PDA

View Full Version : Fukushima - Everyone should read.



GroobySteven
08-22-2013, 12:27 PM
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-23779561

A nuclear expert has told the BBC that he believes the current water leaks at Fukushima are much worse than the authorities have stated.
Mycle Schneider is an independent consultant who has previously advised the French and German governments.
He says water is leaking out all over the site and there are no accurate figures for radiation levels.
Meanwhile the chairman of Japan's nuclear authority said that he feared there would be further leaks.
The ongoing problems at the Fukushima plant increased in recent days when the Tokyo Electric Power Company (Tepco) admitted that around 300 tonnes of highly radioactive water had leaked from a storage tank on the site.

The Japanese nuclear energy watchdog raised the incident level from one to three on the international scale that measures the severity of atomic accidents.


This was an acknowledgement that the power station was in its greatest crisis since the reactors melted down after the tsunami in 2011.
But some nuclear experts are concerned that the problem is a good deal worse than either Tepco or the Japanese government are willing to admit.
They are worried about the enormous quantities of water, used to cool the reactor cores, which are now being stored on site.
Some 1,000 tanks have been built to hold the water. But these are believed to be at around 85% of their capacity and every day an extra 400 tonnes of water are being added.
"The quantities of water they are dealing with are absolutely gigantic," said Mycle Schneider, who has consulted widely for a variety of organisations and countries on nuclear issues.
"What is the worse is the water leakage everywhere else - not just from the tanks. It is leaking out from the basements, it is leaking out from the cracks all over the place. Nobody can measure that.


Satellite images show how the number of water storage tanks has increased in the past two years. The tanks store contaminated water that has been used to cool the reactors.
"It is much worse than we have been led to believe, much worse," said Mr Schneider, who is lead author for the World Nuclear Industry status reports.
At news conference, the head of Japan's nuclear regulation authority Shunichi Tanaka appeared to give credence to Mr Schneider's concerns, saying that he feared there would be further leaks.
``We should assume that what has happened once could happen again, and prepare for more. We are in a situation where there is no time to waste," he told reporters.
The lack of clarity about the water situation and the continued attempts by Tepco to deny that water was leaking into the sea has irritated many researchers.
Dr Ken Buesseler is a senior scientist at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution who has examined the waters around Fukushima.
"It is not over yet by a long shot, Chernobyl was in many ways a one week fire-explosive event, nothing with the potential of this right on the ocean."
"We've been saying since 2011 that the reactor site is still leaking whether that's the buildings and the ground water or these new tank releases. There's no way to really contain all of this radioactive water on site."
"Once it gets into the ground water, like a river flowing to the sea, you can't really stop a ground water flow. You can pump out water, but how many tanks can you keep putting on site?"
Several scientists also raised concerns about the vulnerability of the huge amount of stored water on site to another earthquake.
New health concerns The storage problems are compounded by the ingress of ground water, running down from the surrounding hills. It mixes with radioactive water leaking out of the basements of the reactors and then some of it leaches into the sea, despite the best efforts of Tepco to stem the flow.
Some of the radioactive elements like caesium that are contained in the water can be filtered by the earth. Others are managing to get through and this worries watching experts.
"Our biggest concern right now is if some of the other isotopes such as strontium 90 which tend to be more mobile, get through these sediments in the ground water," said Dr Buesseler.
"They are entering the oceans at levels that then will accumulate in seafood and will cause new health concerns."
There are also worries about the spent nuclear fuel rods that are being cooled and stored in water pools on site. Mycle Schneider says these contain far more radioactive caesium than was emitted during the explosion at Chernobyl.
"There is absolutely no guarantee that there isn't a crack in the walls of the spent fuel pools. If salt water gets in, the steel bars would be corroded. It would basically explode the walls, and you cannot see that; you can't get close enough to the pools," he said.
The "worsening situation" at Fukushima has prompted a former Japanese ambassador to Switzerland to call for the withdrawal of Tokyo's Olympic bid.
In a letter to the UN secretary general, Mitsuhei Murata says the official radiation figures published by Tepco cannot be trusted. He says he is extremely worried about the lack of a sense of crisis in Japan and abroad.
This view is shared by Mycle Schneider, who is calling for an international taskforce for Fukushima.


"The Japanese have a problem asking for help. It is a big mistake; they badly need it."

darkrose2000
08-22-2013, 11:11 PM
Quite disturbing if it is true.
And probably it is.. In such accidents the people always know the news after it happens or later.
I hope they will cope with all this leaks, because if not, we will be in serious trouble.

I remember that no one told us about Chernobyl when it happens.

surf4490
08-23-2013, 12:53 AM
It's true ,their creating 400tons of contaminated water a day!

VictoriaVeil
08-23-2013, 06:00 AM
Its amazing that what you just shared was the first follow up I've heard since it happened. On a side note thats semi related. The HBO Series The Newsroom also covered this story last season. This made me cry with laughter and sorrow as I had been both the control room and anchor desk.

Reporters get their balls cut off so frequently that the general public is done a constant disservice. Probably why I like the show so damn much...It shows the struggle to get it right.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HGdiKLKHpPo

Vladimir Putin
08-23-2013, 06:56 AM
The New York Times, Tuesday, August 20, 2013

TANK HAS LEAKED TONS OF CONTAMINATED WATER AT JAPAN NUCLEAR SITE

By HIROKO TABUCHI, The New York Times

TOKYO — Three hundred tons of highly contaminated water has leaked from a storage tank at the ravaged Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant on Japan’s Pacific coast, its operator said Tuesday, prompting regulators to declare a “radiological release incident” for the first time since disaster struck there in 2011 and adding new fears of environmental calamity.

Workers raced to place sandbags around the leaking tank to stem the spread of the water, contaminated by levels of radioactive cesium and strontium many hundreds of times as high as legal safety limits, according to the operator, Tokyo Electric Power, or Tepco. The task was made more urgent by a forecast of heavy rain for the region.

But a Tepco spokesman, Masayuki Ono, acknowledged that much of the contaminated water had seeped into the soil, which would have to be dug up and removed. And he said the tainted water could eventually reach the ocean, adding to the tons of radioactive fluids that have already leaked into the sea from the plant.

The new leak raises disturbing questions about the durability of the nearly 1,000 huge tanks Tepco has installed about 500 yards from the site’s shoreline. The tanks are meant to store the vast amounts of contaminated liquid created as workers cool the complex’s three damaged reactors by pumping water into their cores, along with groundwater recovered after it poured into the reactors’ breached basements.

Hints of the latest leak began to emerge on Monday, when workers discovered puddles of radioactive water near a tank. Further checks revealed that the 1,000-ton vessel, thought to be nearly full, contained only 700 tons, with the remainder having almost certainly leaked out.

Mr. Ono said that Tepco had assumed the tanks would last at least five years. But the tank that leaked could have been in place no more than two, and workers previously found smaller leaks from similar tanks at least four times. And Hiroshi Miyano, an expert in nuclear system design at Hosei University in Tokyo, said that the tanks would be vulnerable to earthquake or tsunami, with the potential for a huge spill.

A powerful earthquake and tsunami knocked out the Fukushima complex’s cooling systems in March 2011, causing meltdowns at three reactors. The accompanying radiological release was rated at Level 7, the highest on the scale and on par with the 1986 accident at Chernobyl. Japanese regulators said Wednesday that they were preparing to raise the rating for the latest leak to Level 3, indicating a “serious incident,” from an initial reading of Level 1.

Each increase on the scale is meant to represent a 10-fold increase in the severity of the leak, according to the International Atomic Energy Agency, which introduced the scale in 1990. Ratings are made by local regulators or sometimes even the plant operators themselves, and not by the I.A.E.A., however.

Tepco has stumbled repeatedly in its handling of the disaster and its efforts to clean up the plant. After its recent admission that contaminated water had reached the open ocean after breaching an underground barrier built to contain it, Japan’s popular prime minister, Shinzo Abe, ordered his government to intervene.

Tepco hopes to clean the water using an elaborate filtering system and start releasing water contaminated at low levels into the ocean. Those plans have been delayed by technical problems and protests from fishermen.

Desperate for options to stem the leaks, Japan’s Nuclear Regulation Authority has suggested surrounding the plant with a huge underground ice wall. That plan has its own drawbacks, however, and would require huge amounts of electricity.

“We are extremely concerned,” Hideka Morimoto, a spokesman for the authority, was quoted by The Associated Press as saying.

At some point, Tepco will have no choice but to start releasing some of the water, said Dr. Miyano, the expert in nuclear system design. The continued problems have heightened public scrutiny of Tepco and have made it harder to build public consensus around any release of water, he said.

“That just makes the problem worse, with no viable solution,” he said.

Makiko Inoue contributed reporting.

Copyright © 2013 The New York Times Company

http://i1357.photobucket.com/albums/q749/transfan1/NYTimes_zps5572151b.jpg
(Pool photo/Noboru Hashimto) Workers raced to stop the leakage at the Fukushima plant, but its operator said much of the water had seeped into the soil.

-----------

Los Angeles Times, Wednesday, August 21, 2013

JAPAN MAY UPGRADE SEVERITY OF FUKUSHIMA RADIOACTIVE WATER LEAK

By YURIKO NAGANO, Los Angeles Times

TOKYO -- Japan's Nuclear Regulation Authority is considering a heightened "serious incident" designation for the leakage of 300 tons of highly radioactive water at the tsunami-damaged nuclear plant at Fukushima.

The country's nuclear regulator earlier this week classified the spillage from a storage tank as a Level 1 incident, the second-lowest designation for nuclear accidents as classified by the International Atomic Energy Agency.

But serious concerns over the leakage discovered Monday are causing the agency to consider raising the classification to Level 3, or a "serious incident," based on the concentration of radioactivity in the water and the size of the leak.

The meltdown at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, triggered by a March 11, 2011, earthquake and tsunami, has been rated a Level 7 "major accident," the world's worst nuclear disaster since Chernobyl.

Masakazu Shima, head of the accident response office at the Nuclear Regulation Authority, said his organization was in the process of confirming with the IAEA if the storage-tank leakage should be handled as a separate incident, because the tanks have been an emergency measure to help deal with the aftermath of the original Level 7 accident.

During a Nuclear Regulation Authority meeting Wednesday, commissioner Toyoshi Fuketa said he was alarmed by how Tokyo Electric Power Company, or TEPCO, may have been monitoring the storage tanks.

"TEPCO claims they have been patrolling the facility twice a day, but it is hard to believe that a leak of 300 tons of water was not detected a day earlier," Fuketa said. "That is an amount of a full pool of water that leaked in 12 hours. Something is wrong."

Yo Koshimizu, a spokesperson for TEPCO, said the tanks have been visually checked on. "Patrol times have been twice a day but not necessarily spaced out to an even 12 hours," Koshimizu said.

Takao Kashiwagi, a mechanical engineering professor at the Tokyo Institute of Technology, said "the Japanese government needs to step in and pour in more resources in the form of taxpayer's money to resolve this severe accident."

The tank leak illustrates that the plant's problems are no longer on a scale of something a cash-strapped private company can handle, Kashiwagi said.

An official of the watchdog organization affiliated with the Ministry of Environment said the Nuclear Regulation Authority has been advising TEPCO on how to proceed.

"The Nuclear Regulation Authority is like an umpire in a baseball game," said Shinji Kinjo, director of the Office for Accident Measures of Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station in the Secretariat of Nuclear Regulation Authority.

"We don't usually get involved with players -- in this case that would be TEPCO -- or the coach, which would be the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry," Kinjo said.

However, he said, this has been a critical situation and the Nuclear Regulation Authority has been instructing TEPCO on measures that need to be taken.

Nagano is a Tokyo-based special correspondent.

Copyright © 2013 Los Angeles Times. All rights reserved.

http://i1357.photobucket.com/albums/q749/transfan1/LATimes2_zpsc59bb97e.jpg
(TEPCO) Tarps and barriers are deployed to counter the spread of radioactive water at the crippled Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant in Japan.

Rusty Eldora
08-23-2013, 08:54 AM
I'm pretty pro nuke industry.

But TEPCO has been dishonest, fool hearty, incompetent, ill prepared, and has totally bungled this whole thing. They have made a situation much worse than it needed to be and should have been kicked out.

They have cost Japan hundreds of billions, the US several billion, and impaired the health of millions of Japanese. The senior leadership should be serving long and difficult sentences.