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Workers Exposed To Radiation And Injured At Nuclear Plant In Japan

SHINO YUASA and TOMOKO A. HOSAKA   03/24/11 03:37 PM ET   AP

TOKYO — Nearly two weeks of rolling blackouts, distribution problems and contamination fears prompted by a leaking, tsunami-damaged nuclear plant have left shelves stripped bare of some basic necessities in stores across Tokyo. Some people are even turning to the city's ubiquitous vending machines to find increasingly scarce bottles of water.

At the source of the anxiety – the overheated, radiation-leaking nuclear plant – there was yet another setback Thursday as two workers were injured when they stepped into radiation-contaminated water. The two were treated at a hospital.

Supplies of bottled water grew scarce in Tokyo, one day after city officials warned that the level of radioactive iodine in the tap water was more than twice what is considered safe for babies to drink. Tests conducted Thursday showed the levels in the city's water fell to acceptable limits for infants, but they were up in neighboring regions.

Frightened Tokyo residents hoping to stock up on bottled water and other goods flocked to shops across the city, some of which tried to prevent hoarding by imposing buying limits.

"The first thought was that I need to buy bottles of water," said Reiko Matsumoto, a real estate agent and mother of a 5-year-old, who rushed to a nearby store to stock up on supplies. "I also don't know whether I can let her take a bath."

The shortages were mainly limited to basic staples, such as rice, instant noodles and milk. Vegetables, meat and tofu, meanwhile, were readily available in most places.

Japan has been grappling with an avalanche of miseries that began with a massive, 9.0-magnitude earthquake on March 11. That triggered a violent tsunami, which ravaged the northeast coast, killed an estimated 18,000 people and left hundreds of thousands homeless. The quake and tsunami also damaged the critical cooling system at the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant, which overheated and began spewing radiation into the environment.

Workers have been struggling to get the cooling system operating again, but their efforts have been hampered by explosions, fires and radiation scares. Lighting was restored Thursday to the central control room at Unit 1 for the first time since the quake and tsunami.

But two workers were hospitalized after stepping into contaminated water while laying electrical cables in one unit, nuclear and government officials said. The water seeped over the top of their boots and onto their legs, said Takashi Kurita, spokesman for plant owner Tokyo Electric Power Co.

The two likely suffered "beta ray burns," Tokyo Electric said, citing doctors. They tested at radiation levels between 170 to 180 millisieverts, well below the maximum 250 millisieverts allowed for workers, said Fumio Matsuda, a spokesman for the Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency.

The men will be transferred to a radiology medical institute Friday, said Hidehiko Nishiyama, another nuclear agency spokesman. Their injuries were not life-threatening.

More than two dozen people have been injured trying to bring the plant, located 140 miles (220 kilometers) northeast of Tokyo, under control.

The death toll from the earthquake and tsunami continued to rise, meanwhile, with more than 9,800 bodies counted and more than 17,500 people listed as missing. Those tallies may overlap, but police from one of the hardest-hit prefectures, Miyagi, estimate that the deaths will top 15,000 in that region alone.

The crisis has stoked fears about the safety of Japan's food and water supply. Radiation has been found in raw milk, seawater and 11 kinds of vegetables, including broccoli, cauliflower and turnips, grown in areas around the plant.

The U.S. and Australia halted imports of Japanese dairy and produce from the region, Hong Kong said it would require that Japan perform safety checks on meat, eggs and seafood, and Canada said it would upgrade controls on imports of Japanese food products. Singapore, too, has banned the sale of milk, produce, meat and seafood from areas near the plant.

Concerns also spread to Europe. In Iceland, officials said they measured trace amounts of radioactive iodine in the air but assured residents it was "less than a millionth" of levels found in Europe in the wake of the 1986 Chernobyl disaster – the world's worst nuclear accident.

Radioactive iodine is short-lived, with a half-life of eight days – the length of time it takes for half of it to break down harmlessly. However, experts say infants are particularly vulnerable to radioactive iodine, which can cause thyroid cancer.

In Tokyo, government spokesman Yukio Edano pleaded for calm over the water contamination, and said the government was considering importing bottled water from other countries to cover any shortages. Officials urged residents to avoid panicked stockpiling and the city began distributing 240,000 bottles – enough to give each of the 80,000 children under age 1 three small bottles of water.

New readings Thursday showed the city's tap water was back to levels acceptable for infants, but the relief was tempered by elevated levels of the isotope in two neighboring prefectures: Chiba and Saitama. A city in a third prefecture, just south of the plant, also showed high levels of radioactive iodine in tap water, officials said.

Tap water in Kawaguchi City in Saitama, north of Tokyo, contained 210 becquerels of radioactive iodine – well above the 100 becquerels considered safe for babies but below the 300-becquerel level for adults, Health Ministry official Shogo Misawa said.

In Chiba prefecture, the water tested high for radiation in two separate areas, said water safety official Kyoji Narita. The government there warned families in 11 cities in Chiba not to give infants tap water.

"The high level of iodine was due to the nuclear disaster," Narita said. "There is no question about it."

Radiation levels also tested dangerously high in Hitachi in Ibaraki prefecture, about 70 miles (120 kilometers) south of the Fukushima plant, city water official Toshifumi Suzuki said, adding that officials were distributing bottled water.

The limits refer to sustained consumption rates, and officials said parents should stop using tap water for baby formula, although it was OK for infants to consume small amounts.

Despite the appeals, shelves were bare in many stores across Tokyo.

Maruetsu supermarket in the city center sought to impose buying limits on specific items to prevent hoarding: only one carton of milk per family, one 5-kilogram (11-pound) bag of rice, one package of toilet paper, one pack of diapers. Similar notices at some drugs stores told women they could only purchase two feminine hygiene items at a time.

Maruetsu spokeswoman Kayoko Kano acknowledged that the earthquake and tsunami resulted in delays of some products.

Some frustrated shoppers have turned to the city's many vending machines as an alternative. The machines are found everywhere in the city and one can feature about three dozen different beverages – ranging from hot coffee and green tea to power drinks and juice. A 500-milliliter bottle of imported water costs about 100 yen (about $1.25).

A spokesman for Procter & Gamble Japan said its plant was fully operational but that rolling blackouts in Tokyo may be affecting distribution. "Consumers are nervous, and they may be buying up supplies," Noriyuki Endo added.

Worse hardships continued in the frigid, tsunami-struck northeast. Some 660,000 households still do not have water, the government said. Electricity has not been restored to some 209,000 homes, Tohoku Electric Power Co. said. Damage is estimated at $309 billion, making it the most costly natural disaster on record.

In one bright spot of economic news, Toyota Motor Corp. – which had suspended production due to damage to suppliers' factories and power shortages in the quake zone – said it will soon resume production of the Prius and two other hybrid models.

But rival Honda Motor Co. said the suspension of car production at its Saitama and Suzuka factories will be extended to April 3.

The economic woes spawned by the disasters were especially painful for farmers in the region near the nuclear plant.

Sumiko Matsuno, a 65-year-old farmer in Fukushima, spent Thursday frantically harvesting vegetables from her fields.

"We are digging up all our carrots and onions as fast as we can. We can't sell them but we need them ourselves for food," she said. "We are really worried about our future. If this goes on, it is going to really hurt us."

___

Associated Press writers Eric Talmadge in Fukushima, and Mari Yamaguchi, Elaine Kurtenbach, Yuri Kageyama, Kaori Hitomi, Jean H. Lee and Ian Mader in Tokyo contributed to this report.

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TOKYO — Nearly two weeks of rolling blackouts, distribution problems and contamination fears prompted by a leaking, tsunami-damaged nuclear plant have left shelves stripped bare of some basic ne...
TOKYO — Nearly two weeks of rolling blackouts, distribution problems and contamination fears prompted by a leaking, tsunami-damaged nuclear plant have left shelves stripped bare of some basic ne...
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10:38 AM on 03/25/2011
The traumatic events that Japan has suffered and the subsequent additional concerns including radiation have the potential to happen almost anywhere. As a trauma specialist with Shepell.fgi I recall that there was also a ripple effect of events that followed 9/11. My experience in the area of trauma is that there are three key factors that can provide a greater sense of security and re-stabilization: information, presence and visibility. Availability of critical information arms us with knowledge and educates us, placing us in a better position of control and self-reliance. The visibility of decision-makers and their presence throughout an ordeal speaks to their engagement and willingness to support. This is a time for guidance and leadership.
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cyberfringe
When the going gets weird, the weird turn pro.
12:29 AM on 03/25/2011
Where has the japan disaster coverage gone?
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nmaddog7
12:52 AM on 03/25/2011
I have a sneaking suspicion it is being censored.... If you take a look at some of the finance journals like FT.com, you'd have thought they solved this by now. This evening I saw "Neutron beam" race up to the top of google hot trends, only to disappear literally in front of my eyes. I then tried to monitor it using the advanced google trends search, which did show "neutron beam" as a trend with a nearly vertical line starting this evening-BUT only by putting in "neutron" alone and then looking at the top 10 similar searches.....
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01:47 AM on 03/25/2011
Show biz. The next hit production has shoved it off stage.
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Thaigold
Life is Good
07:48 AM on 03/25/2011
You bet it's being squashed. It should be the biggest story on the planet, yet the corporate controlled media is back-burnering it. The very fact they are announcing specious sievert readings is in fact a lie by omission. 99% of the very compliant Japanese and the rest of the world don't have a clue what this dosage terminology means.
Libya can't hold a candle to this disaster in the making. Physics doesn't lie. Politicians do.
12:05 AM on 03/25/2011
This story is now on the very bottom of the world section...and is moderated after not being so all day...just as the warning level reportedly bumped up to a 6.

Interesting.
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11:38 PM on 03/24/2011
Can we move thsi story up a bit now that workers are being admitted for radiation poisoning? What else do we need to happen to keep some focus on this story as it is no where close to ending?
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Roadrun
Question Authority
08:59 PM on 03/25/2011
Rooks haven't you been listening? It's all safe, in fact it is good for you. No radiation will ever get to America or even Tokyo or even the old couple's house next door to the reactor. And if it does it is good for you anyway.

So there.
10:00 PM on 03/24/2011
I can't BELIEVE how hard it was to find news about Japan on HP!!! In addition to the nuclear plants, this is a large scale human tragedy with millions left homeless in freezing conditions, getting sicker, many of them elderly. Now we have widespread contamination of food and water in a first-world country. It's important news to follow...what can happen to anyone. You know, but for the grace of God go we.... Yet, it is BURIED. One thing not having it the lead...but I couldn't even find it on the first page (mbe it's there at the bottom). It's far down even in the WORLD section. This crisis is not NEARLY over. Very bad things can still happen. SInce HP isn't covering much, I'll just have to read below to see the links you all post. Lets see if this post gets thru the mod...somehow I doubt it. Love you HP, but sometimes you frustrate!
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rich misty
10:16 PM on 03/24/2011
I agree - I lost the thread I was on when I had to reboot, can't find it now.
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librainstars
even the smallest things in life make a difference
10:51 PM on 03/24/2011
I had a very hard time finding it. Sad
Why would they want to hide a story this big?

The story is not over by a long shot.
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katylied
It's just a ride
10:54 PM on 03/24/2011
Same here, RM. I'm over on this one.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/03/23/japan-nuclear-plant-workers-_n_839796.html#comments
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11:30 PM on 03/24/2011
Fanned and Faved for that.
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katylied
It's just a ride
09:21 PM on 03/24/2011
Anybody seen this?

The IAEA to upgrade the accident level of the Fukushima disaster
The IAEA to upgrade Fukushima to a Level 6 accident before midnight ET 31 Mar 2011

http://www.intrade.com/jsp/intrade/common/c_cd.jsp?conDetailID=747510
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katylied
It's just a ride
09:38 PM on 03/24/2011
please disregaurd.
10:02 PM on 03/24/2011
it says March 31st...so it's a fake page? (that's why disregard?)
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rich misty
10:07 PM on 03/24/2011
Why, it's a good post?
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
11:18 PM on 03/24/2011
It's only pointless trainspotting; however, since the first hydrogen explosion on 12th March, it's been a six, regardless of what the official rating is.
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katylied
It's just a ride
09:18 PM on 03/24/2011
Asahi Shimbun, quoting Japan NRC, says #Fukushima event has become a Level 6 on INES scale. Courtesy Steve Herman reporter for VOA japan #W7VOA
comment by gabe at 9:18 PM

is this true?
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rich misty
10:18 PM on 03/24/2011
I can verify that the Fukushima releases are rapidly approaching the total release from Chernobyl...  I think somebody should upgrade the alert level and move the citizens there further out.  Radiation levels are rising.
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katylied
It's just a ride
08:01 PM on 03/24/2011
i wish you had a link to this blog on your main page-- folks night be interested in the www.ucsusa.org/ (union of concerned scientists) transcripts of daily briefings on the Japan nuclear situation and 'all things nuclear' blog
comment by mainejen at 3/24/2011 11:55:54 PM7:55 PM
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katylied
It's just a ride
07:10 PM on 03/24/2011
8:00 am camera shot. still looks like some steam/smoke visible.

http://www.tepco.co.jp/nu/f1-np/camera/index-j.html
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mrJJ
06:22 PM on 03/24/2011
Fukushima Nuclear Accident Update Log

http://www.iaea.org/newscenter/news/tsunamiupdate01.html
10:17 PM on 03/24/2011
interesting...16-59 microseverts per hour of radiation detected 30-32km away from plant. That is OUTSIDE Japanese evacuation and "stay in your house" zone, FYI. Radiation workers in US and normally in Japan too are allowed 50 microseverts PER YEAR. General public is suppose to get max of 5 microseverts per year. Some Poor citizens are getting in an hour what radiation workers are allowed in a year. This cannot be good. If they knew I don't think they'd be happy.
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
11:20 PM on 03/24/2011
The limits are 50 and 5 MILLI Sv per year, not micro.
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nmaddog7
08:59 PM on 03/25/2011
But they are so compliant and orderly, isn't that something? They listen to their govt, even when it is transparently obvious that not only is Japan threatening it's own citizens with its lies, it's threatening it's neighbors and allies with poisoned food imports etc.
And yet the MSM tells us they should be admired....
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katylied
It's just a ride
06:07 PM on 03/24/2011
7:00 am camera shot

http://www.tepco.co.jp/nu/f1-np/camera/index-j.html
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myth buster
05:03 PM on 03/24/2011
Beta ray burns are like sunburns- somewhat painful damage caused by a large dose of ionizing radiation to the skin, but which doesn't penetrate very far. Beta rays are powerful enough to burn the live skin layer if they are exposed to unprotected skin, but they won't penetrate much further than that.
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elbeas
Pragmatista sinistra
09:06 PM on 03/24/2011
Are you insinuating the injured workers have nothing to fear?
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myth buster
10:58 PM on 03/24/2011
I wouldn't say nothing to fear, because they do have a slightly elevated risk of cancer, but in terms of acute radiation sickness, no there is no danger of that. They just got a really bad burn that needs to be treated properly. It's an extremity wound, and like all extremity wounds, needs to be kept clean and under observation while it heals, but does not endanger any vital systems, nor even their reproductive capabilities.
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rich misty
10:10 PM on 03/24/2011
Beta particles are penetrating.  They will pass thru several milimeters of sheet aluminum.  In humans they can cause deep tissue burns to muscle and bone.
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MrBadExample
Friends call me ‘exampleicious’
10:14 PM on 03/25/2011
I've seen the exhibits from the Hiroshima museum. Some of the soldiers stationed there had their INTERNAL ORGANS cooked by the radiation--they died pretty awful deaths.
03:39 PM on 03/24/2011
Came across an interesting posting concerning the death rates associated with various forms of power production. Nuclear differs from the other major forms of power production (oil and coal). in that deaths in the field occur in small clusters. whereas oil and coal have steady, day in-day out- deaths. The number of deaths (up to this point) caused by producing Nuclear power worldwide are miniscule compared to the deaths caused by oil and coal power generation.

Counter intuitively, if Nuclear power were to be banned as a result of the Japanese accident, wordwide death risks would actually go up, not down. (Since the lost nuclear power generation would be replaced by increased oil and coal power generation and their accompanying higher power generation death rate).

http://sethgodin.typepad.com/seths_blog/2011/03/the-triumph-of-coal-marketing.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+typepad%2Fsethsmainblog+%28Seth%27s+Blog%29


So as tragic as this accident is, it would be better if Nuclear power isnt banned because of it
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elbeas
Pragmatista sinistra
09:11 PM on 03/24/2011
It would be even better if life was as valued as our pundit class claims it is.
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rich misty
09:46 PM on 03/24/2011
undefined
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Thaigold
Life is Good
12:34 PM on 03/24/2011
Roentgens rems rads sieverts - in this word game the power companies have successfully dumbed down the masses. A lie within a lie, within a multitude of lies. Like hogs in a slaughter house, we don't have a clue - except for the quashed screams of the hogs in the fore.
02:40 PM on 03/24/2011
In this country we use to measure radiation is REMS and MILLIREMS to measure the amounts of Radiation. The rest of the world measures it in Sieverts ,millisieverts,microsieverts to measure dose received.
We use cpm/dpm to measure contamination also.
I don't understand what you mean by the lies?
Honestly why would the public know these things.
You don't work with them so nobody would expect you or the public to understand the lingo.
I work with these everyday so thats why I know what does what.
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Thaigold
Life is Good
07:36 AM on 03/25/2011
The statements coming out of Tokyo Electric are lies of omission, i.e., making false statements about the prognosis of stabilizing the failed reactors and the continuing core degradations. Additionally, for the general public, not understanding radiation limits – especially the non-confrontational Japanese, how are they to know clear and present danger of the nuclear genie’s escape from the jar.
p.s. Have you ever visited Johnston Atoll?
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myth buster
05:05 PM on 03/24/2011
Are the solar companies lying when they don't explain to the public the intricacies of semiconductors and rare earth metals.
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ibsteve2u
Someone who cares - to his unending regret
12:30 PM on 03/24/2011
"...there was yet another setback Thursday as two workers were injured when they stepped into radiation-contaminated water"

Given the dumping of water from helicopters, the spraying from fire trucks, and the snowfall I think finding out that stepping into radioactive water was bad news would make me sweat bullets if I were there.

I'd have no reason to anticipate that water pooled in weakened structures over my head and itching to do what gravity wants it to do would be any less contaminated.
02:42 PM on 03/24/2011
The only way they would have gotten hurt from stepping into contaminated water was if they slipped and fell and got hurt from the fall itself the contaminated water won't cause the injury
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
03:04 PM on 03/24/2011
Thank you, Mr Seaborg, or is it Mr Einstein?

A pool of water in the reactor hall, full of dissolved fission products? Couldn't possibly do any harm.
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
03:12 PM on 03/24/2011
Absolutely, The very idea of pools of heavily contaminated water being found in the turbine hall is preposterous. Where could that possibly have come from?