — not surprising,
experts say, because they have been constructed at a breakneck pace,
often with parts shrunken and custom-built to accommodate Fukushima
Daiichi’s cramped spaces.
Because
of those malfunctions, some water stored in hastily built tanks is
laced with contaminants, including strontium, which can burrow into
bones and irradiate tissue. More than 1,000 gray tanks, some the size
of small apartment buildings, now form a patchwork on a cliff above
the plant — an area where workers once spent their breaks taking
nature walks. Enough toxic water accumulates each week to fill an
Olympic-size swimming pool. One such tank has leaked, another
overflowed, and regulators fear that more spills are inevitable.
Tepco must constantly build more tanks to keep pace with the
accumulating water.
“It’s
not sustainable,” said Lake Barrett, a new adviser to Tepco who
directed cleanup operations at Three Mile Island after the 1979
nuclear accident there.
Tepco
estimates that 800 tons of water flows under the plant daily — half
of it traveling into the ocean, the other half making its way into
the facility’s buildings and requiring storage. Tepco acknowledged
the long-presumed ocean leaks in July; the company said it had held
off on the disclosure because it didn’t want to worry the public
until it was certain of a problem.
Both
the government and Tepco say the ocean contamination is confined
mostly to a man-made harbor around the plant. But some scientists say
that assurance plays down significant long-term concerns about marine
life and the food chain. Cesium levels are hundreds of times the
pre-accident norm in areas beyond the harbor, said Ken Buesseler, a
senior scientist with the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution who
has monitored waters around the nuclear plant, most recently last
month.
Radionuclides
also fall to the ocean floor, where they could be ingested by
bottom-feeders. Many local fish species show high enough levels of
radiation that the Japanese government bars their sale.
“I
could swim in that water” outside the plant, Buesseler said. “But
you might not want to eat those fish. It’s a serious concern for
internal doses. [Radionuclides] are now on the seafloor and could
stay in the food chain for years, if not decades.”
TEPCO’S
FRAGILE SITUATION
Some
nuclear industry executives who have worked with Tepco say the
company shouldn’t be faulted for prioritizing issues other than the
groundwater. They note that Tepco has managed to cool the molten
reactors while reinforcing damaged buildings against further
earthquakes.
But
the buildup of contaminated water also complicates other work at the
plant.
“Right
now, the groundwater is the biggest problem at the plant, and one
Tepco needs to solve thoroughly,” said Tsuneo Futami, who was
superintendent of Fukushima Daiichi from 1997 until 2000. “Dealing
with this is almost a prerequisite for decommissioning.”
The
remaining options to deal with the buildup are unpopular or flawed.
The latest plan includes the ice wall, a new groundwater pumping
system and yet another system to filter radionuclides. But the
ice-wall technology is unproven, and taxpayers will foot the bill
because Tepco lacks the funding to deal with major, unplanned
problems at the plant.
Tepco
can repair its fragile economic situation with a restructuring plan
featuring major cost-cutting that was approved by the government last
year. But the company says its profitability also depends on the
restart of its largest nuclear power plant, Kashiwazaki Kariwa. A
majority of Japanese, though, oppose nuclear power. All of the
nation’s 50 operable reactors are currently shuttered.
Some
activists say Tepco should be allowed to go bankrupt, with the
government taking full control of the Fukushima Daiichi
decommissioning. But bankruptcy would cause “just one more
disaster,” this one economic, said Mana Nakazora, a Tokyo-based
chief credit analyst at BNP Paribas. Bankruptcy might have been
conceivable in the months immediately after the disaster, but Tepco
has since been kept afloat with emergency loans from banks and cash
injections from the government — debts that, if not paid, would
rock Japan’s financial system.
Some
nuclear engineers and government officials say Tepco has one other
option that would ease management of the site: It can dump the stored
water into the ocean, provided it can be refiltered and its
now-high radiation levels lowered to within legal limits. The
International Atomic Energy Agency said in April that Japan should
consider such “controlled discharges.” The chairman of Japan’s
nuclear watchdog, Shunichi Tanaka, said last month that dumping might
be necessary.
Japan’s
National Federation of Fisheries Cooperative Associations said its
members are against any releases, no matter the level of the water’s
toxicity, and local governments also have voiced opposition.
Their
stance highlights the enormous public distrust of Tepco: Few in Japan
are willing to take the company at its word if it says the controlled
releases would be safe.
“They’re
going to have to release the water eventually,” said Barrett, the
adviser. “No ands, if or buts about it in my view. But how they get
there is a huge societal problem, not just for Tepco but for Japan.”
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