Japan’s govt changes evacuation system, as “radiation hot spots” are found
places that are outside the evacuation zones but are feared to have concentrations of radiation due to geographical or weather conditions will be designated as “specific evacuation recommendation spots.”…….
Govt refines evacuation system, The Yomiuri Shimbun, 18 June 11 The government has decided to adopt a new system that would recommend evacuation from areas affected by radiation from the crisis-hit Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power plant not by municipality but on a house-by-house basis. Continue reading
34000 Japanese children to wear radiation badges, as “hot spots” found
Fukushima’sPlan To Put Radiation Badges on Children Not pleasing parents NPR by MARK MEMMOTT 15 June 11 The news that the city of Fukushima, Japan, plans to give badge-like dosimeters to 34,000 children in September — to gauge how much radiation they’re exposed to from the nearby nuclear power plant that was crippled by the March 11 earthquake and tsunami — isn’t sitting well with some parents. ..As Lucy Craft reported forMorning Edition, those parents say the government should be evacuating everyone 18 and under and any woman who is pregnant, not waiting three more months and then only issuing badges that will be checked one a month to determine exposure.
But, as Reuters reports today, the nuclear plant “is estimated to have released just 15 percent of the radiation at Chernobyl, but a complicated software modeling system created by the government to predict where the radiation would drift proved useless.” So-called hot spots are showing up hundreds of miles away
About 40 miles from the crippled Fukushima Dai-Ichi nuclear plant, Fukushima City (population 300,000) is outside the Japanese government’s 12-mile “no-go zone” around that facility….. http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2011/06/15/137195386/fukushimas-plan-to-put-radiation-badges-on-children-not-pleasing-parents
Radioactive cesium found in whales off Japanese coast
Whales in Japan Could Face Radiation Poisoning Gamut News 15 June 11 Japan is reporting that two whales, caught by whalers there along the northern coast, had traces of radiation assumed to come from leaks at the damaged nuclear power plant. Out of a total of 17 whales caught off the Pacific coast of Hokkaido, two showed traces of radioactive cesium…..http://gamutnews.com/20110615/25100/whales-in-japan-could-face-radiation-poisoning.html
Over-exposure to radiation- six more Fukushima workers reported
Six more Tepco staff exposed beyond limit | The Japan Times Online June 14, 2011 Radiated workers may be drop in Fukushima bucket Kyodo Six more workers involved in efforts to contain the nuclear crisis at the crippled Fukushima No. 1 power plant are feared to have been exposed to radiation above the emergency limit, Tokyo Electric Power Co. said Monday. Continue reading
Radioactive strontium found in groundwater and sea near Fukushima
High level of strontium found at Fukushima plant | The Japan Times OnlineJune 13, 2011 Kyodo, Radioactive strontium up to 240 times the legal concentration limit has been detected in seawater samples collected near an intake at the crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant, Tokyo Electric Power Co. said Sunday.
The utility said the substance was also found in groundwater near the plant’s Nos. 1 and 2 reactors. The government’s Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency said it is the first time that the substance has been found in groundwater.The agency said it is necessary to carefully monitor the possible effects of the strontium on fishery products near the plant.
Strontium tends to accumulate in bones and is believed to cause bone cancer and leukemia….High level of strontium found at Fukushima plant | The Japan Times Online
Disillusion of Japanese over TEPCO and Fukushima radiation
A long wait for solace in a ravaged land, Sydney Morning Herald, Russell Skelton, June 11, 2011″……..Emotions towards the government and some local authorities vary from fury to resignation. People are incensed by dithering politicians, and last week’s challenge to Prime Minister Kan’s leadership was seen as displaying callous disregard for the national recovery effort.
There is widespread contempt for the mostly anonymous, seemingly slippery and always secretive management of TEPCO. The company has a long history of dodgy auditing and cover-ups at the Fukushima plant.Since the nuclear meltdown, some 80,000 people have been evacuated from the towns and villages surrounding the crippled power station. Nobody interviewed by The Saturday Age within 200 kilometres of the reactor feels safe or has confidence in the government to effectively manage the recovery and reconstruction.
At first, the dithering Democratic Party government set the evacuation zone around the Fukushima plant at 10 kilometres, then 20 and by the end of this month it will be extended to a recommended but voluntary 30 kilometres. The International Atomic Energy Agency has said the exclusion zone should be 40 kilometres, and Australia’s radiation protection authority has suggested a precautionary zone of 80 kilometres….
A long wait for solace in a ravaged land
Mainstream media not reporting the full story on Fukushima disaster
Water remains a primary complication; 15 million highly radioactive gallons await proper treatment and storage. That’s equivalent to about thirty highly contaminated Olympic-sized swimming pools. It is unclear how much of this water has already been released into the Pacific Ocean, but it is likely in the hundreds of thousands, if not millions of gallons.
Japan Update, Footprints Sara Barczak , 10 June 11 Unfortunately, the mainstream media is reporting increasingly less on the nuclear disaster at the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant in Japan. Nonetheless, radioactivity continues to be released into the air and water at the severely damaged facility. Continue reading
High radiation levels in No. 3 reactor force workers to stop nuclear cleanup
Fukushima: Radiation in No. 3 reactor too high for work H5 NI Via NHK: Radiation in No. 3 reactor too high for work. The operator of the damaged Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant says radiation levels in one of the reactor buildings remain too high for workers to do their jobs.
Tokyo Electric Power Company, or TEPCO, sent 9 workers into the No.3 reactor building for about 20 minutes on Thursday, in a bid to start stabilizing the reactor. The utility plans to inject nitrogen gas into the containment vessel to prevent accumulated hydrogen from causing an explosion. It also intends to install a system to cool the reactor with circulating water.
The workers withdrew after measuring radiation of 100 millisieverts per hour near the reactor’s containment vessel. TEPCO says it intended to limit the workers’ exposure to below 5 millisieverts per hour. But as all 9 received higher doses, it has suspended work while considering a course of action…http://crofsblogs.typepad.com/h5n1/2011/06/fukushima-radiation-in-no-3-reactor-too-high-for-work.html
Three more Fukushima nuclear workers get highly irradiated
Three nuclear workers exposed to high radiation Asia One News TOKYO – Three male emergency workers at a crippled Japanese nuclear plant have been exposed to more than twice the legally permitted level of radiation, an official watchdog agency said Friday.AFP Jun 10, 2011
The agency said another man in his 50s was found to have received more than the 250 millisieverts of exposure allowed for emergency crews working at the crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant……
A man in his 30s was confirmed to have been exposed to 678 millisieverts of radiation, while a man in his 40s received 643 millisieverts, according to the Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency (NISA)…..http://news.asiaone.com/News/Latest%2BNews/Asia/Story/A1Story20110610-283483.html
Water cooling at Fukushima nuclear plant causes more problems
Workers must inject the reactor cores with water to keep them cool. But that step guarantees that water will leak through the damaged plant and into the basement-level turbine rooms……..”They’re just perpetuating the problem and making a bigger and bigger mess,” said Lake Barrett, a nuclear engineer who directed the cleanup of the hobbled Three Mile Island plant in Pennsylvania.-
Water cooling Japan plant now a problem, FRANCE, June 9, 2011 , News Day.com By CHICO HARLAN. The Washington Post, Tokyo At the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant, nothing is more problematic than the contaminated water that covers the basement floors, leaks into the environment and endangers any worker who goes near it. Continue reading
Fear of radiation leads to discrimination against Fukushima victims
Although such examples are isolated, the severity and callousness of them led chief government spokesman Yukio Edano to condemn such actions. But many Japanese from outside the affected area remain wary in their dealings with Fukushima locals….The Fukushima Bar Association says evacuees and their children have been victimised and petrol stations have denied access to cars with Fukushima plates……
Discrimination increases torment of Fukushima, THE AUSTRALIAN, Rick Wallace, Tokyo correspondent June 11, 2011 IT was supposed to be a lifetime highlight, but the wedding plans of a bride-to-be from Fukushima have turned into a nightmare thanks to the new post-crisis phenomenon of radiation discrimination. Continue reading
VIDEO: Fukushima meltdowns, radiation into sea
VIDEO Japan Admits 3 Nuclear Meltdowns, More Radiation Leaked into Sea; U.S. Nuclear Waste Poses Deadly Risks, Democracy Now 11 June 11 Almost three months after the earthquake and tsunami that triggered a nuclear disaster in Japan, new radiation “hot spots” may require the evacuation of more areas further from the damaged Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power facility. Japan’s Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency recently admitted for the first time that full nuclear meltdowns occurred at three of the plant’s reactors, and more than doubled its estimate for the amount of radiation that leaked from the plant in the first week of the disaster in March. “What they failed to mention is that they discharged an equally large amount into the ocean,” says our guest Robert Alvarez, former senior policy adviser to the U.S. Secretary of Energy. “As [the radiation] goes up the food chain, it accumulates. By the time it reaches people who consume this food, the levels are higher than they originally were when they entered the environment.” Alvarez also discusses his new report on the vulnerabilities and hazards of stored spent fuel at U.S. reactors in the United States. Then we go to Tokyo to speak with Aileen Mioko Smith, executive director of the group Green Action. She says citizens leading their own monitoring efforts are calling for additional evacuations, especially for young children and pregnant women. [includes rush transcript] http://www.democracynow.org/seo/2011/6/10/as_japan_nuclear_crisis_worsens_citizen
Continuing radiation emissions into sea and air, from Fukushima
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Highly toxic radioactive iodine, cesium, strontium, plutonium and other toxic man-made radionuclides have leaked unabated since March 12 into the ocean and atmosphere…..The mainstream media is not reporting on this.
Preface Nuclear Toxicity Syndrome, The Intel Hub, By Dr. Mark Sircus – June 9th, 2011 Arnie Gundersen, widely-regarded to be the best nuclear analyst covering Japan’s Fukushima disaster, indicates that the situation on the ground at the crippled reactors remains precarious and at a minimum it will be years before it can be hoped to be truly contained. Continue reading
Fukushima kids to wear radiation dose badges
Fukushima School Rule: Dosimeters for Kids, WSJ By Hiroyuki Kachi, 9 June 11, After the disclosure that much more radiation leaked from the stricken nuclear Fukushima Daiichi than previously estimated, local authorities in towns and cities nearby are taking as many precautions as they can – particularly for schoolchildren. One city in Fukushima prefecture is taking no chances: Date city, located about 60 kilometers northwest of Fukushima Daiichi, has decided to deliver basic radiation monitoring devices to all 8,000 kids in its schools.
The devices to be delivered to students, schoolkids and kindergarten attendees are badge-type dosimeters, rather than hi-tech electronic beeping equipment, according to an official at a local education committee. After being worn for a month or so, the dosimeters will be sent to a research laboratory to check radiation levels. Likely costing about 3,000 yen apiece, it is still undecided when all kids will receive their badges…..http://blogs.wsj.com/japanrealtime/2011/06/09/fukushima-school-rule-dosimeters-for-kids/
Japan may evacuate more towns, as radiation “hot spots” found
Japan Considers Evacuating More Towns WSJ By YUKA HAYASHI TOKYO, 9 June 11—Japanese government officials said they are considering evacuating more towns affected by radiation, after recent monitoring data showed new “hot spots” of elevated contamination farther away from the stricken Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant. Continue reading
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