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Fukushima Nuclear Plant's Tsunami Plan A Single Page

Fukushima Nuclear Tsunami Plan

YURI KAGEYAMA and JUSTIN PRITCHARD   05/27/11 02:13 PM ET   AP

TOKYO — Japanese nuclear regulators trusted that the reactors at the Fukushima Dai-ichi complex were safe from the worst waves an earthquake could muster based on a single-page memo from the plant operator nearly a decade ago.

In the Dec. 19, 2001, document – one double-sized page obtained by The Associated Press under Japan's public records law – Tokyo Electric Power Co. rules out the possibility of a tsunami large enough to knock the plant offline and gives scant details to justify this conclusion, which proved to be wildly optimistic.

Regulators at the Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency, or NISA, had asked plant operators for assessments of their earthquake and tsunami preparedness. They didn't mind the brevity of TEPCO's response, and apparently made no moves to verify its calculations or ask for supporting documents.

"This is all we saw," said Masaru Kobayashi, who now heads NISA's quake-safety section. "We did not look into the validity of the content."

The memo has Japanese text, boxes and numbers. It also has a tiny map of Japan indicating where historical earthquakes are believed to have struck. TEPCO considered five quakes, ranging from 8.0 to 8.6 magnitude, in northeastern Japan, and a 9.5 magnitude across the Pacific near Chile, as examples of possible tsunami-causing temblors.

In the next nine years, despite advances in earthquake and tsunami science, the document gathered dust and was never updated.

When TEPCO finally did revisit tsunami preparedness last year, it was the most cursory of checks. And the conclusion was the same: The facility would remain dry under every scenario the utility envisioned.

"There was an attitude of disrespecting nature," said Kobe University professor emeritus Katsuhiko Ishibashi, who has sat on government nuclear safety advisory panels.

The towering waves unleashed by the magnitude-9.0 earthquake on March 11 destroyed backup generators for several reactors' cooling systems, and nuclear fuel in three reactors melted in the worst such crisis since Chernobyl. Workers have yet to bring the plant under control more than two months later.

Ishibashi said the problem with the plant's tsunami preparedness didn't lie with the limitations of science back in 2001. The problem was that TEPCO and regulators didn't look at risk factors more carefully.

"It is critical to be prepared for what might happen even if the possibilities are small," he said.

NISA's request for tsunami risk assessments did not have the force of law and thus the operators' responses technically were voluntary, but in Japan's often-informal regulatory structure, regulators would expect such a request to be obeyed.

TEPCO's memo was titled "The Assessment of Effects Related to the Japan Society of Civil Engineers' 'Guidelines on Tsunami Assessment for Nuclear Power Plants' – Fukushima Dai-ichi and Daini Nuclear Power Plants."

The company said it used measures for expected earthquakes and other "parameters" to calculate that water would not surpass 5.7 meters (18.7 feet) at Fukushima Dai-ichi.

The waters set off by the March tsunami reached 14 meters (46 feet) above sea level, according to TEPCO.

One big reason for the underestimate: TEPCO's experts asserted that the biggest earthquake that the nearest fault could produce was 8.6 magnitude. At a 9.0 magnitude, the quake that struck was four times more powerful than that.

"The results of the study show the assessment for the maximum levels of tsunami at each site," says one line in the report's typically sparse, matter-of-fact language.

The document relied on guidelines for tsunami assessments written by the Japan Society of Civil Engineers. Those guidelines were not published until 2002, but were made available in advance to TEPCO.

In the nearly 10 years since the memo, advances in science have exposed the potential – and precedent – for huge tsunamis hitting Japan's northeast coast. Several studies showed that the Jogan tsunami of A.D. 869 went far inland in the area near Fukushima Dai-ichi. Other studies showed that the fault that erupted so violently was "stuck" and could produce the kind of truly massive quake it did.

Through the years, TEPCO never changed the maximum tsunami heights expected at Fukushima Dai-ichi, which was built in 1971.

"We assessed and confirmed the safety of the nuclear plants," TEPCO civil engineer Makoto Takao asserted as recently as a November seismic safety conference in Japan.

Kobayashi, of NISA, said his agency began getting serious about scrutinizing tsunami dangers only late last year, but that this process was still in its infancy when the March 11 disaster struck.

Ishibashi noted that coastal nuclear plants need to be prepared for major typhoons and other potential disasters, and backup generators at Fukushima Dai-ichi should have been elevated and protected, not stored in basements prone to flooding, as most of them were.

The generators were critical for maintaining cooling systems for reactor cores during the power outages that followed the quake. The flood that swept through the plant grounds destroyed the generators. The cores, reaching up to 2,000 degrees Celsius (3,600 degrees Fahrenheit) without power, melted, spewing radiation into the sea and air.

TEPCO spokesman Naoyuki Matsumoto defended the 2001 report as relying on what the company saw as the best data available, although he acknowledged that the size of March 11 tsunami had been "outside the imagination."

"We had done our utmost in designing the plant, using various historical data," he said.

The utility now plans to build additional tsunami guards in waters near Fukushima Dai-ichi by the end of June, but has not decided how high they should be, he said.

Outrage is growing among the media, politicians and residents forced to evacuate near the plant that regulators and TEPCO had not adequately assessed tsunami risks.

Some criticism has focused on how the civil engineers' committee that wrote the guidelines was dominated by people with strong ties to the nuclear power industry, or 22 of the 35 committee members.

In a statement this month, the Japan Society of Civil Engineers defended the guidelines as objective and scientific, relying on experts for unbiased knowledge.

Nobuo Shuto, chief architect of the guidelines and the dean of tsunami research in Japan, acknowledged he did not check how exactly TEPCO applied the guidelines to Fukushima Dai-ichi. But he stuck by his work.

"It's easy to complain that it was an underestimate," Shuto, honorary professor at Tohoku University, said in a March telephone interview from Miyagi Prefecture, a disaster-struck area. "The honest truth is: We just don't know."

___

Pritchard reported from Los Angeles and can be reached at ; Kageyama can be reached at

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TOKYO — Japanese nuclear regulators trusted that the reactors at the Fukushima Dai-ichi complex were safe from the worst waves an earthquake could muster based on a single-page memo from the pla...
TOKYO — Japanese nuclear regulators trusted that the reactors at the Fukushima Dai-ichi complex were safe from the worst waves an earthquake could muster based on a single-page memo from the pla...
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02:08 PM on 06/06/2011
Test

Are my comments getting through?
01:09 AM on 06/06/2011
OK Silk, did you say I-131 and other waste was continously removed or does it have to be reprocessed too?
01:41 AM on 06/06/2011
Gases like xenon and krypton are continuously removed by helium sparging. They decay to stability in days. In a separate process the fuel salt (like the blanket salt) is fluoridated. Iodine and about 1/2 dozen other fission products are "gassed out". Any uranium or plutonium fluorides are reduced and returned to the fuel salt while iodine and others go to the waste stream.

Cesium and Strontium fluorides are not volatile having very high boiling points; they remain in the fuel salt. In the event of an accident these isotope would not evaporate into the atmosphere like they do with LWR reactors.

What really makes LFTR work so well is the figgin' magic of fluorine. It just turns out that the isotopes that should be volatile can be made so and the isotopes that should remain liquid remain liquid. This plus fluoride salts are not soluble in water and can be pounded by neutrons for decades with no fuel damage. No other halide (or any element at all) has all of these amazing properties.
01:47 AM on 06/06/2011
Correction about cesium and strontium fluorides. After fluoridation they remain in the fuel salt but are removed in a second vacuum distillation process. Tiny amounts may end up back in the reactor but that is OK since they are not volatile. A fuel spill will not result in them evaporating into the atmosphere.
02:20 AM on 06/06/2011
Ok but fractionated and removed, got it.... Will be a few before I get back, somebody decided to jump out of a moving car. Anything else you can think of, I'm interested...but it might be an hour or two before back on computer.
11:46 PM on 06/05/2011
Wow, good I didn't start it this time. But not gonna' mention I think the corium is in the groundwater....oh well, you'll make it here or not. Other wise have fun in the food fight.
11:57 PM on 06/05/2011
I can't figure out why some aren't more concerned about ground water; instead they want to leave the water where it is. ...but I'm not going to drag you into it. : )
12:04 AM on 06/06/2011
Figures, you got time, I got work but luckily can do both. Ground water and basement water maybe the same thing. But I think if they get it out of the ground, radiation will drop and then maybe a little progress can be made. But we know it's the brew from hell

Otherwise, Rich is just after you for being on the other side....he doesn't see the shades of grey...
Ok work for a quick 5,
12:54 AM on 06/06/2011
They are definitely misinterpreting your words, hey you said that renewables should have higher subsidies, they didn't get that either...
11:33 PM on 06/05/2011
Ok Silk,A) first what percentages of U238 and other stuff is in a normal new rod and same for thorium?
B) old rods in regular reactor, percentage and whatevers of reactions products, and which of these are special concerns?
C) why doesn't the U form UF6 and vaporize, isn't that the whole gas diffusion enrichment thing done.
11:51 PM on 06/05/2011
A) For LEU (low enriched) fuel: U238 is about 97%, U235 is 3%.

B) About 95-96% is U238, < 1% U235, about 1% Pu-239 and Pu-240 and other actinides, about 3% fission products.

C) Not sure what you're asking. UF6 gas is used in one of the enrichment process. In a two fluid LFTR reactor, fluoridation is used to convert U(233)F4 dissolved in the blanket salt into UF6 so that it can bubble out of the blanket salt. It is then reduced back to UF4 and transfered to the core.
Fluoridation is the easiest and least expensive way of reprocessing spent fuel rods to recover long lived actinides (Pu, etc) for transfer to a "burner" reactor like LFTR.
03:34 AM on 06/06/2011
OK, Right here, you answered for todays reactor, now thorium reactor for new, there layers (blankets) Of what %.
Then from there, what % when you would have to replace with new.
Pretend I know nothing about it, easy, I don't.
Tomorrow dude...I'm off at least.
11:54 PM on 06/05/2011
In all cases it is the actinides: plutonium, americium, curium and others that are the problem wastes. Fission products, although more radioactive, have a much shorter half life, about 300 to 500 years. >10,000 years for the actinides.
12:12 AM on 06/06/2011
think you will have more questions in a bit, want to re-read this too.looks like the best explaination I could ever ask for though
11:24 PM on 06/05/2011
test
06:00 PM on 05/29/2011
"Kagoshima received 121mm of rain on Saturday. A little further south, Naze had a whopping 160mm in the same time period. Subsequently, 15,400 households suffered power cuts and 426 households lost their water supply.

Overall, the combination of strong winds and heavy rain left at least 58 people injured and 278,000 households without power.

Tokyo has also been feeling the effects of the storm, which has now been downgraded to a tropical storm. Flights were cancelled for a time.

Elsewhere, concerns remain over Japan's crippled Fukushima nuclear plant, which officials admit is not fully prepared to deal with violent storms. Fortunately the storm has now passed to the south of the site.

However, the typhoon has already brought heavy rain to the Fukushima region and there is still more to come. This has prompted worries that runoff water may wash away radioactive materials from the land into the Pacific Ocean."

http://english.aljazeera.net/weather/2011/05/2011529202041640625.html
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Apollos Dad
I am The Stig
06:09 PM on 05/29/2011
Banned boy!!!!
06:46 PM on 05/29/2011
Greetings AD

Consider the source. When Strangebanana pronounces something, you may safely rely upon the opposite to be the certain truth.

I've been commenting each and every day without interruption. Find me now on the moderated thread. (Fukushima's No. 5...)

~ woof !! ~
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
termgirl
terminate nuclear power
04:25 PM on 05/29/2011
"Fukushima plant prepares for wind and rain."http://www3.nhk.or.jp/daily/english/29_21.html


"The level of contaminated water in the tunnels and turbine buildings of the Number 2 and 3 reactors has risen"
(TEPCO will "continue to monitor the situation.
Well, all righty, then.)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SLS11
Its all there, if we just open our eyes...
03:15 PM on 05/29/2011
http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/nn20110530a2.html

Stabilizing reactors by year's end may be impossible: Tepco
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CaptD
Freedom From Nuclear Fascism...
03:21 PM on 05/29/2011
Of what DECADE?
Faved
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
termgirl
terminate nuclear power
04:14 PM on 05/29/2011
At one time "stabilizing" meant preventing meltdowns.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SLS11
Its all there, if we just open our eyes...
01:55 PM on 05/29/2011
http://mdn.mainichi.jp/mdnnews/news/20110528p2a00m0na004000c.html

Doubts deepen over TEPCO truthfulness after president's sightseeing trip uncovered
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SLS11
Its all there, if we just open our eyes...
01:38 PM on 05/29/2011
What To Do With All The Nuclear Waste

"If the expansion of nuclear energy were to stop today, then when this Onkalo is finished in 120 years and sealed off, you will need another 99 facilities of the same capacity" to store the rest of the world's waste, Madsen said. "But if conservative estimates of the continued use and expansion of nuclear energy are correct, you would need 500 such facilities."
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CaptD
Freedom From Nuclear Fascism...
03:23 PM on 05/29/2011
BY then we will just send the waste (no pun intended) into the sun....

But hopefully this will all be unnecessary since we will have shifted over to Clean Solar and ares spending all that "extra" money on educating the World's masses...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jeffrey Williams
Don't worry ! Nothing is going to be OK !!!
12:53 PM on 05/29/2011
The front page story's threads are almost comical ... Dr Suess and JJT are a good source of humor there. I found one new freind in particular that did a Burns speel on em it was halarious !

They are funny !

Im off to the Tumbleweed perserve (Bloomington,Ca.) to visit the in laws.

Ill be back a bit later I suppose to see if things get any better. Keep digging and posting peoples its good to know what is really happening.

Rooks ~ missed you again ~ Hope all is well for you and your family !
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
termgirl
terminate nuclear power
12:57 PM on 05/29/2011
Enjoy your day, JW.
CU later, hopefully.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SLS11
Its all there, if we just open our eyes...
01:14 PM on 05/29/2011
Enjoy your day, JW.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
termgirl
terminate nuclear power
01:23 PM on 05/29/2011
Hi there, SLS.
11:43 AM on 05/29/2011
Protest in Kochi against Nuclear Power Plants
http://tinyurl.com/3nr9t6l
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CaptD
Freedom From Nuclear Fascism...
11:51 AM on 05/29/2011
The Japanese are slow to anger but TEPCO/Gov't. is making a mockery of the Public's trust and that will be there undoing!
Faved
11:57 AM on 05/29/2011
CaptD - did you turn on the english cc? Amazing what they are saying, how much they "get it". TY
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CaptD
Freedom From Nuclear Fascism...
12:42 PM on 05/29/2011
Maybe someone here can be of HELP:

Look at these comments (below) and then maybe you can figure out how to import the protestors slogans and comments they are great!

Maybe we could post them for the protestors...
11:38 AM on 05/29/2011
http://jen.jiji.com/jc/eng?g=eco
11:27 AM on 05/29/2011
A large portion of the Bing Fukushima images at bottom of the article are altered and fake. More examples of the quality information conveyed on Fluff-ington Post.
11:30 AM on 05/29/2011
Fluff is right. ff
11:32 AM on 05/29/2011
Here's some that were released yesterday. Pay close attn to the very last photo. Photo shop anyone?
http://www.houseoffoust.com/fukushima/r3May27.html
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CaptD
Freedom From Nuclear Fascism...
11:52 AM on 05/29/2011
Faved
If they are going to play make believe why not use a "before" picture!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CaptD
Freedom From Nuclear Fascism...
12:33 PM on 05/29/2011
Man on Left with stenciled name removed...

I mentioned the names before but did not notice that I could pan the image...
Only Lyon had last name visible...

Now we know who to ask questions to!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CaptD
Freedom From Nuclear Fascism...
11:54 AM on 05/29/2011
Second link has better images IMO
Faved