Wasn't
it just a day or so since some one on Democracy Now! assured us that
radiation levels were well down?
Radiation
at Fukushima well hits ‘record high’
A
record high level of beta rays released from radioactive strontium-90
has been detected at the crippled Fukushima nuclear power plant
beneath the No. 2 reactor's well facing the ocean, according to the
facility’s operator.
RT,
18
Janaury, 2013
Tokyo
Electric Power Company (TEPCO) measured the amount of beta
ray-emitting radioactivity at more than 2.7 million becquerels per
liter, Fukushima’s operator said as reported in Japanese media. The
measurements were taken on Thursday.
There
has been a spike of radiation in this area since the beginning of the
year. The measurements taken on Monday showed 2.4 million Bq/l, while
the results taken on January 9 indicated the amount of beta rays at
2.7 million Bq/l, according to TEPCO’s Friday announcement.
Strontium-90
is a radioactive isotope of strontium produced by nuclear fission
with a half-life of 28.8 years. The legal standard for strontium
emissions is 30 becquerels per liter.
In
March 2011 an earthquake triggered a tsunami that hit Japan’s
coast, damaging the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant. The
catastrophe caused the meltdown of three nuclear reactors at the
facility, leading to the worst nuclear disaster since Chernobyl.
The
water used to cool the reactors has been leaking into the soil and
contaminating the ground water ever since. Some of the radioactive
water has been escaping into the Pacific Ocean.
TEPCO
plans solve the problem by setting up special equipment to freeze the
ground around the reactors. The works which are to start this month
include plunging tubes carrying a coolant liquid deep into the
ground. The coolant would freeze the ground solid so that no
groundwater could pass through it.
Japan
plans to restart world’s biggest nuclear plant
While
the company struggles to contain the contaminated water, TEPCO’s
president has voiced the possibility of spinning off the clean-up
project at the wrecked Fukushima nuclear plant from the rest of the
company. This would be an option in the future if the decommissioning
runs smoothly, Naomi Hirose said in an interview to Reuters on
Saturday.
A
spin-off was also proposed by the ruling Liberal Democratic party’s
committee overseeing the government bailout of TEPCO in October.
Hirose
noted that currently TEPCO has to work on improving the workers
conditions at the plant.
"Paying
compensation (to evacuees), decontamination, and the work at the
Fukushima plant; there is a lot of work to be done ... We have to
continue doing this, while maintaining workers' safety, their sense
of responsibility, duty and keeping up their morale," he said.
The
company’s head added that he was against hiving off the Fukushima
decommissioning from the rest of the business until working
conditions improve significantly.
On
January 15 the government approved TEPCO’s plan to restart four
reactors at the Kashiwazaki-Kariwa nuclear power plant, the biggest
nuclear power plant in the world. The utility aims to resume
operations at the plant's No. 6 and 7 reactors as early as July.
The
plan was met with criticism from the administration of the Niigata
Prefecture, where the plant is located. The local governor has
repeatedly called for the company’s liquidation.
TEPCO
argued that the company may have to raise electricity prices by as
much as 10 percent if Kashiwazaki restart is further delayed.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.