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    Fukushima - 3 years later still radiating the environment and now reactor 4 may have exploded

    JesterTerrestrial
    JesterTerrestrial


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    Fukushima - 3 years later still radiating the environment and now reactor 4 may have exploded Empty Fukushima - 3 years later still radiating the environment and now reactor 4 may have exploded

    Post  JesterTerrestrial Wed May 21, 2014 2:30 pm

    Fukushima Lives: Unit 4 Has Exploded, It’s On Fire

    Fukushima - 3 years later still radiating the environment and now reactor 4 may have exploded Fukush10




    Fukushima - 3 years later still radiating the environment and now reactor 4 may have exploded Fukushima-Daiichi-nuclear-009



    The operator of the wrecked Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant has started pumping groundwater into the Pacific ocean in an attempt to manage the large volume of contaminated water at the site.

    Tokyo Electric Power (Tepco) said it had released 560 tonnes of groundwater pumped from 12 wells located upstream from the damaged reactors. The water had been temporarily stored in a tank so it could undergo safety checks before being released, the firm added.

    The buildup of toxic water is the most urgent problem facing workers at the plant, almost two years after the environment ministry said 300 tonnes of contaminated groundwater from Fukushima Daiichi was seeping into the ocean every day.

    The groundwater, which flows in from hills behind the plant, mixes with contaminated water used to cool melted fuel before ending up in the sea. Officials concede that decommissioning the reactors will be impossible until the water issue has been resolved.

    The bypass system intercepts clean groundwater as it flows downhill toward the sea and reroutes it around the plant. It is expected to reduce the amount of water flowing into the reactor basements by up to 100 tonnes a day – a quarter – and relieve pressure on the storage tanks, which will soon reach their capacity.

    But the system does not include the coolant water that becomes dangerously contaminated after it is pumped into the basements of three reactors that suffered meltdown after the plant was struck by an earthquake and tsunami in March 2011.

    That water will continue to be stored in more than 1,000 tanks at the site, while officials debate how to safely dispose of it. The problem has been compounded by frequent technical glitches afflicting the plant's water purification system.

    Tepco and the government are also preparing to build an underground frozen wall around four reactors to block groundwater, although some experts doubt the technology will work on such a large scale. The utility is also building more tanks to increase storage capacity.

    Dale Klein, a senior adviser to Tepco, recently warned the firm that it may have no choice but to eventually dump contaminated water into the Pacific.

    The first groundwater release went ahead after Tepco assured local fishermen that levels of radioactive isotopes were far lower than those permitted in drinking water by the World Health Organisation.

    Tepco described the move as a "major milestone", adding: "The water's quality is monitored regularly by independent third parties using safety and environmental standards more stringent than those set by Japanese law."

    The release comes after a Japanese newspaper revealed that almost all of the workers who were at Fukushima Daiichi when a reactor building exploded in March 2011 panicked and fled, defying orders to remain at the site.

    The small number of workers, along with firefighters, and soldiers – nicknamed the Fukushima 50 – who did stay behind, working in shifts around the clock to cool nuclear fuel, have been fêted for their heroics.

    But the Asahi Shimbun, citing leaked transcripts of testimony from the plant's then manager, Masao Yoshida, revealed this week that of the 720 workers present when a reactor building exploded on 15 March, 650 fled to another power plant about six miles (10km) away. Yoshida died of cancer last July.

    While the Fukushima cleanup continues, government plans to restart some nuclear reactors were in doubt on Wednesday when a court ordered the operator of a plant in western Japan not to put the facility back online, citing safety concerns.

    In a rare victory for anti-nuclear campaigners, the court in Fukui prefecture said Kansai Electric Power should not restart two reactors at Oi nuclear power plant.

    All of Japan's dozens of nuclear reactors are idle after being shut down for safety checks in the wake of the Fukushima disaster.

    "Plaintiffs have rarely won. This is right in the middle of the restart process … it could have very well have repercussions," said Aileen Mioko Smith, executive director of Green Action.

    Kansai Electric said it would appeal against the decision.


    http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2014/may/21/fukushima-groundwater-pacific-nuclear-power-plant

    Fukushima - 3 years later still radiating the environment and now reactor 4 may have exploded 176305077

    Japan's TEPCO to Start Dumping Fukushima Water Into Ocean Next Week

    MOSCOW, May 16 (RIA Novosti) – Tokyo Electric Power (TEPCO), the operator of the crippled Fukushima nuclear power plant, plans to begin releasing underground water near the facility into the Pacific Ocean as early as next Wednesday, The Asahi Shimbun reported Friday.
    The first water to be released will total around 560 tons, the agency said citing an official from the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry. TEPCO will begin releasing the water as soon as it presents results of radiation tests to local government and the fishing industry.
    Initial talks between the government and TEPCO agreed that only water with 1,500 becquerels of radiation or less per liter could be released. Tests conducted by TEPCO and two outside agencies have revealed that the Fukushima underground water met the standards, averaging 220 to 240 becquerels of tritium per liter.
    TEPCO began pumping out groundwater from the Fukushima nuclear plant in April in an effort to prevent further radioactive leaks.
    The company continues to grapple with the problem of contaminated water storage, with about 450,000 tons of highly-radioactive water currently being stored in Fukushima’s underground facilities and tanks. Experts say some 15,000 tons is also being held in a service tunnel. According to recent estimates, up to 400 tons of contaminated water from the damaged plant is seeping into the Pacific Ocean every day.
    In an effort to prevent further irradiation, TEPCO has adopted a plan to draw off groundwater from the plant. The fallout from Fukushima is later to be sent for analysis that will determine whether it is safe to be disposed of by dumping into the ocean.
    The practice will allow the operator to reduce the accumulation of radioactive water at the plant by 100 tons a day.
    Last August saw the worst radioactive water leak at the crippled Fukushima plant since the 2011 disaster, after 300 tons of water with strontium levels equaling 80 million becquerels per liter leaked from a storage reservoir into the Pacific Ocean. The leak was then classified as a level three incident on the International Nuclear Event Scale (INES).
    In March 2011, Japan was hit by a massive magnitude 9.0 earthquake and subsequent tsunami, claiming more than 15,000 lives and causing a number of explosions at the Fukushima plant.
    In what has been dubbed the world's worst nuclear disaster since Chernobyl, three of the plant’s reactors underwent a partial meltdown as radiation leaked into the atmosphere, soil and seawater.

    Fukushima disaster: Tokyo hides truth as children die, become ill from radiation - ex-mayor
    Video interview...

    The tragedy of the Fukushima nuclear plant disaster took place almost three years ago. Since then, radiation has forced thousands out of their homes and led to the deaths of many. It took great effort to prevent the ultimate meltdown of the plant – but are the after effects completely gone? Tokyo says yes; it also claims the government is doing everything it can for those who suffered in the disaster. However, disturbing facts sometimes rise to the surface. To shed a bit of light on the mystery of the Fukushima aftermath, Sophie Shevardnadze talks to the former mayor of one of the disaster-struck cities. Katsutaka Idogawa is on SophieCo today.
    http://rt.com/shows/sophieco/fukushima-disaster-radiation-children-740/


    Last edited by JesterTerrestrial on Thu May 22, 2014 12:24 am; edited 2 times in total
    mudra
    mudra


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    Fukushima - 3 years later still radiating the environment and now reactor 4 may have exploded Empty Re: Fukushima - 3 years later still radiating the environment and now reactor 4 may have exploded

    Post  mudra Wed May 21, 2014 3:31 pm

    Special Broadcast Fukushima Unit 4 Major Fire May 20th 2014

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=03BSllU0i6Q


    Love Always
    mudra
    Jenetta
    Jenetta


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    Fukushima - 3 years later still radiating the environment and now reactor 4 may have exploded Empty Fukushima Three Years Later Still Radiating The Environment & May Have Exploded

    Post  Jenetta Wed May 21, 2014 11:26 pm

    2014.05.20 20:00-21:00 / ふくいちライブカメラ (Live Fukushima Nuclear Plant Cam)

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ur1ngyuj7LA


    We are by no means experts at identifying instances of fire caught on camera under low illumination conditions, but the following compressed 3 minute video from the official Tepco YouTube feed (where 1 second of the clip represents 20 seconds in real time) showing the Fukushima nuclear power plant between 8:00pm and 9:00 pm last night, and particularly the segment 1:16 into the clip and continuing for about 30 seconds (or about 6 minutes in the real world), certainly looks disturbing.

    That said, we are confident Tepco has a canned and ready for dissemination explanation which soothes away fears that in addition to free gamma rays, the Fukushima sarcophagus is now also in the flambe a la carte business.

    We can't wait to hear it.

    http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-05-20/caught-camera-fire-fukushima

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    B.B.Baghor
    B.B.Baghor


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    Fukushima - 3 years later still radiating the environment and now reactor 4 may have exploded Empty Sophia Banks journey to Fukushima... the aftermath of a disaster

    Post  B.B.Baghor Tue Jan 27, 2015 11:51 am

    This report of a journey to Fukushima is posted in a Transition Network blog by Sophia Banks.

    December 4 2014.

    Fukushima - living with the aftermath of a disaster

    Excerpt from Sophia's blog "Fukushima trainstation Fukushima. We all arrive by bullet train and take a photo of the station sign. Not just our small group of visiting foreigners but other visiting Japanese are doing the same thing. Fukushima. The name has resonance these days. An ongoing tragedy worthy taking a picture of the station sign on arrival.

    I am travelling here as part of a ‘Learning Journey’ to Tohoku – the Northern tsunami-hit region of Japan – organised by Bob Stilger who has been working in the region on and off ever since the disaster. It’s now 3 years and 8 months since the earthquake, tsunami and nuclear disaster hit this region on ‘3.11’ as the Japanese call it – the 11th March 2011. Our small group of Americans – and me – are here to listen to people’s stories and learn what we can from bearing witness to the impact of the disaster and its aftermath. To listen to and share more widely the stories and reality here on the ground that are still ongoing while much of the world – and even Japan – has moved on.

    Before arriving inFukushimawe have spent two days slightly further north in Ishinomaki – a coastal town badly hit by the tsunami. On arriving in the town I am struck by the fact that I recognise some of the landscape from those dreadful video pictures of the ferocious water deluging the town sweeping everything and everyone in its wake. We hear many personal stories of that terrible day and the dreadful loss of life, of homes, of livelihoods and how a flood of volunteers from all overJapanswept in to clear up the enormous debris and mud that caked absolutely everything. Many people in this region are still living in temporary housing. The tragedy was and is awful and the pain of the loss is enormous. In one brutal day unimaginable amounts of people’s lives were swept away in one fell sweep. Gone. No more. The pain and grief are deep and I am hugely moved and pained by people’s stories. Even though the scale is awesome it is nevertheless people’s resilience that shines through. Piece by piece they are picking themselves up. They are piecing destroyed lives back together again. Many spoke of the fact that without the presence of the many volunteers from all over Japan they may not have been able to start again. A fish processing factory owner whose entire factory was swept away spoke of the dark days after the disaster when he didn’t want to carry on. When he contemplated ending it all with suicide. And how the cheerful volunteers who every evening said to him ‘see you tomorrow!’ gave him a glimmer of hope – and possibility – that one day these dark days would be over. That he and his devastated community could begin again".


    Source: https://www.transitionnetwork.org/blogs/sophy-banks/2014-12/fukushima-living-aftermath-disaster
    B.B.Baghor
    B.B.Baghor


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    Fukushima - 3 years later still radiating the environment and now reactor 4 may have exploded Empty Re: Fukushima - 3 years later still radiating the environment and now reactor 4 may have exploded

    Post  B.B.Baghor Wed Mar 11, 2015 12:36 pm

    Fukushima - 3 years later still radiating the environment and now reactor 4 may have exploded N-311-10

    A man prays for victims of the March 11, 2011, quake-tsunami disaster at a memorial site in the city of Sendai on Wednesday.

    KYODO National Survivors mark four years since 3/11 2011 disasters
    Kyodo, Staff Report

    March 11, 2015 Article history

    "Japan, on Wednesday, commemorated the fourth anniversary of the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake and tsunami with prayers for the more than 18,000 people who died or who remain missing following the disaster, which devastated much of the Tohoku region.

    The anniversary comes at a time when post-quake reconstruction in hard-hit Iwate, Miyagi and Fukushima prefectures remains incomplete, with many evacuees still forced to live away from their hometowns amid decommissioning work at the crippled Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power plant and decontamination work across Fukushima Prefecture.

    A government-sponsored memorial service held in Tokyo was attended by Emperor Akihito and Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, as well as representatives of people who lost family members. A moment of silence was observed at 2:46 p.m., the moment that the magnitude-9 quake struck four years ago.

    “To make the most of the precious lessons learned from the earthquake and tsunami, I will push forward the effort to build an enduring nation that can stand firmly against disasters,” Abe said at the memorial service.

    The Emperor also expressed compassion for those affected by the disaster, noting that “the situation surrounding affected people still remains difficult, and I think citizens’ continuous efforts to help each other and unite as one is important.”

    A total of 30 relatives of the deceased from Iwate, Miyagi and Fukushima prefectures participated in the memorial, with representatives from each prefecture taking turns to speak about the four years since the disaster".


    Source: http://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2015/03/11/national/survivors-mark-4-years-since-311-disasters/#.VQB6pZV0zIU


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