Fukushima
debris island the size of Texas floating to the US
A
massive island of debris is slowly making its way to the United
States after forming in the wake of the tsunami that rocked Japan
back in 2011.
RT,
5
November, 2013
The
tsunami killed almost 16,000 people in Japan, caused numerous
problems at the nuclear plant in Fukushima, and dislodged more than
1.5 million floating objects into the Pacific Ocean. Now, a
collection of debris the size of Texas is roughly 1,700 miles off the
coast of California.
According
to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), the
debris scattered by the tsunami has been spread around an area of the
ocean that’s three times the size of the continental United States.
It also said to expect trash to continue arriving on American shores
for the next few years.
Already,
objects such as boats, rooftops, soccer balls, and docks have hit
various parts of the West Coast. Even more will arrive with the
Texas-sized island, but, more than the trash, scientists are
interested in the organisms that could be living on them.
"At first we were only thinking about objects like the floating docks, but now we’re finding that all kinds of Japanese organisms are growing on the debris," John Chapman of the Marine Science Center at Oregon State University told Fox News.
"We've
found over 165 non-native species so far,"
he continued. "One type
of insect, and almost all the others are marine organisms … we
found the European blue mussel, which was introduced to Asia long
ago, and then it grew on a lot of these things that are coming across
the Pacific ... we’d never seen it here, and we don’t
particularly want it here."
The
worst-case scenario would be that the trash is housing invasive
organisms that could disrupt the local environment’s current
balance of life. Such was the case in Guam, where earlier
this year
it was announced that the US government intended to parachute dead
mice laced with painkillers onto the island in order to deal with an
invasive species of brown tree snakes that were believed to have been
brought to the American territory on a military ship over 60 years
ago. In a little over half a century, a few snakes spawned what
became an estimated two million animals, the likes of which ravaged
the island’s native bird population and warranted government
intervention.
Other
concerns such as radiation, meanwhile, have been downplayed. On its
website, the NOAA says, “Radiation
experts agree that it is highly unlikely that any tsunami generated
marine debris will hold harmful levels of radiation from the
Fukushima nuclear emergency.”
Independent
groups like the 5 Gyres Institute, which tracks pollution out at sea,
have echoed NOAA’s findings, saying that radiation readings have
been “inconsequential.”
Even the release of radioactive water from the Fukushima nuclear
reactor shouldn't be a grave concern, since scientists say it will be
diluted to the point of being harmless by the time it reaches
American shores in 2014.
Fukushima:
There may be no more time
By
Wayne Madsen
4
November, 2013
In
the movie classic “On the Beach,” the end scene shows a banner
flapping in the breeze over a radioactive and dead Melbourne,
Australia, proclaiming, “THERE IS STILL TIME . . BROTHER.
”
For the people of the
fictional Earth, there was no time left in Nevil Shute’s classic
novel and Stanley Kramer’s epic film. And there may not be any time
left for the people of the actual Earth if authoritative warnings
about the dire effects of the Daiichi nuclear plant disaster in
Fukushima, Japan turn out to be correct.
Explosion
from Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant. Naoto Kan was the Prime
Minister of Japan at the time of the now confirmed partial meltdowns
of three nuclear reactors following the March 11, 2011 Tohoku
earthquake and tsunami. Kan assured the press that the evacuation
order for a 20-mile radius around the stricken plant would be
sufficient. However, Kan’s statement was based on assurances and
reassurances from Japan’s Nuclear Safety Commission that the
evacuation zone was sufficient. It turned out that the commission was
packed with shills for the nuclear plant operator, the
politically-powerful Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO). In
addition, the powerful General Electric, the manufacturer of the
nuclear reactors, mobilized its army of lobbyists and public
relations flacks to pepper the broadcast and web media with
propaganda and “sock puppet” comments on blogs posted by paid
trolls criticizing any suggestions that Fukushima represented a major
disaster.
Recently,
Kan recently totally shed his past support for nuclear power by
writing the following: “The accident at the Fukushima Daiichi
Nuclear Power Plant was the most severe accident in the history of
mankind.” Kan revealed that the situation at Fukushima was more
dire than what he reported to the media on March 25, 2010. Kan wrote:
“At Unit 1, the fuel rods melted down in about five hours after the
earthquake, and molten fuel breached and melted through the reactor
pressure vessel. Meltdowns occurred in Units 2 and 3 within one
hundred hours of the accident. At around the same time, hydrogen-air
blasted in the reactor buildings of Units 1, 3 and 4.”
Kan,
apologizing for his past support for nuclear power, admitted that he
almost ordered the evacuation of 50 million Japanese from the Greater
Tokyo region as a result of the multiple nuclear core meltdowns at
Fukushima. Kan wrote: “Before the Fukushima accident, with the
belief that no nuclear accident would happen as long as the safety
measures were followed properly, I had pushed the policy of utilizing
nuclear power. Having faced the real accident as Prime Minister, and
having experienced the situation which came so close to requiring me
to order the evacuation of 50 million people, my view is now changed
180 degrees.”
Kan,
a member of the opposition Democratic Party of Japan, is now opposed
to nuclear power generation. Kan’s words are powerful. “The most
severe accident in the history of mankind” are words not to be
taken lightly. The current Liberal Democratic Party Prime Minister,
the far right-wing Shinzō Abe, favors restarting Japan’s 54
working nuclear reactors, shut down in the wake of Fukushima. Abe is
supported by multinational companies, including TEPCO and GE, that
put profits ahead of people.
Abe
is so far outside the mainstream on nuclear power in Japan that his
own political mentor, former Liberal Democratic Prime Minister
Junichiro Koizumi, the Elvis Presley fan who maintained close ties to
President George W. Bush, recently stunned an audience of Liberal
Democratic Party faithful with the following speech:
“I
wonder if human beings can really control nuclear energy. I have now
become an advocate calling for zero nuclear plants and urge
politicians to make that decision as quickly as possible.”
Like
Kan, Koizumi made a 180 degree turn in announcing his opposition to
nuclear power plants. It is obvious that these two former Japanese
Prime Ministers of opposing political parties know something that has
been slow to be conveyed to the general public. The world is in
trouble as a result of the Fukushima melt downs. And it isn’t a
question of there still being time left but how much time is left.
The
debate over the Affordable Care Act in the United States may soon
shift from whether one wants to participate or not to one of triaging
medical care for those with short-term effects of terminal cancer
from the effects of Fukushima radiation to those with medium- and
long-term effects. If the worst-case scenarios play out, there will
also be a debate over whether government or private health care plans
will cover euthanasia for those who will die a painful death from the
effects of airborne and seaborne radiation from Fukushima.
Although
Prime Minister Kan doesn’t believe that the most
critically-effected reactors at Fukushima have melted through the
bottom containment vessel, other nuclear power specialists are not so
sanguine. Dean Wilkie is a nuclear plant engineer at the Department
of Energy’s Idago National Laboratory. In an interview with WERU-FM
in Bangor, Maine on August 7, Wilkie said he believes some of the
Fukushima reactors melted completely through the base of the reactor
building and that highly radioactive water is saturating the ground
soil.
Canadian
nuclear expert Gordon Edwards concurs.
In
an August 12 interview, Edwards stated that Units 1, 2, and 3 at
Fukushima have either melted through the reactors’ buildings into
the ground or are in the process of doing so.
This
scenario sets up the “China Syndrome” popularized by another
motion picture with the same name. The syndrome is that if cold water
is not constantly pumped onto the molten cores, they will descend
into the earth’s crust, creating a molten radioactive mass that
will melt right down to our planet’s core and, eventually emerge on
the other side of the Earth. In the “China Syndrome,” a melted
down core in the United States was to have melted through to China.
But
TEPCO is covertly pumping seawater from the Pacific Ocean to cool
down the molten reactors. This highly-radioactive seawater is seeping
back into the ocean.
The
nuclear energy industry, led by Exelon, General Electric, Duke
Energy, and Westinghouse, are investing hundreds of millions of
dollars to place bogus news stories in the media and attack nuclear
industry critics by playing down the adverse effects of the Fukushima
disaster on the world’s population of humans and other living
creatures. Those who warn of the dangerous after-effects of Fukushima
are being referred to as doomsayers and kooks by the Brooks Brothers
suit-clad PR flacks of Washington’s K Street and New York’s
Madison Avenue.
The
power of the nuke industry was on full display when it pressured the
resignation of Gregory Jaczko as chairman of the U.S. Nuclear
Regulatory Commission because of his criticism of his own agency for
not fully appreciating the lessons of Fukushima. Appearing on a panel
with Kan this past summer in California, Jaczko criticized the safety
of the GE nuclear reactors sold by GE to TEPCO. Jaczko noted the GE
reactors at Fukushima came from the U.S. and the disaster in
Fukushima put to rest the notion that “severe accidents wouldn’t
happen.”
The
fact that President Barack Obama, who has received tons of campaign
cash from Exelon, would not stand by his own NRC chairman, provides
full evidence of the power of the nuke industry in framing the debate
and defeating its opponents.
But
the face savers for the nuclear industry cannot explain the complete
reversals of two Japanese Prime Ministers from opposing political
parties on nuclear power and Kan’s apocalyptic statement that
Fukushima is the worst accident in the history of mankind.
And
the nuclear energy apologists and paid shills cannot convince people
to avoid Pacific Ocean seafood, including blue fin tuna caught off
the U.S. west coast and seaweed, which are now registering high and
unsafe levels of radiation. The nuclear industry lackeys are even
pushing the inane meme that one receives more radiation from eating a
banana than from eating Pacific seafood.
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