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Japan Nuclear Disaster: Fukushima Power Plant Remains Fragile, Plant Chief Says

By MARI YAMAGUCHI 02/28/12 09:24 PM ET AP

OKUMA, Japan — Japan's tsunami-hit Fukushima power plant remains fragile nearly a year after it suffered multiple meltdowns, its chief said Tuesday, with makeshift equipment – some mended with tape – keeping crucial systems running.

An independent report, meanwhile, revealed that the government downplayed the full danger in the days after the March 11 disaster and secretly considered evacuating Tokyo.

Journalists given a tour of the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant on Tuesday, including a reporter from The Associated Press, saw crumpled trucks and equipment still lying on the ground. A power pylon that collapsed in the tsunami, cutting electricity to the plant's vital cooling system and setting off the crisis, remained a mangled mess.

Officials said the worst is over but the plant remains vulnerable.

"I have to admit that it's still rather fragile," said plant chief Takeshi Takahashi, who took the job in December after his predecessor resigned due to health reasons. "Even though the plant has achieved what we call 'cold shutdown conditions,' it still causes problems that must be improved."

The government announced in December that three melted reactors at the plant had basically stabilized and that radiation releases had dropped. It still will take decades to fully decommission the plant, and it must be kept stable until then.

The operators have installed multiple backup power supplies, a cooling system and equipment to process massive amounts of contaminated water that leaked from the damaged reactors.

But the equipment that serves as the lifeline of the cooling system is shockingly feeble-looking. Plastic hoses cracked by freezing temperatures have been mended with tape. A set of three pumps sits on the back of a pickup truck.

Along with the pumps, the plant now has 1,000 tanks to store more than 160,000 tons of contaminated water.

Radiation levels in the Unit 1 reactor have fallen, allowing workers to repair some damage to the reactor building. But the Unit 3 reactor, whose roof was blown off by a hydrogen explosion, resembles an ashtray filled with a heap of cigarette butts.

A dosimeter recorded the highest radiation reading outside Unit 3 during Tuesday's tour – 1.5 millisieverts per hour. That is a major improvement from last year, when up to 10 sieverts per hour were registered near Units 1 and 2.

Exposure to more than 1,000 millisieverts, or 1 sievert, can cause radiation sickness including nausea and an elevated risk of cancer.

Officials say radiation hot spots remain inside the plant and minimizing exposure to them is a challenge. Employees usually work for two to three hours at a time, but in some areas, including highly contaminated Unit 3, they can stay only a few minutes.

Since the March 11 crisis, no one has died from radiation exposure.

Tuesday's tour, organized by plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Co., or TEPCO, came as an independent group released a report saying the government withheld information about the full danger of the disaster from its own people and from the United States.

The report by the private Rebuild Japan Initiative Foundation delivers a scathing view of how leaders played down the risks of the reactor meltdowns while holding secret discussions of a worst-case scenario in which massive radiation releases would require the evacuation of a much wider region, including Tokyo. The discussions were reported last month by the AP.

The report, compiled from interviews with more than 300 people, paints a picture of confusion during the days immediately after the accident. It says U.S.-Japan relations were put at risk because of U.S. frustration and skepticism over the scattered information provided by Japan.

The misunderstandings were gradually cleared up after a bilateral committee was set up on March 22 and began regular meetings, according to the report.

It credits then-Prime Minister Naoto Kan for ordering TEPCO not to withdraw its staff from the plant and to keep fighting to bring it under control.

TEPCO's president at the time, Masataka Shimizu, called Kan on March 15 and said he wanted to abandon the plant and have all 600 TEPCO staff flee, the report said. That would have allowed the situation to spiral out of control, resulting in a much larger release of radiation.

A group of about 50 workers was eventually able to bring the plant under control.

TEPCO, which declined to take part in the investigation, has denied it planned to abandon Fukushima Dai-ichi. The report notes the denial, but says Kan and other officials had the clear understanding that TEPCO had asked to leave.

But the report criticizes Kan for attempting to micromanage the disaster and for not releasing critical information on radiation leaks, thereby creating widespread distrust of the government.

Kan said he was grateful the report gave a favorable assessment of his decision to prevent TEPCO workers from abandoning the plant.

"I give my heartfelt respects to the efforts of the commission," he said in a statement. "I want to do my utmost to prevent a recurrence."

Kan has acknowledged in a recent interview with AP that the release of information was sometimes slow and at times wrong. He blamed a lack of reliable data at the time and denied the government hid such information from the public.

The report also concludes that government oversight of nuclear plant safety had been inadequate, ignoring the risk of tsunami and the need for plant design renovations, and instead clinging to a "myth of safety."

"The idea of upgrading a plant was taboo," said Koichi Kitazawa, a scholar who heads the commission that prepared the report. "We were just lucky that Japan was able to avoid the worst-case scenario. But there is no guarantee this kind of luck will prevail next time."

___

Associated Press writer Yuri Kageyama contributed to this report from Tokyo. Follow Yamaguchi at and Kageyama at

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OKUMA, Japan — Japan's tsunami-hit Fukushima power plant remains fragile nearly a year after it suffered multiple meltdowns, its chief said Tuesday, with makeshift equipment – some mended ...
OKUMA, Japan — Japan's tsunami-hit Fukushima power plant remains fragile nearly a year after it suffered multiple meltdowns, its chief said Tuesday, with makeshift equipment – some mended ...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Atoms4Peace1
Applying the atom peacefully since 1978
01:51 PM on 02/29/2012
Quote -- " Japan's tsunami-hit Fukushima power plant remains fragile nearly a year after it suffered multiple meltdowns, its chief said Tuesday, with makeshift equipment – some mended with tape – keeping crucial systems running.

An independent report, meanwhile, revealed that the government downplayed the full danger in the days after the March 11 disaster and secretly considered evacuating Tokyo."
---------------------------------------------------

This disaster is not over and needs more coverage in the press and on cable TV shows.

There was a good Frontline TV show last night that shed some light on the first few days of the disaster by interviewing plant workers. It was very scary then and it is still scary today.
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Atoms4Peace1
Applying the atom peacefully since 1978
10:58 AM on 03/04/2012
Scary for those that dont understand radiation. Scary for those that dont have a background in the technology. Flying is scary. Surgery is scary. Knowledge is power. Education is knowledge. Internet koolaid sites dont provide knowledge. Just confusion.
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Nick Hatch
I'm So Meta Even This Acronym
03:40 PM on 03/04/2012
Worse than confusion, they deliberately spread fear and attempt to incite panic.
Genders
Love, Tolerance, Enlightenment
12:02 AM on 04/29/2012
You don't understand radiation. All radiation is different, and you deny it.

Do I need to link to the official guide to radioisotopes, exposure route and cancer caused?

http://www.epa.gov/radiation/docs/federal/402-r-99-001.pdf
EPA radionuclide exposure coefficients
all radiation is different and routes of exposure matter.

“The mouse data – our mouse data – shows a very bizarre thing... We irradiate mice, we breed them, and then we analyse their children.  Strangely enough, mutation rate in these children is substantially higher than that in control animals.  So these children are genetically unstable... And it’s not only this data obtained in my group – there’s plenty of similar data obtained in Japan, Canada, United States. We don’t know why, but there’s sort of memory, traveling from parents to their children, and this memory can destabilise the offspring, or the children. So, somehow, the memory of parental irradiation travels to them and makes them unstable.”
http://web.me.com/antonybutts/After_the_Apocalypse/Radiation_Science.html

Half a million deaths from Japan so far: 400k deaths http://www.llrc.org/fukushima/subtopic/fukushimariskcalc.htm Chernobyl Forum, which estimated 4,000 excess cancer deaths. The UCS analysis, released earlier this week, also estimates there will be some 50,000 excess cancers due to the accident.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Harley 2
09:02 PM on 03/04/2012
Exactly the disaster was intentionally covered up as documented in this 100 page power-point by a University Doctorate.

nukeproffesional.blogspot.com/2012/03/majia-great-pdf-of-coverup-deception-of.html
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CaptD
Freedom From Nuclear Fascism...
11:29 AM on 02/29/2012
USA can help cover up Fukushima but cannot help with radioactive analysis!

NRC worried about US National Labs “chomping at the bit” to help with Fukushima Radiation analysis – Call lab directors and say “Knock it off”
http://wp.me/p21p6a-7Ql
NRC snip:
MR. SHARON: This is Brian Sharon. Quick question, well, not question, but I’ve gotten a couple of emails here today, from some of the National Labs, and they’re all — there are a couple of them chomping a the bit, you know, saying, “Ghee, can we help? Ghee, can we go calculate this,” with the codes and all that stuff.
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Atoms4Peace1
Applying the atom peacefully since 1978
10:59 AM on 03/04/2012
Your tax dollars are going to fund many studies. The most qualified people in the country are already looking into this. Old news. Got in the game last year.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Harley 2
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CaptD
Freedom From Nuclear Fascism...
11:24 AM on 02/29/2012
4 out of 40 GE workers assisting with refueling at Fukushima in March 2011 were contaminated after Reactor 1 explosion http://wp.me/p21p6a-7Qp NRC snip We understand that out of the 40 people, four were contaminated, but the State Department and GE are working to pull them back to Tokyo and to get them whatever assistance they need to get back to the States.
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
01:23 PM on 02/29/2012
I don't think they weren't contaminated by an explosion.

They were reported at the time to be in the top of the reactor building for unit 1 when the earthquake took place, and were surrounded by leaking steam before they could leave the building.
professor
Correkt the Spelling and Pick on the Moniker
01:27 AM on 02/29/2012
Another whitewash on Frontline tonight. Although they undermine themselves by trying to make it all dramatic so people will watch. So: it's this incredibly dramatic crisis, but everything's alright. Check. Gotcha.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CaptD
Freedom From Nuclear Fascism...
10:54 AM on 02/29/2012
Frontline story should now be known as TEPCO's Take on Fukushima...

Viewers discretion advised...
professor
Correkt the Spelling and Pick on the Moniker
01:24 AM on 02/29/2012
I remember when the tros were denying that Fukushima had melted down at all and now "multiple meltdowns" are common knowledge. Why believe them ever when they were demonstrably wrong then?
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Callme Ish
12:03 AM on 03/01/2012
Looks lite the tro's funding was cut, no more tro's. I reported them to HP, maybe they got smart and eliminated all of them. Pimpin' death ain't much of a living boy!
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CaptD
Freedom From Nuclear Fascism...
08:39 PM on 02/28/2012
Here is my take on it:
1. If they halt the cooling then the water that remains starts to increase in temp!
2. Since the POOL is jam packed with SFR's the temperatur­e will rise "quickly"
... Since the more SFR the more decay (or residual) heat. 
3. As the pool water heats up it tends to get hotter faster
4. If another big quake "struck" during this period, it might even physically "slop"
... water out of the pool, in which case the rate of change of the temp in the pool
... would then dramatical­ly change!
5. If the water started to boil off then a SPR pool meltdown would be much more ..... serious since it is not a "hardened" structure and it contains a huge number of..... SFR's... and some of them also are the MOX type, which is yet another concern!

I suggested months ago the they remove as many SFR's as possible to yet another site,..... but I don't know why they have not done so YET; my guess it that TEPCO wants to..... restart #5 and #6...

Japanese love to GAMBLE and they are betting that other Trillion Dollar Eco-Disast­ers
...will not happen, which is N☢T a safe bet; Ask The Japanese people!!
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
01:32 PM on 02/29/2012
The fuel rods cannot easily be moved, as they weigh 300 kg, are in deep tanks that have been subject to large explosions and topped by heavy debris. They could now be wedged, or in some cases melted, into the racks, and so it might not be possible to move them even if the debris on top was cleared. There's also no longer a crane to lift them out or perhaps fittings for it to grab onto.

Since the rest of the damaged reactor buildings are not exactly uncontaminated either, leaving the fuel exactly where it is isn't the worst plan, even if they could be moved.
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CaptD
Freedom From Nuclear Fascism...
05:29 PM on 02/29/2012
What you say is probably correct,
BUT
They could move as many away from the complex as possible!

By moving as many as possible they will make any future complex problems less!
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Callme Ish
11:49 PM on 02/29/2012
Took $2B to chop apart the fuel at Three Mile Island, and that was back in the day. But can't just leave this mess is an earthquake an tsunami zone

Must be Done
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Callme Ish
12:05 AM on 03/01/2012
Huge disaster to have a fuel pool fire, especially a spent fuel pool. Way worse than just a meltdown
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CaptD
Freedom From Nuclear Fascism...
08:17 PM on 02/28/2012
There are only three piles of radioactiv­e junk in Fukushima and those are no longer reactors!Example:If a tank blows up you have a burned out hulk or mass of scrap but you don't have a tank any more; that ceased to exist when it blew up...

RE: Cold Shutdown:It is a misuse of the term to describe a reactor after meltdown as 'in cold shutdown'. As the fuel assembly is destroyed no shutdown is possible. Fuel is melted together and impossible to control directly. Even if pressure and temperatur­­e are unalarming momentaril­­y 'cold shutdown' implies complete control which is impossible after a meltdown.

Why can't the Nuclear Industry accept that a melted down reactor is not a normal condition for a reactor which is shut down for any number of reasons and is ABLE TO BE STARTED UP AGAIN SAFELY!

This is a perfect example of Nuclear Oriented Bad Science (N☢ BS) being used to provide dis-inform­ation to the public and only serves to call into question all those in the Industry that should be speaking out against this Nuclear Baloney (NB), instead of remaining quiet!
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WeMustDoBetter09
03:09 PM on 02/28/2012
Radioactivity detected in Tokyo park sample at Chernobyl evacuation level? http://t.co/cN2PFQ62
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WeMustDoBetter09
02:56 PM on 02/28/2012
WHY DOES IT TAKE A ONE YEAR ANNIVERSARY FOR THE MSM TO REPORT ON FUKUSHIMA JAPAN?
This hasn't stopped since 3/11. The news is ALL BAD coming from Japan today.
But it takes an ANNIVERSARY for you guys to even mention it?!?!
SHAMEFUL...absolutely shameful.
02:17 PM on 02/28/2012
Thank God for duct tape, sometimes super glue is good too!