Google starts digitally mapping Japan’s Nuclear Exclusion Zone
Google starts to digitally map Japan’s Nuclear Exclusion Zone
Two years after the Great East Japan Earthquake and the nuclear meltdown at the Fukushima Plant, Google has begun trying to bring the displaced residents of the Nuclear Exclusion Zone virtually back to their homes by starting the digital mapping of the area using its street view technology.
For the first time since the disaster, Google’s street view car, with a camera mounted on top, drove around Namie, which is still basically a ghost town. The car is attempting to capture a 360 view of the damaged town through its collapsed houses and cracked roads. The Google crew wasn’t wearing any protective gear, but they had to be out of the zone within three hours. Google product manager Kei Kawai is estimating that the mapping process will take several weeks and that the Namie street view map can be unveiled in a few months. They will also continue following the progress of the rebuilding process through the “Memories for the Future” site, that includes a digital archive project that will give a virtual tour of the devastated buildings.
The idea for mapping the desolated town came from the residents themselves. They want to show the world what the real situation is, that they still cannot return home two years after the disaster. Namie Mayor Tamotsu Baba said that they still have not started the process of decontamination and that recovery is still a long way ahead for their town. He works out of a temporary town hall in Nihonmatsu, which is around 40 miles away from Namie. More than half of the residents have already relocated to other cities in the prefecture, and he’s finding it harder and harder to keep the community together. He even released a phone book with the contact details of the displaced residents, even those living outside the region, but he is still very much frustrated that it might take a decade for residents to be allowed to come home. “That ‘smell’ of life, the smell of the kitchen, the smell of gasoline in the streets, all of that is gone now. There is just silence,” he adds.
[ via ABC News ]
http://japandailypress.com/google-starts-to-digitally-map-japans-nuclear-exclusion-zone-0524511
Areva says Japan to relaunch six reactors in 2013 – The Big MOX Sale
“…The forecast is much more optimistic than a report published “yesterday” forecasting no new reactors put into operation before the end of the year….”
The head of French nuclear group Areva, a major supplier to Japan, said today six reactors would reopen in the country before the end of the year and that most of the country’s nuclear plants would eventually be put back on line.
Once a major consumer of nuclear power, the 2010 Fukushima disaster brought the archipelago’s nuclear industry to a standstill, but Areva and many Japanese companies hope the situation will soon be reversed.
“We think that there could be a half dozen reactors that will restart by the end of the year”, in addition to two reactors already put back into operation, Luc Oursel said at a news conference.
He said the company projection was based on what they expected Japan to decide in new regulation set for July and on the preparedness of Japanese engineers.
The forecast is much more optimistic than a report published yesterday forecasting no new reactors put into operation before the end of the year.
The Kyodo press agency said Japan’s major electricity providers believed that nuclear power would remain frozen in 2013.
Orsel said a newly created nuclear agency would “take years” to greenlight all of Japan’s reactors for activity, and that some, including those in Fukushima, would remain shut.
Areva plans first nuclear fuel shipment to Japan since Fukushima
Last updated Monday, Mar. 04 2013, 3:44 PM EST
French energy group Areva said it was preparing to send nuclear fuel to Japan for the first time since the Fukushima disaster of March, 2011, a sign of possible restarts of idled Japanese reactors.
Japanese Researchers Say Massive Amount of Fukushima Radiation Released into Ocean
Published on Mar 4, 2013
Researchers are now saying that massive amounts of radiation have been puked in the ocean from Fukushima. 18,000 trillion Bq est.
English Article
http://fukushima-diary.com/2012/04/ma…
Japanese Article
http://www.asahi.com/national/update/…
Fukushima – Strontium 90 is about half the amount of Cesium in the sea water
Sunday, 3 March 2013
Strontium 90 is about half the amount of Cesium in the sea water

Strontium 90 is one of the four major radio nuclides from the nuclear disaster that we need to be aware of. According to Prof. Koide, Kyoto University Reactor Research Institute, the amount of strontium90 that was discharged from Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant was 1/1000 of Cesium 134/137, that doesn’t sound a lot comparing it with Cesium, but it’s considered to be very harmful to the environment: It is 300 times more radioactively toxic. While cesium can be out of body in 100 days, much of strontium 90 stays in bones of the body, and yet we don’t hear much about it. The Food Authority checks Iodine and Cesium but not Strontium 90 because it’s difficult to measure the exact amount. It costs £300 in Japan to measure one item and takes half a month. Therefore if you measure fish, they rot in this time. So there has been a tendency to ignore Strontium 90…….
Bradley Manning Nobel Peace Prize Nomination 2013
February 1st 2013 the entire parliamentary group of The Movement in the Icelandic Parliament, the Pirates of the EU; representatives from the Swedish Pirate Party, the former Secretary of State in Tunisia for Sport & Youthnominated Private Bradley Manning for the Nobel Peace Prize. Following is the reasoning we sent to the committee explaining why we felt compelled to nominate Private Bradley Manning for this important recognition of an individual effort to have an impact for peace in our world. The lengthy personal statement to the pre-trial hearing February 28th by Bradley Manning in his own words validate that his motives were for the greater good of humankind.
Source:
I was stigmatized as a walking atomic bomb
- WordPress has got some sort of glitch.. the headline link is wrong and if you were looking for the Chernobyl update it is to be found here:
http://www.bellona.org/articles/articles_2013/chernobyl_roof_collapse_report
-
Sometimes they are born alive and live for a few minutes or hours, and you can see the blood moving through their bodies before they die. We give birth to babies with missing limbs, or their organs and spinal cords on the outside of their bodies. We never experienced these types of births before the U.S. testing program. We have complained about these births for decades and we are always told by the U.S. Government that they are not the result of radiation exposure.
- Friday, 01 March 2013 15:47
- The Oslo Times
- Ursula Gelis – No-to-Nuclear-weapons
- http://theoslotimes.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=9068:i-was-stigmatized-as-a-walking-atomic-bomb&catid=139:op-ed&Itemid=645

- Jelton Anjain (right) and Paul Ahpoy from Fidji. Hiroshima, 6th of August 2012. Photo: Ursula GelisBikini, Rongelap and, and…”I was stigmatized as a walking atomic bomb”. Traveling with Jelton Anjain from Rongelap.
“Test sites are the grounds for unlimited human suffering”. Senator Anjain-Maddison, Republic of the Marshall Islands.In July 1946, two atomic tests–code named “Operation Crossroads”–were conducted at Bikini Atoll in the Pacific, at the Marshall Islands. These tests explored the effects of airborne and underwater nuclear explosions on ships [and] equipment. A fleet of 95 surplus and captured ships were used as targets, including the Saratoga […]. These tests were witnessed by hundreds of reporters, politicians, and international observers, along with 42,000 military and scientific personnel. The two bombs used in Crossroads were identical in design and yield to the bomb used on Nagasaki.
Jelton Anjain and I are crossing the bridge which links the Japanese islands Honshu and Kyushu. We are traveling from Hiroshima to Nagasaki talking about the humanitarian consequences of any nuclear weapons use.
Rongelap was Jelton’s home, one of the Marshall Islands located in the Central Pacific. His island was part of the US nuclear weapons testing program from 1946-58. The Rongelap Atoll is near to the test sites’ ground zero. As the result of being so close to the epicenter where the bombs went off the people of the island became ‘bomb nomads’ and had to leave their sacred land.
Jelton dives back into history when the cobra trade brought German entrepreneurs to Rongelap. Intermarriage among Europeans and islanders was frequent, farming and fishing was the base to sustain families. Women were mainly tied up with housework and children.
Ditches were made by Jelton’s uncle for the Japanese during WWII. Japan “seized the islands in 1914 and later (after 1919) administered them as a League of Nations mandate. Occupied by the United States in World War II, […] the Marshall Islands were made part of the United Nations Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands under jurisdiction of the United States in 1947.”
In 1944 the US had taken Micronesia after two years of fighting bloody battles. A short while later the nuclear age arrived on the beautiful shores. Among the pearls taken was also the island of Tinian where the atom bombs for Japan were loaded.
Bikini Atoll, Marshall Islands, 1 March 1954
Editorial: Nuclear disaster guidelines must put lessons from Fukushima into practice
“….However, critics have raised questions about whether 500 microsieverts is an appropriate level for ordering evacuations. The NRA should explain the basis for its figure. It should also consider delivering iodine tablets to households outside the five-kilometer zone in advance….”
http://mainichi.jp/english/english/perspectives/news/20130304p2a00m0na005000c.html
The government’s Nuclear Regulation Authority (NRA) has drawn up new guidelines for nuclear disaster countermeasures, providing specific standards for evacuations in the event of another nuclear plant accident. In October last year, the panel decided to expand the priority zone for nuclear disaster prevention measures from a 10-kilometer radius around nuclear power stations to 30 kilometers. Authorities must implement detailed measures that dispense of the safety myth surrounding nuclear power plants.
Disaster prevention measures are the last line of defense in the five-tier layer protecting people from the radioactive substances from nuclear power stations. While guidelines must be strengthened, local governments also have a crucial role to play in protecting local residents from radiation in the event of a serious accident. Twenty-one prefectural governments and 135 municipal governments around Japan’s nuclear plants are drawing up nuclear disaster prevention plans, but their work has been delayed because it took the NRA longer than initially expected to work out its guidelines.
The guidelines are complex and there are numerous challenges to overcome. Local bodies are supposed to work out their nuclear disaster prevention plans by the end of this month, but some have never compiled such plans before. The NRA should help them, even if the process is prolonged.
Unlike the previous guidelines, the new guidelines call for a response before radioactive substances start leaking from damaged nuclear reactors. Residents within five kilometers from a nuclear plant are required to evacuate if a reactor faces serious trouble. Iodine tablets will be delivered in advance to residents in such areas so they can quickly guard their thyroid glands from radiation exposure in the event of a nuclear disaster. We can regard these measures as appropriate.
In areas located more than five kilometers from a nuclear plant, residents will be ordered to evacuate when airborne radiation levels reach 500 microsieverts per hour, and those who have difficulties fleeing their neighborhoods will be instructed to stay indoors. Under the guidelines, local bodies are required to stockpile iodine tablets and deliver them to residents in such areas if necessary.
Brazil to get its first nuclear subs
By Agence France-Presse on Monday, March 4th, 2013
Brazil is set to join the select group of countries that have nuclear-powered submarines, President Dilma Rousseff said Friday.
Rousseff stressed Brazil was committed to peace but also needed its defense deterrent, as she inaugurated a naval shipyard in Rio de Janeiro state where the country’s first nuclear-powered sub is set to be built in partnership with France.
“We can say that with these installations we are entering the select club of countries with nuclear submarines: The United States, Russia, France, Britain and China,” said Rousseff.
Known as the Metallic Structures Construction Unit, the factory in the city of Itaguai near Rio de Janeiro is part of the ambitious ProSub program launched in 2008.
Under the scheme, France will supply Brazil with four conventional submarines and help develop the non-nuclear components of the South American powerhouse’s first nuclear-powered attack submarine.
Brazil already has the uranium enrichment technology required for producing nuclear fuel and wants to use it to power the submarine.
The 7.8 billion reais ($3.95 billion) ProSub program aims to protect the country’s 8,500-kilometer (5,280-mile) coastline and huge deep-water oil reserves.
The defense ministry said the first of the four conventional Scorpene-class subs will be delivered to the Brazilian Navy in 2017, while the nuclear-powered vessel will be commissioned in 2023.
“This alliance (with France) must be carefully watched by all those who are taking part because our mission is to ensure that this technology is transferred to us in line with the contract,” Rousseff said.
The 75-meter-long (246-foot) Scorpene is a diesel-electric attack submarine built by France’s DCNS naval defense firm for a variety of missions, including anti-submarine warfare, special operations and intelligence collection.
France is also vying to win a contract valued at between $4 and $7 billion for 36 multi-purpose combat aircraft to modernize the Brazilian air force.
The Rafale fighter, built by French firm Dassault Aviation, is up against US aviation giant Boeing’s F/A-18 Super Hornet and Swedish manufacturer Saab’s Gripen.
SNEAK PEEK SURVIVING JAPAN: Minimum # tix must be sold by March 4th!
Published on Mar 2, 2013
PLEASE SPREAD THE WORD: LIKE & SHARE (YT will not allow remix)
*Clip used with permission from director/producer Christopher Noland.
Film premiere is planned for the following cities: Los Angeles, New York, Chicago, San Francisco, San Diego, Seattle, Portland, & Laguna Niguel…tickets are available online only by advance purchase until 3.4.13 and if a minimum of 50 seats are not sold, the movie will NOT be shown.
Buy tickets at this link: http://us6.campaign-archive2.com/?u=8…
The screening will benefit the
Save Minami-Soma Project, providing clean water and food to Japanese citizens still living in radioactive waste. A portion of the ticket sales will be donated and generated by your participation. This is an opportunity to raise awareness of the clean-up effort, including worldwide radioactive contamination through open-air burning policies and 200,000+ tons of highly radioactive water dumped into the Pacific Ocean.
Website: http://survivingjapanmovie.com/
Italian Physicist Antonino Zichichi: “Nuclear Technology Is the Safest Technology That Exists, Anti-Nuclear Movement Is Meaningless”
I wonder if Jiji’s reporter dared (or bothered) to ask him about nuclear waste management and disaster cleanup cost. I suppose not. His strange calculation of 1 euro one sandwich doesn’t make any sense to me. And to have him say that the nuclear accidents are caused by lowly workers not scientists.
Sunday, March 3, 2013
EXSKF
and the Fukushima I Nuclear Power Plant accident happened because of human errors.

(Uh… A M.9.0 earthquake and over 30 feet tsunami hitting the nuclear power plant right on the coast, didn’t they have something to do with the accident?)
Italian nuclear physicist Antonino Zichichi was interviewed by Jiji Tsushin in February at CERN in Geneva, Switzerland.
From Jiji Tsushin in the series on the second anniversary of the March 11, 2011 disaster (3/3/2013):
脱原発は「無意味」=安全対策、人為ミス排除を-伊核物理学者【震災2年】
Two years since the disaster: Italian nuclear physicist says anti-nuclear movement is “meaningless”, focus on safety measures and eliminate human errors.
イタリアの素粒子、核物理学の第一人者でボローニャ大名誉教授のアントニノ・ジキキ博士(83)が時事通信のインタビューに応じた。原子力技術は「人類の 最も安全な発明」とした上で、脱原発は「全く無意味」と明言。東京電力福島第1原発事故は人為的ミスで起きたとの認識を示し、知識を持った専門家による安 全対策が不可欠だと述べた。
Dr. Antonino Zichichi (age 83), one of the most prominent particle and nuclear physicists in Italy and professor emeritus at University of Bologna, spoke with Jiji Tsushin. Dr. Zichichi said the nuclear technology was “the safest human invention”, and declared anti-nuclear movement was “totally meaningless”. According to his understanding, the Fukushima I Nuclear Power Plant accident was caused by human errors, and safety measures developed by knowledgeable experts would be indispensable.
Fukushima World Health Organization report greeted with broad skepticism

Image source : http://www2.macleans.ca/2011/03/29/a-radioactive-legacy/
“…In Bellona’s opinion, the WHO report released yesterday falls well short of the realities that are immediately evident from Fukushima’s sister disasters…..”
Charles Digges, 01/03-2013
http://www.bellona.org/articles/articles_2013/who_fukushima_report
As the second anniversary of Japan’s Fukushima nuclear disaster approaches, people in the area worst affected by the catastrophe have a slightly higher risk of developing certain kinds of cancers, the World Health Organization (WHO) said on Thursday.
Many humanitarian groups working in the area have immediately said the WHO is being employed to assist in a whitewash of how dire the health difficulties facing Fukushima residents – as well as workers assisting in the cleanup – actually are, and have refuted the claims of the study, citing at least three thyroid cancer incidents related to the fallout from Fukushima.
A magnitude 9 earthquake and tsunami on March 11, 2011, killed nearly 19,000 people and devastated the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant, which spewed radiation, forcing about 160,000 people to flee their homes – the majority of which have not been able to return.
It was the worst nuclear accident since a reactor exploded at the Chernobyl power plant in Ukraine in 1986.
Nils Bøhmer, Bellona’s general manager and nuclear physicist emphasized that the WHO report was only the first in a series of studies that need to be conducted on citizens of Japan’s Fukushima prefecture who were directly impacted by the accident.
He also cited that some 21,000 cleanup workers for Tokyo Electric Power, or TEPCO, have yet to have their own radiation exposure figures submitted to Japanese regulatory officials. These figures are due this month, but TEPCO has blamed its failure to submit the documentation on its current inability to digitize the data.
“These workers have probably received much higher does of radiation that the public that was evacuated,” said Bøhmer. “So it is far too early to reach any conclusions about the actual radiation impacts on humans.”
Bøhmer’s comments point up just one of a number of snafus in the WHO report, which NGOs, aid organizations, other UN bodies, Japanese authorities and a member of the WHO have disputed.
Summary of the WHO’s reporting
“A breakdown of data, based on age, gender and proximity to the plant, does show a higher cancer risk for those located in the most contaminated parts,” Dr Maria Neira, WHO director for public health and environment, said yesterday upon presenting the organizations report entitled, “Health risk assessment from the nuclear accident after the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake and Tsunami.”
The United Nations agency said for the general population in Japan the predicted health risks of cancer were low. But it was not able to say how many people were exposed in the area where the highest amount of radioactive material was released.
A substantial amount of radiation was released into the environment and a 20-kilometer evacuation zone was set up.
The WHO report says that it has found no data on any cancers among the population in the area, but humanitarian organizations have offered contradictory evidence to those claims, saying at least three cases of thyroid cancer have been linked to the disaster.
ATOM Project presented at the ICAN Civil Society Forum in Oslo
The Atom Project will tell the tragic and hopeful stories of survivors of nuclear testing from the region of Semey, Kazakhstan, the site of more than 450 Soviet-era nuclear tests. The survivors and their children continue to suffer from illness, disease and severe deformities caused by exposure to nuclear radiation during and after the testing, which took place 100 miles outside of the city, then called Semipalatinsk.
semipalatinsk in eastern kazakhstan was the main test facility for nuclear weapons in the soviet union – photo by robert knoth
04 March 2013, 11:37

ASTANA. March 4. KAZINFORM Kazakh delegation with the Honorary ATOM Project Ambassador Karipbek Kuyukov was among 500 campaigners from 70 countries gathered in Oslo, Norway, from 2 to 3 March 2013 for the Civil Society Forum of the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN), with the aim of ramping up efforts to get negotiations started on a treaty banning nuclear weapons. The two-day forum included presentations by international policy and military experts, the Red Cross and UN representatives.
The ATOM project has been presented during the event. Deputy Director of “Nazarbayev Center” Roman Vasilenko informed the participants and guests of the efforts of the Republic of Kazakhstan and the international community in the aftermath of nuclear tests at the Semipalatinsk nuclear test site, and stressed the importance of further work in this area.

The ATOM Project is an international petition campaign designed to unify global public opinion against nuclear weapons testing. The Atom Project went live August 22, 2012 with international television and social media campaigns, a short documentary and video profiles of current survivors of nuclear testing.
The Project is an initiative of The Nazarbayev Center, whose mandate, in part, is to continue and broaden Kazakhstan’s legacy of fighting for a world free of nuclear weapons and weapons testing. The Atom Project hopes to affect real and lasting change by engaging millions of global citizens to stop nuclear weapons testing by joining together to show the world’s leaders that its citizens deserve and demand a world safe from additional nuclear weapons testing.
UK ministers have no nuclear ‘plan B’, MPs warn
Ministers have no ‘plan B’ if new nuclear plants are not built and are “crossing their fingers” that private companies deliver on time and on budget, a committee of MPs warned on Monday.
By Emily Gosden
6:00AM GMT 04 Mar 2013
A series of obstacles could mean the Government’s target of 16 gigawatts of new nuclear power by 2025 is not met, according to a report from the commons Energy Select Committee. It warns that if new plants do not materialise it could be “much more expensive” to meet Britain’s legally-binding climate change targets, and could leave the country more dependent on imported gas to keep the lights on.
Tim Yeo MP, the Committee’s chairman, said ministers must “urgently come up with a contingency plan in case the nuclear industry does not deliver the new power stations we need”.
But the committee also criticises the lack of transparency in Government talks with EDF Energy over subsidies to build Britain’s first new nuclear plant in a generation at Hinkley Point in Somerset, and warns that “new nuclear should not be delivered if the price is too high”.
With all but one of Britain’s existing nuclear reactors due to close by 2023, new plants are “crucial” if nuclear power is to remain part of the UK’s energy mix in future decades, the report says.
However the MPs heard evidence that the Government’s 16GW target – a plan that would see new reactors at five sites around the UK – was “’ambitious’ at best and ‘unrealistic’ at worst”.
Fukushima – Strontium 90 is about half the amount of Cesium in the sea water
Sunday, 3 March 2013
Strontium 90 is about half the amount of Cesium in the sea water
http://fukushimaappeal.blogspot.co.uk/2013/03/strontium90-is-about-half-amount-of.html
65 percent of worlds nuclear laboratories get Strontium 90 measurement wrong –
“The determination of 90Sr proved difficult for 65 % of the participants which submitted results outside the acceptable range (± 20 %). No improvement could be seen compared to 90Sr determination in one of the previous ILC exercises (Wätjen et al., 2008).
The laboratories concerned, i.e. the vast majority of laboratories reporting 90Sr results, are urged to review their analysis procedures.”
European Commission
Joint Research Centre
Institute for Reference Materials and Measurements
Radioactive strontium one million times over limit into ocean from Fukushima
“The source of the beta radiation in the water is likely to include strontium 90, which if absorbed in the body through eating tainted seaweed or fish, accumulates in bone and can cause cancer,”
Fukushima floods into Pacific Ocean, Strontium becomes One Million Times over Limit, The Canadian, 07 DECEMBER 2011
Fukushima Rad News 3/3/13:Tepco Fails to Report Worker Rad Levels; Hanford-67 Tanks May Be Leaking
Published on Mar 3, 2013
TEPCO fails to report worker radiation levels
Tokyo Electric Power Company has failed to report to a national body the radiation exposure doses of 21,000 workers mobilized to contain the crisis at the Fukushima Daiichi plant.
Operators of nuclear plants in Japan are required to report such exposure every year to the Radiation Effects Association to keep each worker’s dose below 50 millisieverts.
Abe pledges support for Tokyo’s 2020 Olympic bid
Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe says his government will offer all-out support for Tokyo’s bid to host the 2020 Summer Olympics and Paralympic Games.
Abe spoke on Friday at an inaugural meeting of his cabinet ministers to support the city’s bid.
Researchers: Landslide played role in 2011 tsunami
An international team of researchers says a huge undersea landslide may have played a role in the massive tsunami that hit northeastern Japan 2 years ago.
The team led by Professor Stephan Grilli of Rhode Island University in the United States says it found the likely cause of waves higher than 20 meters that hit parts of Iwate Prefecture.
Link to source links for video on “More” description on You Tube
(3.11から2年) March 11, 2011 DISASTER: looking back two years later
Published on Mar 3, 2013
As the two-year anniversary of the March 11, 2011, disaster approaches, this is a look back at the first few days after the earthquake, tsunami and nuclear meltdown.
– Ian Thomas Ash
http://www.documentingian.com/
Short documentaries appearing in this compilation:
Panic Buying (March 14, 2011)
http://youtu.be/g-Lx3ErjKWk
Foreigners Flee (March 15, 2011)
http://youtu.be/1P4JZJLUENk
Nuclear Crises: radiation in Tokyo (March 17, 2011)
http://youtu.be/1ZPcR9g1XOQ
After the tsunami: Part 1 (filmed March 24, 2011)
http://youtu.be/nyPzGalHNxI
After the tsunami: Part 2 (filmed March 24, 2011)
http://youtu.be/1S5kez9arYE
More short documentaries about the March 11, 2011disaster:
Fukushima: one month after the nuclear meltdown
http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=…
Fukushima: six months after the nuclear meltdown
http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=…
Fukushima: one year after the nuclear meltdown
http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=…
Iitate Village: nuclear ghost town
http://youtu.be/YXocjiKU-Vk
Fukushima: 15 months after the nuclear meltdown
http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=…
Feature documentaries about the Fukushima nuclear disaster:
In the Grey Zone (2012, Japan)
http://youtu.be/5lLOALNx_kU
A2 (2013, Japan)
http://youtu.be/ZD9yGONdEUY
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