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Japanese nuclear workers called upon for heroic sacrifice

Disaster officials could face a grim choice: Scale back their containment efforts or allow workers to face radiation levels that could significantly increase their risk of cancer…..The actions of the power plant workers in Japan have already been described as heroic,

Japan nuclear accident poses crisis for worker safety, latimes.com, 17 march 11, Workers at the damaged Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant could rapidly reach their annual radiation exposure limit and may have to be rotated out soon. Continue reading

March 18, 2011 Posted by | - Fukushima 2011, Japan, Religion and ethics | Leave a comment

Fukushima reactors might get concrete tomb, like Chernobyl

Japan nuclear operator: not impossible to encase reactors in concrete TOKYO (Reuters) 18 March 11,  – The operator of Japan’s crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant said on Friday that it would not be impossible to encase the facility’s reactors in concrete, though cooling them down is the priority.

Tokyo Electric Power Co told reporters that using concrete was an option, but that it would continue trying to cool the reactors for the time being……UPDATE 1-Japan nuclear operator: not impossible to encase reactors in concrete | Reuters

 

March 18, 2011 Posted by | - Fukushima 2011 | Leave a comment

US Senator Graham has touching faith in nuclear industry

I have a lot of faith in the nuclear industry, and I feel safe living five miles away from a nuclear power plant,”…Graham said, adding that the nuclear industry needs to do a better job explaining itself…….

US Sen. Graham: I have faith in nuclear power – BusinessWeek, 18 March COLUMBIA, S.C.U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., said Thursday that Japan’s nuclear crisis shouldn’t cause a halt in the construction of new nuclear power plants in this country. Continue reading

March 18, 2011 Posted by | politics, USA | Leave a comment

The danger of “spent nuclear fuel rods” at Fukushima

These rods, which will have become laced with radioactive by-products of the main reaction, including plutonium and radioactive isotopes of strontium, iodine and other elements, are taken out of reactors and put in pools of water for storage

The Fukushima crisis: A new danger at Fukushima | The Economist, 18 March 11, “…….the Japanese Atomic Industrial Forum, a trade body, acknowledged that there were worries about the water levels in the ponds at units 3 and 4. Continue reading

March 18, 2011 Posted by | - Fukushima 2011, Japan, technology | Leave a comment

Westinghouse, Toshiba, AREVA, Rosatom marketing nuclear power to Czech Republic

U.S.-based Westinghouse Electric Co., a subsidiary of Japan’s Toshiba Corp., France’s state-owned nuclear engineering giant Areva SA and a consortium led by Russia’s Atomstroyexport submitted preliminary bids.

Czechs pledge to develop nuclear energy program  Bloomberg, BusinessWeek. 18 March, PRAGUE The Czech Republic’s prime minister says his country will go ahead with plans to develop its nuclear energy program despite Japan’s nuclear crisis. Continue reading

March 18, 2011 Posted by | EUROPE, marketing | Leave a comment

Potential for disaster in USA’s nuclear reactors and cooling systems

It would not even require a quake or tsunami, only a moderately ingenious terrorist, to breach Shearon Harris’s puny defences and sabotage the cooling systems. A study by the Brookhaven Labs estimates that a pool fire there could cause 140,000 cancers, and contaminate thousands of square miles of land.

Another Fukushima meltdown? In America? Not if, but when | The First Post, Alexander Cockburn, 18 March 11, “…….. President Obama for example, who took plenty of money from this industry for his presidential campaign and used his State of the Union address last January to reaffirm his commitment to “clean, safe” nuclear power. This week, Obama’s press spokesman confirmed that nuclear energy “remains a part of the President’s overall energy plan”. Continue reading

March 18, 2011 Posted by | safety, USA | Leave a comment

Nuclear power for Indonesia, despite earthquakes, tsunamis, and corruption

But experts are worried – not only about Indonesia’s regular earthquakes, one of which triggered a massive tsunami in December 2004, but also about weak government institutions and corruption.

Indonesia insists nuclear plans are safe | beyondbrics |March 17, 2011  by Anthony Deutsch Indonesia will go ahead with a feasibility study for a nuclear power plant, even as China has put plans on hold in the wake of Japan’s nuclear crisis. Continue reading

March 18, 2011 Posted by | Indonesia, politics | Leave a comment

French nuclear company chief “in no doubt” that Britain needs nuclear

Mr de Rivaz said his “determination to press ahead was undimmed” and added that he was in no doubt that “what Britain needs is nuclear”.

UK industry must press on, says EDF chief, FT.com , By David Blair and Sylvia Pfeifer in London March 17 2011 The British nuclear industry will have to work harder to keep the public’s trust in the aftermath of Japan’s disaster, Continue reading

March 18, 2011 Posted by | marketing, UK | Leave a comment

Japanese residents flee Tokyo in fear of radiation

Japan nuclear plant: no quick getaway for thousands trying to flee the radiation zone,  Telegraph, 18 march 11, “…….. the main road out of Tokyo quickly became clogged with traffic …….We’re fleeing the radiations,” said Katsuya Terakado, a 37-year-old carpenter who, with his girlfriend, Rie Yanai, were entering their seventh hour of queuing for petrol,

Continue reading

March 18, 2011 Posted by | general | Leave a comment

In nuclear accident, evacuation from Indian Point area would be impossible

Citing plants like the Indian Point nuclear site north of New York City, Mr. Lyman, a physicist and member of the Institute of Nuclear Materials Management, called it “utterly unrealistic” to expect that an effective evacuation could be undertaken should a disaster like the earthquake and tsunami that hit Japan last week occur in this country.

Citing Near Misses, Report Faults Both Nuclear Regulators and Operators, – NYTimes.com,By TOM ZELLER JR. March 17, 2011,The Nuclear Regulatory Commission, which oversees the nuclear power industry in the United States, came under fire from critics on Thursday for recommending that Americans in Japan remain at least 50 miles away from the ailing Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant there. Continue reading

March 18, 2011 Posted by | safety, USA | Leave a comment

Nuclear technology – never really safe

I used to be a believer in “safe” nuclear technology. I saw the renaissance of nuclear plants as a means to combat global warming (please restrain the hysterical giggling at this point). After Fukushima, and in reflection on the history of nuclear power plants, I have changed my mind…….the bubble of lethal radiation around Reactors 3 and 4 could make it impossible to even send workers — except on a suicide mission — to contain the damage. And even if they are successful — and we all pray they do — it seems clear that this area of Japan may be off-limits to human habitation for a very, very long time……

Japan’s Nuclear Nightmare; Is any Nuclear Plant Safe? : SF Gate, Michael Yaki , 18 March 11, Continue reading

March 18, 2011 Posted by | 2 WORLD, Religion and ethics | Leave a comment

Ever increasing hidden subsidies to nuclear lobby in USA

U.S. Nuclear Subsidies Mask Real ‘Costs and Risks,’ Scientists Say, Sunshine State News, Kenric Ward’  March 17, 2011 A report issued just days before Japan’s nuclear-reactor crisis warned that U.S. government subsidies to the industry inject financial instability.”Government subsidies to the nuclear power industry over the past 50 years have been so large in proportion to the value of the energy produced that in some cases it would have cost taxpayers less to simply buy kilowatts on the open market and give them away,” stated the study by the Union of Concerned Scientists.

The report — “Nuclear Power: Still Not Viable without Subsidies” — argues that tax breaks and other government-engineered deals fuel a continued rise in costs as the nuclear power lobby demands evermore support from taxpayers.

“Piling new subsidies on top of existing ones will provide the industry with little incentive to rework its business model to internalize its considerable costs and risks,” concluded the Cambridge, Mass.-based Union.
Alternatively, the UCS report recommended adopting market-oriented approaches to uranium mining royalties and waste- management financing, and incorporating the costs of preventing nuclear proliferation and terrorism into economic assessments of new reactors.

The Obama administration is currently proposing $54 billion in new government-backed loan guarantees to facilitate the construction of new nuclear power plants.

U.S. Nuclear Subsidies Mask Real ‘Costs and Risks,’ Scientists Say | Sunshine State News

March 18, 2011 Posted by | politics, USA | Leave a comment

Radiation detectors set off by passengers from Tokyo

Tokyo passengers set off radiation detectors at O’Hare, WLS  17 march 11, CHICAGO – Passengers arriving this week on a flight from earthquake-and tsunami-ravaged Tokyo set off radiation detectors at O’Hare Airport, city officials acknowledged Thursday.“We are aware that occurred [Wednesday]. We are working with Customs and Border Protection on this issue,” Aviation Commissioner Rosemarie Andolino said, referring all questions to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.
Andolino refused to say how the incident was handled or what happened to the Tokyo passengers in question.“The protection of the person coming off the plane is very important in regards to any radiation — especially within their families and anything else,” Mayor Daley said.WLS 890AM

 

March 18, 2011 Posted by | general | Leave a comment

Renewable energy can replace Germany’s nuclear power

German Green Industries Say Can Fill Nuclear Gaps Planet Ark 17-Mar-11 GERMANY Vera Eckert German renewable industry lobby BEE said on Wednesday it would be able to supply 47 percent of German power requirements by 2020, joining a debate on how to replace nuclear generation capacity. Continue reading

March 18, 2011 Posted by | Germany, renewable | 1 Comment

Earthquake risks for USA nuclear plants

The Uniform California Earthquake Rupture Forecast figures the probability of an earthquake of 6.7 magnitude or higher is 67 per cent for Los Angeles, 63 per cent for San Francisco.

Another Fukushima? In America? Not if, but when, Alexander Cockburn on the shameful trade-off that keeps nuclear power on the agenda MARCH 17, 2011

Along much of California’s coastline runs the Ring of Fire which stretches round the Pacific plate from Australia, north past Japan, to Russia, round to Alaska, and down America’s west coast to Chile. Ninety per cent of the world’s earthquakes happen round the Ring.

The late great environmentalist David Brower used to tell audiences solemnly, “Nuclear plants are incredibly complex technological devices for locating earthquake faults.”

Apparently acting on this piece of sarcastic wisdom, the US has deployed four nuclear plants near the Ring of Fire faultline, including two active ones in my home state of California.

Forty miles up the road from me, in far northern California we had a boiling water reactor, closed in 1976 because – surprise! – there was an earthquake from a “previously unknown fault” just off the coast. Now all we have are spent nuclear fuel rods in ponds, right on the shoreline, a few feet above sea level, nicely situated for a tsunami, such as the one that disabled the relief diesel generators designed to pump emergency coolant in the Fukushima plant. Three plates meet a few miles west of where I write. We had a 7.1 earthquake in 1992. First moral in the nuclear business: Expect the unexpected.

Further south, halfway between San Francisco and Los Angeles, is the Diablo Canyon nuclear plant, planned in 1968 when no one knew about the Hosgri fault, part of the Ring of Fire, a few miles offshore. See moral number one.

Further inquiry established that there’d been a 7.1 earthquake 40 years earlier, offshore from the plant, completed in 1973. The power company – Pacific Gas and Electric – said it would beef up defences. In their haste, the site managers managed to reverse the blueprints for the new earthquake-proofing of the two reactors, and so the retro-fit wasn’t a total success. Second moral in the nuclear business: people do mess up.

Back to the first moral: they recently discovered yet another fault and are now worried about “ground liquefaction” in the event of a big quake. In 2008 there was a terrorist attack by jellyfish which blocked the cold water intake, and the plant was shut down for a couple of days…….

The Uniform California Earthquake Rupture Forecast figures the probability of an earthquake of 6.7 magnitude or higher is 67 per cent for Los Angeles, 63 per cent for San Francisco. Up where I live, in the Cascadia subduction zone, we have a 10 per cent possibility of an 8.0 or 9.0 force quake….

Alexander Cockburn: Another Fukushima meltdown? In America? Not if, but when | News & Politics | News & Comment | The First Post

March 18, 2011 Posted by | safety, USA | Leave a comment