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Japan Nuclear Plant Spills More Radioactive Water

Fukushima Nuclear

By SHINO YUASA   03/28/11 01:17 PM ET   AP

TOKYO -- Workers discovered new pools of radioactive water leaking from Japan's crippled nuclear complex, officials said Monday, as emergency crews struggled to pump out hundreds of tons of contaminated water and bring the plant back under control.

Officials believe the contaminated water has sent radioactivity levels soaring at the coastal complex and caused more radiation to seep into soil and seawater. Crews also found traces of plutonium in the soil outside of the complex on Monday, but officials insisted there was no threat to public health.

Plutonium – a key ingredient in nuclear weapons – is present in the fuel at the complex, which has been leaking radiation for over two weeks, so experts had expected some to be found once crews began searching for evidence of it this week.

Tokyo Electric Power Co. official Jun Tsuruoka said only two of the plutonium samples taken Monday were from the leaking reactors. The other three were from earlier nuclear tests. Years of weapons testing in the atmosphere left trace amounts of plutonium in many places around the world.

The Fukushima Dai-ichi power plant, 140 miles (220 kilometers) northeast of Tokyo, was crippled March 11 when a tsunami spawned by a powerful earthquake slammed into Japan's northeastern coast. The huge wave engulfed much of the complex, and destroyed the crucial power systems needed to cool the complex's nuclear fuel rods.

Since then, three of the complex's six units are believed to have partially melted down, and emergency crews have struggled with everything from malfunctioning pumps to dangerous spikes in radiation that have forced temporary evacuations.

Confusion at the plant has intensified fears that the nuclear crisis will last weeks, months or years amid alarms over radiation making its way into produce, raw milk and even tap water as far away as Tokyo.

The troubles at the Fukushima complex have eclipsed Pennsylvania's 1979 crisis at Three Mile Island, when a partial meltdown raised fears of widespread radiation release, but is still well short of the 1986 Chernobyl disaster, which killed at least 31 people with radiation sickness, raised long-term cancer rates, and spewed radiation across much of the northern hemisphere.

While parts of the Japanese plant has been reconnected to the power grid, the contaminated water – which has now been found in numerous places around the complex, including the basements of several buildings – must be pumped out before electricity can be restored to the cooling system.

That has left officials struggling with two sometimes-contradictory efforts: pumping in water to keep the fuel rods cool and pumping out – and then safely storing – contaminated water.

Hidehiko Nishiyama, a spokesman for Japan's Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency, called that balance "very delicate work."

He also said workers were still looking for safe ways to store the radioactive water.

"We are exploring all means," he said.

The buildup of radioactive water first became a problem last week, when it splashed over the boots of two workers, burning them and prompting a temporary suspension of work.

Then on Monday, officials with Tokyo Electric Power Co., which owns and runs the complex, said that workers had found more radioactive water in deep trenches used for pipes and electrical wiring outside three units.

The contaminated water has been emitting radiation exposures more than four times the amount that the government considers safe for workers.

The five workers in the area at the time were not hurt, said TEPCO spokesman Takashi Kurita.

Exactly where the water is coming from remains unclear, though many suspect it is cooling water that has leaked from one of the disabled reactors.

It could take weeks to pump out the radioactive water, said Gary Was, a nuclear engineering professor at the University of Michigan.

"Battling the contamination so workers can work there is going to be an ongoing problem," he said.

Meanwhile, new readings showed ocean contamination had spread about a mile (1.6 kilometers) farther north of the nuclear site than before but is still within the 12-mile (20-kilometer) radius of the evacuation zone. Radioactive iodine-131 was discovered offshore at a level 1,150 times higher than normal, Nishiyama, a spokesman for the Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency, told reporters.

Amid reports that people had been sneaking back into the mandatory evacuation zone around the nuclear complex, the chief government spokesman again urged residents to stay out. Yukio Edano said contaminants posed a "big" health risk in that area.

Gregory Jaczko, head of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, arrived in Tokyo on Monday to meet with Japanese officials and discuss the situation, the U.S. Embassy said in a statement.

"The unprecedented challenge before us remains serious, and our best experts remain fully engaged to help Japan," Jaczko was quoted as saying.

Early Monday, a strong earthquake shook the northeastern coast and prompted a brief tsunami alert. The quake was measured at magnitude 6.5, the Japan Meteorological Agency said. No damage or injuries were reported.

Scores of earthquakes have rattled the country over the past two weeks, adding to the sense of unease across Japan, where the final death toll is expected to top 18,000 people, with hundreds of thousands still homeless.

TEPCO officials said Sunday that radiation in leaking water in Unit 2 was 10 million times above normal – a report that sent employees fleeing. But the day ended with officials saying that figure had been miscalculated and the level was actually 100,000 times above normal, still very high but far better than the earlier results.

"This sort of mistake is not something that can be forgiven," Edano said sternly Monday.

___

Associated Press writers Tomoko A. Hosaka, Mayumi Saito, Mari Yamaguchi and Jeff Donn contributed to this report.

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TOKYO -- Workers discovered new pools of radioactive water leaking from Japan's crippled nuclear complex, officials said Monday, as emergency crews struggled to pump out hundreds of tons of contaminat...
TOKYO -- Workers discovered new pools of radioactive water leaking from Japan's crippled nuclear complex, officials said Monday, as emergency crews struggled to pump out hundreds of tons of contaminat...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rog1112
stealing bread from the mouths of decadence
03:41 PM on 03/29/2011
As many different ways we've used modeling predictive scenario outcomes or simulations using factual data, from video games to military or geopolitical, one would thing that in creating nuclear plants with as massive a potential for destruction as these, that there would've been more failsafes, redundant or not. Hundreds of sims predicted the Iraq war outcome, but we did it anyway and badly.

It may be a little simplistic to say it's all about the projected short term monetary profits. But read this article that makes an argument 'for and against' using 'probability'. A rather convoluted way of saying just that.

http://futuringassociates.com/text/Probabilities_with_Scenarios_DEC_2008.pdf
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CaptD
Freedom From Nuclear Fascism...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CaptD
Freedom From Nuclear Fascism...
11:35 AM on 03/29/2011
IAEA Accident Log: http://www.iaea.org/newscenter/news/tsunamiupdate01.html
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CaptD
Freedom From Nuclear Fascism...
11:17 AM on 03/29/2011
BTW: Neutron Beam observed 13 times on site:
http://english.kyodonews.jp/news/2011/03/80539.html
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Roadrun
Question Authority
09:12 AM on 03/29/2011
"... but is still well short of the 1986 Chernobyl disaster, which killed at least 31 people with radiation sickness, ....." - This sentence is for baggers, and other no information crowd. 31 people? If you want to be taken seriously inch toward some form of reality first.

"Confusion at the plant has intensified fears that the nuclear crisis will last weeks, months or years amid alarms over radiation making its way into produce, raw milk and even tap water ....." -- No no no, scientists at FoxNews and working under Ann Coulter have discovered that when you mix radioactive plutonium, iodine, cesium etc with produce, raw milk, or even tap water that radiation suddenly becomes inert instead of remaining hot for thousands of years as previously thought.

These are just 2 examples but the point is that my nose ring is getting very sore from my chain being yanked so often these days. I truly believe that someone can't handle the truth but from my perspective it isn't who is implicated.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Roadrun
Question Authority
09:24 AM on 03/29/2011
And I just have to add this question:

How long is 1,000 milliseconds?

Hint, the answer is much less dramatic than the question.

High numbers don't make the story, the story makes itself. Sensationalize or downplay please, a roller coaster ride isn't journalism.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CaptD
Freedom From Nuclear Fascism...
11:16 AM on 03/29/2011
Just a second, let me THIMK...
:-)
Fanned and Fav'd! for being cool!
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lostinseganet
You need good D"Defence"? well so do I
01:22 PM on 03/29/2011
Maybe he3? :)
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mycall8
Spiritual not religious, One Planet, One Humanity
07:41 AM on 03/29/2011
An article concerning the #3 reactor:

http://www.dcbureau.org/201103151304/Natural-Resources-News-Service/is-airborne-plutonium-a-threat-from-reactor-number-three.html

also interesting "Readings" from HARRP March 10 - 12.

http://www.haarp.alaska.edu/haarp/index.html

Go to online data, magnetometer readings, try the date 20110313, set plot width 3 days Its a dramatic "Reading". Would be interesting also to see when and where the HF beam was aimed.... effect or cause and effect the valid question unasked.

also looked at April 10, 2010 (China Quake) & January 12, 2010 (Haiti Quake)... also interesting, the information for the quake and Tsunami from Thailand Dec 26, 2004 is unavailible now.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CaptD
Freedom From Nuclear Fascism...
11:40 AM on 03/29/2011
Great factual post!
Don't stop!
Fanned and Fav'd!
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
04:30 AM on 03/29/2011
From the latest edition of "JapanToday.com":

"High levels of readiation exceeding 1,000 millisieverts per hour were detected Sunday in water outside the No. 2 reactor's building,...."

"At a radiation level of 1,000 millisieverts per hour, people could suffer a drop in the count of lymphocytes - a type of white blood cell - in just 30 minutes, and half could die within 30 days by remaining in such a condition for four hours."
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
12:38 AM on 03/29/2011
This story is being suppressed and minimized. Radiation is being released all day, every day from these four reactors. That this story is not reported on NBC, and CBS, at the top of the hour, and that it is only a minor story here on HP is worrisome. Radiation readings are up even on the US east coast, yet no one seems to be covering readings anywhere else in the country -- especially Hawaii, the nearest US state to Japan. Plutonium found in the soil near the plant, meaning the Reactor 3 vessel is likely breached, is a huge story with international implications. Tell it!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Eyeful
virtuous raconteur
02:20 AM on 03/29/2011
This is not only the story of our lifetime. It may be the story to end all others. It has already superseded the Biblical-like destruction of the 9.0 earthquake and tsunami.

Plutonium is created in nuclear reactors as a by-product. Because plutonium occurs in nature in only minute amounts, it must be considered for all practical purposes a man-made element. Pu-239 has a major role in a conventional light water power reactors. It's half-life is 24,000 years. There is hardly a trace of human history that is this old.

We have opened Pandora's Box.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
knoxvillegirl
03:21 AM on 03/29/2011
I agree, the story is being suppressed. Given the implications, I feel as if we should be able to open HP's home page (or any other news source) any time of day and find the most current technical and condition updates, right there. BBC and msnbc seem fairly consistent with keeping the links to stories on forward pages. Don't know about the others.
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
06:06 AM on 03/29/2011
It's another reactor accident, releasing debris into the environment. There's been windscale, chernobyl and now fukushima. Plutonium was also spread around the world by atmospheric nuclear weapons testing and weapons accidents.

Those mourning the 25,000 dead might still consider the nuclear side to be a sideshow.

Pu-239 has no role in power reactors unless they're using MOX fuel, or being run to manufacture the plutonium for nuclear weapons.
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
06:00 AM on 03/29/2011
You know why? No pictures, no video means no viewers and no advertizers.

That fission product signatures can be detected on the US east coast doesn't mean that radiation readings are necessarily up, just that very sensitive spectrographs can see the trace amounts getting there.
strangiato
Ha Ha...Charade You Are
10:37 AM on 03/29/2011
Wrong. EPA standards for safe drinking water are in the vicinity of 110 piC/L for radioactive Cesium 137 and 3 piC/L for Iodine 131. Public health officials in Boston just released data for rain water collected in the city contaminated by Fukushima fallout and found radiation levels at 79 piC/L. Since most people do not collect rain water for drinking, it's not a major concern at the moment. But high levels of radioactivity have been detected in fallout across the United States - high in terms of the EPA's drinking water standards. And the EPA's standards were established over a period of many years by biologists and medical experts who spend their lives studying the effects of ionizing radiation on the body - particularly impacts to genetic functioning within human cells. Get your facts straight.
12:09 AM on 03/29/2011
The poor people of Japan! On top of everything else..... they must be nervous wrecks awaiting some sort of resolution to this matter.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pakaal
Pigs, in cages, on antibiotics
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CaptD
Freedom From Nuclear Fascism...
11:26 AM on 03/29/2011
Fanned and Fav'd!
Please keep posting as your news source is better than what is now being added by HP :-(
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HenHouse
WhoWhatWhyWhereWhenHow and how much?
11:32 PM on 03/28/2011
ge / msnbc is cheerleading, new reactor designs
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/42258191/ns/business-world_business/
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
seachange525
All will be well...I just don't know how yet :)
11:42 PM on 03/28/2011
NO reactor is a safe reactor. There is no such thing, there never can be such a thing, because we cannot predict what Mother Nature will do. Combine Mother Nature's unpredictability with man's money-over-survival attitude, and you have a recipe for disaster. Fukushima is an excellent example of both. We must NOT forget.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pakaal
Pigs, in cages, on antibiotics
01:31 AM on 03/29/2011
When we build 'em to withstand a 9, and a 9.1 comes along, it only ensures that there will be a reactor problem exactly when we least need one. Fanned.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CaptD
Freedom From Nuclear Fascism...
11:28 AM on 03/29/2011
Well Said...

GOOD, FAST CHEAP
PICK ANY TWO
11:08 PM on 03/28/2011
The Fukushima complex was not the only nuclear facility damaged. Two others were in the news the first day, yet no updates have been given on them.

Suppressing information has been rampant, and little released has been honest.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
James McGill
02:37 AM on 03/29/2011
There was a refinery fire that burned for more than a week, and might still not be under control. I would be just as concerned for the soil, water, and air contamination from that as from the reactor!
But we don't hear a word about it, do we?
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
06:07 AM on 03/29/2011
If it burns for fourteen days, someone's found the fountain of eternal oil.

It's tough to get thyroid cancer from breathing two hundred miles a refinery fire.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CaptD
Freedom From Nuclear Fascism...
11:30 AM on 03/29/2011
Well Said...
Faved
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]