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Japan's Nuclear Power Industry Has History Of Scandals

Japan Nuclear Power Scandals

By YURI KAGEYAMA   03/17/11 07:12 AM ET   AP

TOKYO -- Behind Japan's escalating nuclear crisis sits a scandal-ridden energy industry in a comfy relationship with government regulators often willing to overlook safety lapses.

Leaks of radioactive steam and workers contaminated with radiation are just part of the disturbing catalog of accidents that have occurred over the years and been belatedly reported to the public, if at all.

In one case, workers hand-mixed uranium in stainless steel buckets, instead of processing by machine, so the fuel could be reused, exposing hundreds of workers to radiation. Two later died.

"Everything is a secret," said Kei Sugaoka, a former nuclear power plant engineer in Japan who now lives in California. "There's not enough transparency in the industry."

Sugaoka worked at the same utility that runs the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant where workers are racing to prevent a full meltdown following Friday's 9.0 magnitude quake and tsunami.

In 1989 Sugaoka received an order that horrified him: edit out footage showing cracks in plant steam pipes in video being submitted to regulators. Sugaoka alerted his superiors in the Tokyo Electric Power Co., but nothing happened – for years. He decided to go public in 2000. Three Tepco executives lost their jobs.

The legacy of scandals and cover-ups over Japan's half-century reliance on nuclear power has strained its credibility with the public. That mistrust has been renewed this past week with the crisis at the Fukushima Dai-Ichi plant. No evidence has emerged of officials hiding information in this catastrophe. But the vagueness and scarcity of details offered by the government and Tepco – and news that seems to grow worse each day – are fueling public anger and frustration.

"We don't know what is true. That makes us worried," said Taku Harada, chief executive of the Tokyo-based Internet startup Orinoco. Harada said his many American friends are being urged to leave the capital while the Japanese government says the area is safe, probably to avoid triggering panic.

The difference is unsettling, he said. He has rented an office in Osaka 250 miles (400 kilometers) to the southwest to give his 12 employees the option of leaving Tokyo.

"We still don't know the long-term effects of radiation," he said. "That's a big question."

Tokyo Electric Power Co. official Takeshi Makigami says experts are doing their utmost to get the reactors under control.

"We are doing all that is possible," he told reporters.

Worried that over-dependence on imported oil could undermine Japan's humming economy, the government threw its support into nuclear power, and the industry boomed in profile and influence. The country has 54 nuclear plants, which provide 30 percent of the nation's energy needs, is building two more and studying proposals for 12 more plants.

Before Friday's earthquake and tsunami that triggered the Fukushima crisis and sent the economy reeling, Japan's 11 utility companies, many of them nuclear plant operators, were worth $139 billion on the stock market.

Tepco – the utility that supplies power for Japan's capital and biggest city – accounted for nearly a third of that market capitalization, though its shares have been battered since the disasters, falling 65 percent over the past week to 759 yen ($9.6) Thursday. Last month, it got a boost from the government, which renewed authorization for Tepco to operate Fukushima's 40-year-old Unit 1 reactor for another 10 years.

With such strong government support and a culture that ordinarily frowns upon dissent, regulators tend not to push for rigorous safety, said Amory Lovins, an expert on energy policy and founder of the Rocky Mountain Institute.

"You add all that up and it's a recipe for people to cut corners in operation and regulation," Lovins said.

The United States, Japan's close ally, has also raised questions about the coziness between Japanese regulators and industry and implicitly questioned Tokyo's forthrightness over the Fukushima crisis. The director of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission and the U.S. ambassador this week issued bleaker assessments about the dangers at the plant than the Japanese government or Tepco.

Competence and transparency issues aside, some say it's just too dangerous to build nuclear plants in an earthquake-prone nation like Japan, where land can liquefy during a major temblor.

"You're building on a heap of tofu," said Philip White of Tokyo-based Citizens' Nuclear Information Center, a group of scientists and activists who have opposed nuclear power since 1975.

"There is absolutely no reason to trust them," he said of those that run Japan's nuclear power plants.

Japan is haunted by memories of past nuclear accidents.

_In 1999, fuel-reprocessing workers were reported to be using stainless steel buckets to hand-mix uranium in flagrant violation of safety standards at the Tokaimura plant. Two workers later died in what was the deadliest accident in the Japanese industry's history.

_ At least 37 workers were exposed to low doses of radiation at a 1997 fire and explosion at a nuclear reprocessing plant operated in Tokaimura, northeast of Tokyo. The operator, Donen, later acknowledged it had initially suppressed information about the fire.

_ Hundreds of people were exposed to radiation and thousands evacuated in the more serious 1999 Tokaimura accident involving JCO Co. The government assigned the accident a level 4 rating on the International Nuclear Event Scale ranging from 1 to 7, with 7 being most serious.

_ In 2007, a powerful earthquake ripped into Japan's northwest coast, killing at least eight people and causing malfunctions at the Kashiwazaki Kariwa nuclear power plant, including radioactive water spills, burst pipes and fires. Radiation did not leak from the facility.

Tepco has safety violations that stretch back decades. In 1978, control rods at one Fukushima reactor dislodged but the accident was not reported because utilities were not required to notify the government of such accidents. In 2006, Tepco reported a negligible amount of radioactive steam seeped from the Fukushima plant – and blew beyond the compound.

Now with the public on edge over safety, Tatsumi Tanaka, head of Risk Hedge and a crisis management expert, believes the government would find it difficult to approve new plants in the immediate future.

Tanaka says that, true to Japan's dismal nuclear power record, officials bungled the latest crisis, failing to set up a special crisis team and appoint credible outside experts.

Tokyo Electric Power Co., regulators and the government spokesman have been holding nationally televised news conferences, sometimes several a day, on the latest developments at the Fukushima plant.

But the reactors have been volatile, changing by the hour, with multiple explosions, fires and leaks of radiation. The utility, regulators and government spokesmen often send conflicting information, adding to the confusion and the perception they aren't being forthright, Tanaka says.

"They are only making people's fears worse," he said. "They need to study at the onset what are the possible scenarios that might happen in about five stages and then figure out what the response should be."

___

Associated Press writers Joji Sakurai and Mari Yamaguchi in Tokyo and Justin Pritchard in Los Angeles contributed to this report.

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TOKYO -- Behind Japan's escalating nuclear crisis sits a scandal-ridden energy industry in a comfy relationship with government regulators often willing to overlook safety lapses. Leaks of radioact...
TOKYO -- Behind Japan's escalating nuclear crisis sits a scandal-ridden energy industry in a comfy relationship with government regulators often willing to overlook safety lapses. Leaks of radioact...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JoanMeijer
Author of Relentless: The Search For Typhoid Mary
06:09 PM on 03/19/2011
And Governor Rick Perry of Texas wants this energy company to come to South Texas and build a plant just like they have in Japan and have this Japanese company run it. Welcome to the world of insanity.
02:10 AM on 03/19/2011
Reading many of these statements. WTF has Obama got to do with Japanese Corporatocracy, or the corruption throughout?

We've got our own pariahs to fry, starting with the investment banking cartel.

So, statements such as "The United States...has raised questions about the coziness between Japanese regulators and the industry...Tokyo's forthrightness..." is just so much sanctimonious drivel.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ConcernedCitizen78
08:50 PM on 03/18/2011
"The United States, Japan's close ally, has also RAISED QUESTIONS about the coziness between Japanese regulators and industry and IMPLICITLY QUESTIONED Tokyo's forthrightness over the Fukushima crisis." [emphasis added]

There is neither CONDEMNATION of the Japanese government's irresponsible behavior towards mankind in general and to its own people in particular, nor of its "scandals and cover-ups", nor blaming the Japanese form of government ('democracy') for this nuclear disaster.

Imagine if this accident had happened in China. There will be hysterical screams of condemnation about a COMMUNIST system of corruption, cronyism, irresponsibility, eco-terrorism, complete and cruel disregard for mankind, etc.

Yes, I do sympathize with the Japanese in their hour of catastrophe. But, nevertheless, I am truly amazed at the double standards.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
AlxAlxdr
Salt Lake City
11:40 AM on 03/18/2011
I don't think any government can be trusted...well I trust they will collect their taxes on time.
absolument
Debate the policy. But first, LEARN the science.
03:11 PM on 03/18/2011
Ha! Only if they can find me. j/k
12:21 AM on 03/18/2011
why is there no LOOTING????
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
AlxAlxdr
Salt Lake City
11:37 AM on 03/18/2011
They were well prepared for a major earthquake. There are several countries who are helping with the rescue effort.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
AlxAlxdr
Salt Lake City
11:38 AM on 03/18/2011
If you are trying to liken what is going on in Japan to Katrina there are several things that are different.
absolument
Debate the policy. But first, LEARN the science.
08:51 PM on 03/17/2011
And you'll never guess what President Obama wants to have built on the Gulf Coast of Texas, and who he wants to give $4,000,000,000 from our Treasury to build it.
http://www.gregpalast.com/no-bs-info-on-japan-nuclearobama-invites-tokyo-electric-to-build-us-nukes-with-taxpayer-funds/

Okay, in the circumstances you might have guessed it, but IT'S STILL CRAZY!
11:55 PM on 03/18/2011
Still less than oil industry subsidies.
absolument
Debate the policy. But first, LEARN the science.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Andres64
Religion is a sectually transmitted disease.
01:29 AM on 03/19/2011
But...but...all those poor, starving oil companies. Exxon and Chevron only made $69,000,000,000 in 2009. They need government handouts.

http://money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/fortune500/2009/performers/companies/profits/
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mummyscurse
06:34 PM on 03/17/2011
Obama Issues Statement.. 'Japanese People Are Not Alone'....

Ha Ha Ha Ha Ha Ha Ha... Just alone are the American people who placed their trust in this totem pole, and his false promises, by casting their votes for him!

Surprised he took time out from arranging his next shoot-around with some NBA star, his real passion in life, other than building his bank account.
06:53 PM on 03/17/2011
He has spent less time in photo ops with celebrities than Bush spent cutting brush.

Don't get your panties in a wad.
12:25 AM on 03/18/2011
japanese and americans are ALONE,,,

he has left for RIO,,,

he is finally leading by example,,,

if i were you,,, i'd be LEAVING,,, what a good idea,,,
06:19 PM on 03/17/2011
Let's just hope that the people in Japan don't hear this empty bromide from the leader of the not-so-free world.
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moby49
I will act as if what I do makes a difference.
06:31 PM on 03/17/2011
Or see the US ambassador boarding a charter flight to DC.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tom95134
06:12 PM on 03/17/2011
Is Obama using the same script that he used for the Labor Unions? "are not alone" "I'll put on a comfortable pair of shoes myself" (and join them) Or his commitment to the activists in Cairo

Empty, empty, empty.
06:17 PM on 03/17/2011
With friends like Obama....
06:07 PM on 03/17/2011
not intellectu­­ally capable to be president,­­,

the prez leaves the country as the radiation hits america,,,

he is finally leading,,,
06:07 PM on 03/17/2011
So someone finally told Obama about the crisis in Japan.....
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Cori527
Gay democrat agnostic vegetarian!
05:53 PM on 03/17/2011
I wonder how their whaling fleet is doing?
05:51 PM on 03/17/2011
It is time to turn these nukes off. You can't have even one problem with these things and given man made them, you know what is going to happen....
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CashCrop101
Everything Burns
05:38 PM on 03/17/2011
Boy if this was Bush you pinkos would have demanded a response 6 days ago.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
robnelsong
Dire Wolfman
05:40 PM on 03/17/2011
Sorry dude, but there are no pinkos around anymore except Fidel and Kim Jong Il. You will have to come up with a better insult.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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XcessiveHeat
What we do in life...Echoes in eternity.
05:56 PM on 03/17/2011
You see, President Obama spoke today, AFTER the Japanese Emperor spoke yesterday. It's called diplomacy.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TheHat921
05:16 PM on 03/17/2011
Criticism of Pres. Obama with regard to the nuclear crisis is totally misplaced; I'm sure that as much help as the Japanese desire was offered to theri P.M. beyond that, Pres. Obama need only weigh in on matters of U.S. safety and security of our internal reactor/plants; nothing more.

It might sound cold, but this really is an internal Japanese matter and we have no ability or right to intervene.
05:22 PM on 03/17/2011
Can we afford to wait until it becomes a matter of US safety, US economy or US interest in the region? It became a US matter when Japan asked for US help and US offered any help they need.