This
is written, I presume by Arnie Gundersen
Steam
from Fukushima #3 – response from Fairewinds
Steam
heat? What is happening at Fukushima Daiichi?
Via
Facebook
Beginning
on Monday December 30, 2013, the Internet has been flooded with
conjecture claiming that Fukushima Daiichi Unit 3 is ready to
explode. Fairewinds Energy Education has been inundated with
questions about the very visible steam emanating from Fukushima
Daiichi Unit 3. Our research, and discussions with other scientists,
confirms that what we are seeing is a phenomenon that has been
occurring at the Daiichi site since the March 2011 accident.
It
is winter and it is cold throughout much of the northern hemisphere.
Hot water vapor has been released daily by each of the four Fukushima
Daiichi nuclear power plants since the accident. We believe that is
one of the reasons TEPCO placed covers over Daiichi 4 and 1.
Sometimes the steam [hot water vapor] is visible and sometimes it is
not. If you have been outside on a cold winter day, you have
personally experienced that phenomenon when you see the breath you
exhale form a cloud in the cold air. The technical explanation is
that hot water vapor becomes visible when it comes in contact with
cold air and condenses. During the winter months in the Fukushima
Prefecture, the sea air is cold and moist, thus forming the ideal
conditions to see the released steam.
Why
is there still steam coming from the plants especially since TEPCO
says that they are in cold shutdown? As we at Fairewinds have
discussed in our many videos, podcasts, and reports, radioactive
rubble (fission products) was left in each unit following the triple
meltdowns. While the plants are shutdown in nuke speak, there is no
method of achieving cold shut down in any nuclear reactor. While the
reactor can stop generating the actual nuclear chain reaction, the
atoms left over from the original nuclear chain reaction continue to
give off heat that is called the decay of the radioactive rubble
(fission products). The heat from this ongoing decay of radioactive
rubble is constantly releasing moisture (steam) and radioactive
products into the environment. The radioactive decay is gradually
slowing down, as fission products decay away. The cold moist winter
air at this time of year is making steam from the ongoing decay
easily visible.
How
much radiation is escaping? When Unit 3 was operating, it was
producing more than 2,000 megawatts of heat from the nuclear fission
process (chain reaction in the reactor). Immediately after the
earthquake and tsunami, it shut down and the chain reaction stopped,
but Unit 3 was still producing about 160 megawatts of decay heat.
Now, 30 months later, it is still producing slightly less than 1
megawatt (one million watts) of decay heat.
What
does that figure mean; is it an inconsequential amount? 1 megawatt of
decay heat is a lot of heat even today, and it is creating
radioactive steam, but it is not a new phenomenon. These hot
radioactive releases [not physically hot, but radioactive hot –
meaning they contain radioactive fission products] have occurring for
the entire 33 months following the triple meltdown. The difference
now is that the only time we visibly notice these ongoing releases is
on the cold days with atmospheric conditions cold enough to condense
hot vapor into steam.
Fairewinds
Energy Education would like to thank our viewers and listeners for
following our work and supporting our work and sending it important
questions like this one. We will continue to keep you informed.
Turner is a thoroughly unreliable website. That pic is NOT current.They are alarmist Armageddon cult click-baiters...here's a better persspective...http://www.fukuleaks.org/web/?p=11990
ReplyDeleteBrother, I would like to connect w' you on FB. Followed you through Michael C Ruppert. several times I wished I sould chime in or talk w' you but privacy settings send all my mail to your other box, or charges me a dollar to send it to your regular box :\. If you check your other you will find me. We have mutual goals. Please connect ;)
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