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MELTDOWN DISASTER ESCALATES RAPIDLY - Japan

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Author Topic: MELTDOWN DISASTER ESCALATES RAPIDLY - Japan  (Read 2568 times)
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Lovelee
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« Reply #150 on: April 19, 2011, 10:07:27 am »

A pair of thin robots on treads sent to explore buildings inside Japan's crippled nuclear reactor have returned with disheartening news: radiation levels are far too high for repair crews to go inside.

Nevertheless, Japanese officials remained hopeful on Monday they could stick to their freshly minted "road map" for cleaning up the radiation leak and stabilising the plant by year's end so they could begin returning tens of thousands of evacuees to their homes.

"Even I had expected high radioactivity in those areas. I'm sure [Tokyo Electric Power Co (TEPCO), operators of the Fukushima Daiichi power station] and other experts have factored in those figures when they compiled the 'road map'," Yukio Edano, Japan's chief cabinet secretary, said.

Officials said on Monday that radiation had jumped in a water tank in Unit 2 and contaminated water was discovered in other areas of the plant, underscoring the growing list of challenges facing TEPCO in cleaning up and containing the radiation. They also described in more detail the damage to fuel in three troubled reactors, saying pellets had melted.

Workers have not been able to enter the reactor buildings at the plant since the first days after the cooling systems were wrecked by the March 11 earthquake and tsunami  that left more than 27,000 people dead or missing in Japan's northeastern coast.

http://english.aljazeera.net/news/asia-pacific/2011/04/201141820146882320.html
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« Reply #151 on: April 24, 2011, 11:34:31 am »

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TMXvpWoHzeE&feature=player_embedded#at=582
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« Reply #152 on: April 24, 2011, 05:31:04 pm »



Japan advisor says nuclear threat receding – report



Agence France-Presse
First Posted 12:48:00 04/24/2011

Filed Under: Nuclear accident, Safety of Citizens, Environmental Issues


TOKYO – The Japanese prime minister's special advisor on the nuclear crisis says the immediate risk of a major radiation leak from the Fukushima power plant has receded, the Wall Street Journal reported.

The government could not say the situation had been completely stabilized at the plant, but after studying the possibility of severe deterioration, Tokyo was comfortable with the current evacuation policy, Goshi Hosono told the paper in an interview Saturday.

"There is no way Tokyo or Kyoto will come into harm's way," said Hosono, Prime Minister Naoto Kan's special advisor on management of the nuclear crisis.

The atomic plant, where reactor cooling systems were knocked out, has been hit by a series of explosions and leaked radiation into the air, ground and sea in the world's worst nuclear disaster since Chernobyl 25 years ago.

The government last week imposed a no-go zone 20 kilometers (12 miles) around the plant, giving legal weight to an existing exclusion zone over fears of the effect of long-term exposure to radiation on residents.

More than 85,000 people have moved to shelters from areas around the plant, including from a wider 30-kilometre zone, where people were first told to stay indoors and later urged to leave.

Hosono said radiation levels in the damaged reactors had to be lowered before work would be carried out and they had to find ways to process water contaminated with radiation from efforts to cool the reactors and spent fuel rod pools.

Workers have dumped thousands of tons of low-level radioactive water into the Pacific Ocean, to the concern of neighboring countries worried about contamination of the marine environment.

"Our goal is very clear: preventing further spreading of radiation into the atmosphere and into the ocean," Hosono told the paper.

"In order to achieve that, we must restore stable cooling functions. This is extremely difficult technically."

Plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Company says it does not expect a "cold shutdown" of all reactors for another six to nine months.

Hosono said officials had started to examine the causes and handling of the nuclear accident.

"When we investigate the accident, it will naturally become clear where the problems were, including issues with Japan's nuclear regulatory policy," he told the paper.

Hosono, a member of the ruling Democratic Party of Japan, said it was not the right time to decide whether the country should look to non-nuclear energy sources or continue to keep using atomic power.

"I just don't think we can make a cool-headed judgment in the current atmosphere," the paper quoted him as saying.

"For now, we should maintain both options and let the people decide in time."
DPJ secretary general Katsuya Okada on Friday said the government would review its energy policy in light of the disaster but would stick with nuclear power.

Resource-poor Japan, highly dependent on Middle Eastern oil, meets about one third of its energy needs with nuclear power, but its high-tech companies are also world leaders in many environmental and energy-saving technologies.

http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/breakingnews/world/view/20110424-332702/Japan-advisor-says-nuclear-threat-receding--report
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Lovelee
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« Reply #153 on: April 24, 2011, 05:38:48 pm »

hmm .. its still very confusing .. there are many articles out there saying things havent changed.  That no one will be living in the immediate vicinity for decades.

I see Julia Gillard Aussie PM has been there and cried her eyes out.
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