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Contamination of groundwater and sea discharges

The tritium contamination of the control well No. 10 upstream of the reactors continues to rise and has just beaten two new records with 1,800 Bq / L (sampling of 6 July) and 1,900 Bq / L (sampling of 9 July).

http://www.tepco.co.jp/nu/fukushima-np/f1/smp/2015/images/pump_well_15070802-j.pdf

http://www.tepco.co.jp/nu/fukushima-np/f1/smp/2015/images/pump_well_15071101-j.pdf

These are the fourth and fifth successive records.

This exceeds the limit for dumping at sea, which is 1 500 Bq / L, but TEPCO relies on dilution with water from other wells:

The tritium contamination of the waste water dumped into the sea is around 100 Bq / L.

http://www.tepco.co.jp/nu/fukushima-np/f1/smp/2015/images/weighted_average_150707-j.pdf

Further upstream, the tritium contamination of groundwater can reach 20 000 Bq / L in the E10 control well (sampling of 7 July).

http://www.tepco.co.jp/nu/fukushima-np/f1/smp/2015/images/around_h4_15070901-j.pdf

At the foot of the reactors, the tritium contamination also broke a record in the control well No. 3 with 8,500 Bq / L (sampling of 1 July)

http://www.tepco.co.jp/nu/fukushima-np/f1/smp/2015/images/2tb-east_15070601-j.pdf

The cesium also broke its own record in the control well 1-8 with respectively 170 and 670 Bq / L for cesium-134 and -137 respectively (levy of 6 July).

http://www.tepco.co.jp/nu/fukushima-np/f1/smp/2015/images/2tb-east_15070701-j.pdf

Cesium contamination of the seawater at the mouth of the port continues to oscillate.

http://www.tepco.co.jp/nu/fukushima-np/f1/smp/2015/images/port_entrance_150711-j.pdf

Furthermore, Fukushima Dairy reported that the frozen underground wall in the testing phase at the foot of reactor No. 4 does not take after two months of cooling. This is bad news because TEPCO will not be able to limit groundwater infiltration leaking.

http://fukushima-diary.com/2015/07/underground-wall-not-frozen-for-2-months/

Source: L’ACROnique de Fukushima

http://fukushima.eu.org/contamination-de-leau-souterraine-et-rejets-en-mer/

July 15, 2015 Posted by | Japan | , | Leave a comment

Full decontamination work at soccer village

Japan’s environment ministry has started comprehensive decontamination work at a soccer training center named J-Village near the crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant. Workers started cleaning up the grounds on Monday.

The facility opened as the country’s first national soccer training center in 1997. It had drawn more than one million visitors, including national team members, before the nuclear accident in March 2011.

Since the accident, the center, which is located about 20 kilometers from the damaged plant, has been used as an operation base for decommissioning nuclear reactors.

Ministry officials ordered full decontamination work at J-Village, as they plan to relocate their operation base by the end of March, 2017.

The ministry plans to continue the work until March of next year.

The Fukushima prefectural government intends to reopen the facility as a soccer training center in April 2019. It hopes to welcome athletes competing in the 2020 Tokyo Olympics and Paralympics.

Source: NHK

http://www3.nhk.or.jp/nhkworld/english/news/20150714_01.html

July 15, 2015 Posted by | Japan | | Leave a comment

Fukushima Daiichi is using highly toxic chemical: Hydrazine

The Recent Roadmap reports on activity at the plant have shown that hydrazine is still in use. Japan has had their own reporting rules for hydrazine use since 2006. The rules require closed tanks and measures to reduce releases.

Hydrazine is considered a dangerous chemical, Some of the health problems it can create: “Symptoms of acute (short-term) exposure to high levels of hydrazine may include: irritation of the eyes, nose, and throat, dizziness, headache, nausea, pulmonary edema, seizures, coma in humans. Effects to the lungs, liver,spleen, and thyroid have been reported in animals chronically exposed to hydrazine via inhalation. Increased incidences of lung, nasal cavity, and liver tumors have been observed in rodents exposed to hydrazine.

In 2008 the US shot down a spy satellite due to the hydrazine tank on board. The 1.4 meter tank contained half a ton of hydrazine, used as rocket fuel. NASA confirmed that the risk of the frozen tank of hydrazine falling to earth, then thawing and evaporating was a serious risk to the public.

There are also serious environmental concerns:
“Due to the extreme corrosive potential of this chemical and its reactivity with moisture and oxidants, Hydrazine in the environment is of great concern. While the ecotoxicity is not known, the products of biodegradation of Hydrazine are more toxic than the parent compound. Potentially hazardous short and long term degradation products are to be expected (MSDS 2005).”

***It is also toxic to the marine environment above certain concentrations.***
TEPCO’s new report shows that they are continuing to use hydrazine in the reactors and spent fuel pools at Fukushima Daiichi. Units 3′s spent fuel pool still has open access to the environment. Unit 3′s containment vessel is known to leak to the environment through the reactor well. Units 1 and 2 have the same problem but are currently covered and have the exhaust air run through a HEPA filter bank.

Since the water injected into the reactor vessels eventually mixes with groundwater and to some extent still leaks to the ocean, this is another potential release to the environment. TEPCO reports the use of hydrazine and the intention to continue to use it through September in their new report. They also confirm the use of the chemical in all four spent fuel pools.

There is no public accounting for the amounts of hydrazine used. No estimate of how much might leak to the environment through evaporation, containment leaks or through groundwater leaks has been conducted. TEPCO has also not publicly documented if they have any way of safely removing hydrazine from the contaminated water processed at the plant site.

Source:

(587450936) roadmap cooling injection d150625_10-j.unlocked.pptx

https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/16MBOBw7k2FxgeWTGl_C65A_VgFBh6ptSwT39ouQm7Ik/edit#slide=id.p3

July 15, 2015 Posted by | Japan | | 2 Comments

Cs-134/137 detected from all of the marine soil samples along Eastern Japan coastal area

Cs-134137-detected-july 13 2015

From the report of NRA (Nuclear Regulation Authority), Cesium-134/137 was detected from 32 of 32 marine soil samples taken this May.

The sampling locations are offshore of Miyagi, Fukushima, Ibaraki and Chiba Prefecture. The report was published on 7/13/2015.

The report says the samples were taken from 30m depth to 660m and collected by Marine Ecology Research Institute (MERI) and analyzed by Japan Atomic Energy Agency (JAEA).

Cs-134 was not detected from only one sample. Cs-134 was measured from all the rest of the samples.

The highest reading was 164 Bq/Kg in total of Cs-134/137. The sampling location was approx. in 40km South East of Fukushima nuclear plant.

Other nuclides such as Sr-90 and U-235 were not even tested. They did not collect samples from Tokyo Bay either.

http://radioactivity.nsr.go.jp/en/contents/11000/10000/24/458_20150713.pdf

Source: Fukushima Daiichi

Cs-134/137 detected from all of the marine soil samples along Eastern Japan coastal area

July 14, 2015 Posted by | Japan | , | 1 Comment

Kyushu Electric expects to restart Sendai nuke reactor Aug. 10

sendai july 7 2015

Kyushu Electric Power Co. will have the No. 1 reactor at the Sendai nuclear power plant in Kagoshima Prefecture back online as early as Aug. 10, according to sources.

The utility will begin producing electricity several days after the restart and resume commercial operations in mid-September, the sources added July 10.

Kyushu Electric is currently undergoing the final procedures toward the restart of the reactor under the new safety standards of the Nuclear Regulation Authority. The utility began loading nuclear fuel into the No. 1 reactor in the afternoon of July 7, and completed the work before dawn on July 10.

Kyushu Electric will continue to have NRA inspections of equipment related to the reactor. It will also hold a four-day safety drill from July 27 that will replicate conditions of a severe accident at the plant, which is located in the city of Satsuma-Sendai.

Source: Asahi Shimbun

http://ajw.asahi.com/article/behind_news/social_affairs/AJ201507110054

July 14, 2015 Posted by | Japan | , | Leave a comment

Fukushima Evening Radiation TV News

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It is the evening TV screens in Fukushima Prefecture.

Before the accident at the TEPCO Fukushima Daiichi power plant, it looked like a scene from science fiction, but unfortunately it is now in real life.

People watch the news on TV, followed by weather forecast, then by the radiation measures of the day.

A scene that shows us what is living with radiation …

This is not to discuss the measures of radioactivity viewed on the screen, because there are many debates about the veracity of the measures communicated by the local channel NHK.

The purpose here is to show the trivialization of radiation.

Special thanks to Kurumi Sugita, Nos Voisins Lointains 3.11
_____

These photos were published July 13, 2015 on Facebook by Mrs. Kazue Morizono resident of the city of Koriyama in Fukushima Prefecture

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July 14, 2015 Posted by | Japan | , | Leave a comment

Voices of the Residents in Date, Fukushima

By Kurumi Sugita Nos Voisins Lointains 311

The City of Date has divided its territory into three zones to program decontamination work: Zone A where the measurement of ambient radioactivity exceeds 20 mSv/yr, the area adjacent to the B zone A and zone C where radioactivity does not exceed 5 mSv/yr.

In zone C, instead of decontaminating entire areas, the municipality only cleans hot spots that exceed 3μSv/h measured at 1cm off the ground. For example, if a measurement exceeds this limit on a rooftop, it won’t be decontaminated.

date-decon-e1436750145432Before and After decontamination according to the lying local authorities

During the election campaign of January 2014, the incumbent Mayor Shôji NISHIDA promised to work on decontaminating the entire specified C areas. However, since his re-election, he did not fulfill his promise.

date-decon2-e1436750373919

Frustrated by the lack of response from the mayor on their repeated requests for him to fulfill his promise, some residents of Date city gathered to found the “Association to Protect the Future of Children in the Date city” (Kodomo no Mirai wo kai mamoru in Date).  They began installing flags and signs across town, calling for effective decontamination work. The association brings together their voices and publish on their website and Facebook page.

The following is a sample of these voices trying to pierce the ongoing deafening silence.

Frustrated by the lack of response from the mayor on their repeated requests for him to fulfill his promise, some residents of Date city gathered to found the “Association to Protect the Future of Children in the Date city” (Kodomo no Mirai wo kai mamoru in Date).  They began installing flags and signs across town, calling for effective decontamination work. The association brings together their voices and publish on their website and Facebook page.

The following is a sample of these voices trying to pierce the ongoing deafening silence.

Voices of the Residents

01 Decontamination work was only done in public gardens and on school sites, but not around the house.

02 How come in Area C, the minimum threshold for decontamination work is at 3μSv/h?

03 Children go fishing for crayfish and fish near rice fields.
04 Children play with mud around the house. These are spots which have not been decontaminated yet.
1
05 I want to see results on decontamination work come true.
06 Is it safe to let children play outside?
07 Our house is located in zone B, but the workplace and the school are located in Area C.
08 My child is still small and picks up things off the street and eat them.
2
09 Is it necessary to separate Zone B and Zone C? It would make more sense to work the entire area.
10 I live in zone B. The radioactivity is remains high, even after decontamination. It seems we are being affected by radiation in places surrounding us.
11 Without decontaminating around the house, radioactivity does not decrease.
3
12 Why in our city of Date, they only clean the house? I have heard elsewhere, that’s different.
13 I am afraid of radiation during farming operations.
14 Small children play sitting on the floor. Sometimes they are barefoot. I saw them at the parking lot of a store where
decontamination work has not yet been made. These are not my children, but I got the chills.
4
15 I see fumes from things being incinerated. Is this normal? It often happens when children are on the way to school. This worries me.
16 I have concern regarding low-dose radiation. It frightens me to think that the children will live their entire lives in this environment.
17 I will consider possibilities to join a recuperation program or even evacuate.
5
18 Why isn’t the town Date performing the decontamination work?
19 In 2011, the mayor promised decontamination work would be done in all households. I am still waiting. What happened?
20 I envy inhabitants of the cities and surrounding municipalities.
date-map-e1436752609815
kodomomirai-e1436748783619
 

July 13, 2015 Posted by | Japan | | Leave a comment

Radiation safety is not a “psychological” issue – say Fukushima town residents

text-radiationflag-japanFukushima town residents protest official’s comment about radiation safety, Mainichi, 13 July 15 Nuclear evacuees from the Fukushima Prefecture town of Naraha have protested over a government official’s comment that he thinks the safety of the town’s drinking water is “a psychological issue.”

The whole town was designated as a no-entry zone after the Fukushima No.1 Nuclear Power Plant disaster, but is set to have its evacuation order lifted on Sept. 5, as announced by Vice-Minister of Economy, Trade and Industry Yosuke Takagi on July 6 when he visited the town. After the announcement, he held a press conference where, in response to a reporter’s question he pointed out that radioactive cesium amounts in Naraha tap water are below the detectable level, and said, “People differ in how they think about radiation. I think whether you think (the water source is) safe or not is a psychological issue.”

There is deep-rooted concern among town residents after sampling in July last year by the Ministry of the Environment found up to 18,700 becquerels of radioactive cesium per kilogram of soil at the bottom of the reservoir at the Kido Dam. That reservoir is the source of tap water for the town.

After Takagi’s comment, a Naraha resident in his 60s who has already finished reconstructing his house in preparation for returning to the town said, “That comment makes me lose my desire to go back. Does he intend to say it’s people’s own fault (that they feel unsafe)?”……..

At first, the government was aiming to have Naraha’s order lifted in early August, but after criticism that there were not enough measures in place to help residents live there, the government delayed the lifting of the evacuation order by around a month to prepare additional measures such as increasing the number of free buses.

“We are reminded once again that the government can’t be trusted,” said Naraha resident Noboru Endo, 43, who is living in the western Tokyo suburb of Musashino as an evacuee with his 9-year-old son Shota. He feels that the national government is not listening to the voices of those calling for the safety and ease of mind of Naraha residents…….http://mainichi.jp/english/english/newsselect/news/20150707p2a00m0na019000c.html

July 13, 2015 Posted by | Japan, spinbuster | Leave a comment

No solution to the Fukushima nuclear pollution: is that why global authorities are ignoring it?

There has been a massive die-off of marine life along the west coast of the US, which has scientists “baffled.” Do you mean to tell me that scientists studying this death of the Pacific haven’t taken into account the possibility that it could be caused by the hundreds of tons of nuclear waste that has been pouring into the Pacific each day for the last four years?

Fukushima: The Extinction-Level Event That No One Is Talking About, Collectively Conscious, July 15  by  Source: dougmichaeltruth.wordpress.com  A massive earthquake of 9.0 magnitude struck off the coast of Japan, triggering a devastating tsunami, which left parts of the country in utter shambles. Official reports claim that 15,891 people lost their lives, 6,152 were injured and 2,584 were reported missing.

This was the most powerful earthquake ever recorded to have struck Japan, and the fourth most powerful in the world, since modern record keeping began in 1900.[1]This earthquake was so intense in magnitude, that it shifted Honshu, the main island of Japan by an estimated eight feet and actually shifted the Earth’s axis by between four and ten inches![2]

Japan is a nation containing many nuclear reactors which produce roughly 30% of the nation’s electricity.[3] The majority of operable nuclear reactors are right along the coast, in one of the most seismically active areas on the entire planet!

map Japan's nuclear stations

The powerful tsunami caused complete devastation of three of the six nuclear reactors at the Fukushima Daiichi facility, the cores of which melted within the first three days. In November 2011, the Japanese Science Ministry reported that radioactive cesium had contaminated 11,580 square miles of the land surface of Japan,[4] with an additional 4,500 square miles contaminated.[5]

The destroyed reactor sites have been dumping hundreds of tons of radioactive waste into the Pacific Ocean, every single day for the past four years and the devastating results are now becoming plainly obvious. Radioactive cesium (an alkali metal) rapidly contaminates an ecosystem and poisons the entire food chain, and this waste offshoot has been detected in Japanese foodstuffs over a 200 mile radius of the Daiichi facility.[6]

Cesium and other radioactive waste products are bioaccumulative, meaning that they accumulate in an organism at a rate faster than the organism can eliminate it. Of course the Japanese government and TEPCO (Tokyo Electric Power Company) have blatantly lied about the amount of radioactive waste that has been leaking into the Pacific, however, the devastating results have been impossible to ignore.

I’ve wondered since the beginning of this disaster-which has already shown to be far worse that the Chernobyl nuclear disaster in the Ukraine, in 1986-why the world’s top, leading scientists have not come together to figure out how to stop the leaking radiation. The reason is because no one knows how to deal with this catastrophe.

In March of 2015, it was reported in the Times of London, that Akira Ono, the chief of the Fukushima power station admitted that the technology needed to decommission the three melted-down reactors does not exist, and he has no idea how it will be developed.[7]

More recently, Naohiro Masuda, the decommissioning chief of the Fukushima Daiichi Decommissioning Company, also stated that the technology does not exist to remove the highly radioactive debris from the damaged reactors:

Ono also claimed that decommissioning the plant by 2051 may be impossible without huge leaps in technological advancement.[8] It’s also been estimated that plutonium fallout has been 70,000 times greater than atomic bomb fallout in Japan![9]

Japan has also seen a skyrocketing of childhood Cancer rates, particularly, thyroid Cancer.[10] As of August, 2013, TEPCO admitted that between “20 trillion to 40 trillion becquerels[11] of radioactive tritium may have leaked into the sea since the disaster.”[12] Since it’s been shown over and again, that TEPCO repeatedly lied and covered up the true extent of the disaster, that number is most likely far greater.

While official sources keep claiming that there is no danger from the leaking radiation, sea life all along the west coast of the US has been dying in alarming numbers, and many fish and sea creatures tested off the west coast have shown extremely high amounts of radioactivity, that far exceeds safe limits. In actuality though, there really are no “safe” limits of radiation.

The Japan Times reported on Feb 25th, 2015, that cesium and other radioactive waste was pouring from the reactor one site, directly into the ocean.[13] TEPCO did nothing to prevent the leak and simply ignored the problem for close to a year![14]

There has been a massive die-off of marine life along the west coast of the US, which has scientists “baffled.” Do you mean to tell me that scientists studying this death of the Pacific haven’t taken into account the possibility that it could be caused by the hundreds of tons of nuclear waste that has been pouring into the Pacific each day for the last four years? So few dare to admit the extent of damage caused by this disaster or the fact that it is forcing us to face the possibility of our own extinction. What happens when the planet’s largest body of water is rendered lifeless on a planet made up mostly of water? What happens when the radiation accumulates in the atmosphere and is spread throughout the world by the jet stream?

In 2013, the Huffington Post reported that massive amounts of krill washed up along the west coast in a 250 mile stretch from Oregon to California.[15] Krill is an essential part of the ocean’s food chain. When marine life on the low end of the food chain dies off, the larger animals that feed on that marine life starve to death. Carcasses of dead sea lions and seals that were examined revealed high doses of radiation,[16] and yet, mainstream scientists remain “baffled.”…………http://collectivelyconscious.net/articles/fukushima-the-extinction-level-event-that-no-one-is-talking-about/

July 13, 2015 Posted by | Fukushima 2015 | 1 Comment

The vegetables of a grandmother

main_recipe_04

Today, a grandmother in my neighborhood asked me if I ate the vegetables produced locally.   

She had given me several times vegetables that she had grown.
It seems it’s tomato season now, and she has them abundantly.

I replied that I was eating them, but still selecting them.    

It seems that her grand-daughter works in the medical sector. When the grandmother serves her at the table pumpkins or green beans, she says she will eat them later, but in fact she never eats them.

As for her son, before the disaster (of March 2011), he loved and ate every day salty pickled plums. After the disaster, he eats them no more, even after the lifting of the restriction on plums distribution.

I told the grandmother that it was sad.
No one is wrong, not the grandmother nor the son nor the grand-daughter.

I understand the feeling of the grandmother but I also understand the concern of the family members. And no one takes responsibility for this situation. It’s really absurd.

But the grandmother was well aware.
“I grow vegetables in a greenhouse, but as I aerate the greenhouse, it enters through the opening.”

I had heard that radioactivity was detected at the entrance of the greenhouse.

The grandmother said with a laugh, “We, the elderly, we eat everything.”
She also said that after the disaster she measured radioactivity, but as it is no longer detected, these days she does not measure.      

___
Published on July 9, 2015 on Facebook by a resident of Date city (in Fukushima Prefecture)

Source : Nos Voisins Lointains 3.11

http://nosvoisins311.wix.com/voisins311-france#!L%C3%A9gumes-dune-grandm%C3%A8re/c1tye/559ef1dd0cf286eab01f08a7

July 12, 2015 Posted by | Japan | , | Leave a comment

Radiation and Baseball Dream

higashi-high-baseball-team-posing-for-photo-on-contaminated-school-field

The highschool baseball tournament in Fukushima Prefecture began today.
A former classmate of my son plays in it.

I remember that summer of 2011, my son was still in 2nd year highschool when he quarreled seriously with J, his best friend
J was playing in a baseball club.
Trainings were happening outside.

Slides, dust …
My son was concerned for J risk of internal radiation by inhalation.

The year when my son took refuge alone in Sapporo, J came to visit me.
During our conversation, he apologized.

“Every time when we met, S (my son) insisted me to pay attention to radiation. It was because he cared for me … but I was tired. I told him to stop. Still, I knew it was because S was thinking of me …. “
“But if I was careful to radiation, I could not play baseball. To avoid it, I would have been forced to give up my dream … “
In saying this, J had some tears in his eyes.

Two years already.
This summer, this is the last highschool baseball tournament for him.
I’d like to see his achievement.
Today his highschool won.
My son screamed with joy when I gave him the news.

I hope my son will have a chance to go to the tournament to show his support.

The radiation….
Currently there is an atmosphere of discomfort to use this word within Fukushima Prefecture.        

The baseball exploits of the highschool students from Fukushima Prefecture.
My support is for them.

_____

Published: July 10, 2015 YOKOTA Asami, a resident of the city of Koriyama in Fukushima Prefecture.
Source : Nos Voisins Lointains 3.11
http://nosvoisins311.wix.com/voisins311-france#!La-radiation-et-le-r%C3%AAve-de-baseball/c1tye/55a184740cf286eab020799d

July 12, 2015 Posted by | Japan | , | Leave a comment

Plutonium levels 10,000,000 times normal in water below Fukushima reactors

Plutonium levels 10,000,000 times normal in water below Fukushima reactors — Plutonium hit record high off coast in 2014 — “Has been transported relatively long distances” – Every sample taken from rivers flowing into Pacific had Pu-239, Pu-240, Pu-241,and Pu-242 from plant

 

 Scientists from Japan’s National Institute of Radiological Sciences, Hirosaki University, and Peking University (pdf), May 2015 (emphasis added): Pu Distribution in Seawater in the Near Coastal Area off Fukushima… the amount of Pu isotopes directly released into the marine environment remains unknown. In the high level radioactive accumulated water collected at the FDNPP after the accident, high level radioactivities of Pu isotopes (ca. 10-3 Bq/mL) were detected. These values were 6 to 7 orders of magnitudes [1,000,000 – 10,000,000 times] higher than that of the seawater in the western North Pacific. In addition, a new study on Pu isotopes… suggested there was a potential sediment-borne Pu supply from Fukushima coastal rivers to the Pacific Ocean. Thus more attention should be paid to the contamination situation of Pu isotopes in the marine environment off Fukushima since the FDNPP accident… Pu isotopes in seawater… needs to be routinely investigated… There are two sampling sites close to the FDNP… 239+240Pu concentrations in seawater were reported in 2012-2014 and the range was from detection limit to 14 mBq/m3 except 31 mBq/m3 observed at T-2-1 site on 10 April 2014.

Scientists from Japan, Belgium, and French gov’t (pdf), 2015: Tracing the dispersion of contaminated sediment with plutonium isotope measurements in coastal catchments of Fukushima Prefecture — The Fukushima Dai-ichi Nuclear Power Plant (FDNPP) accident led to important releases of radionuclides into the environment, and trace levels of plutonium (Pu) were detected in northeastern Japan… In this study, we measured Pu isotopic ratios in recently deposited sediments along rivers draining the most contaminated part of the inland radioactive plume… Results showed that the entire range of measured Pu isotopes (i.e. 239Pu, 240Pu, 241Pu, and 242Pu) were detected in all samples, although in extremely low concentrations. The 241Pu/239Pu atom ratios measured in sediment deposits (0.0017 – 0.0884) were significantly higher than the corresponding values attributed to the global fallout (0.00113 – 0.00008 on average in the Northern Hemisphere between 31-71 N)… These results demonstrate that this radionuclide has been transported relatively long distances… and deposited in rivers representing a potential source of Pu to the ocean.

t21

Source: Enenews

http://enenews.com/experts-plutonium-levels-10000000-times-normal-water-below-fukushima-reactors-plutonium-ocean-japan-hit-record-high-2014-pu-transported-relatively-long-distances-every-sample-rivers-flow-pacific

July 11, 2015 Posted by | Japan | , , | Leave a comment

Japan’s 17,000 Tons of Nuclear Waste in Search of a Home

Welcome to Japan, land of cherry blossoms, sushi and sake, and 17,000 metric tons of highly radioactive waste.

That’s what the country has in temporary storage from its nuclear plants. Supporters of atomic power say it’s cleaner than fossil fuels for generating electricity. Detractors say there’s nothing clean about what’s left behind, some of which remains a deadly environmental toxin for thousands of years.

Since atomic power was first harnessed more than 70 years ago, the industry has been trying to solve the problem of safe disposal of the waste. Japan has been thrown into the center of the conundrum by its decision in recent months to retire five reactors after the Fukushima disaster in 2011. It also decided this week to begin the restart process of one reactor despite public opposition.

“It’s part of the price of nuclear energy,” Allison Macfarlane, a former chief of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, said in an interview in Tokyo on atomic waste. “Now, especially with the decommissioning of sites, there will be more pressure to do something with this material. Because you have to.”

For more than half a century, nuclear plants in more than 30 countries have been humming away — lighting up Tokyo’s Ginza, putting the twinkle into New York’s Broadway and keeping the elevators running up the Eiffel Tower. Plus powering appliances in countless households, factories and offices around the world.

In the process, the world’s 437 operating reactors now produce about 12,000 tons of high-level waste a year, or the equivalent of 100 double-decker buses, according to the World Nuclear Association.

Fukushima Disaster

Most countries now agree burying atomic waste deep underground is the best option. Other ideas like firing it into space or tossing it inside a volcano came and went.

The U.S., with the most reactors, spent an estimated $15 billion on a site for nuclear refuse in Yucca Mountain, Nevada. Local opposition derailed the plan, meaning about 49,000 tons of spent fuel sits in cooling pools at nuclear plants around the country.

Japan faces another challenge. Four years ago, the country had a nuclear accident unlike anything seen before. An earthquake and tsunami ripped through the engineering defenses at the Fukushima plant north of Tokyo and caused the meltdown of three reactors.

It will need billions of dollars and technology not yet invented to clean up Fukushima. How long that will take is disputed. The operator, Tokyo Electric Power Co., estimates 40 years. Greenpeace says it could take twice that time.

‘Ethical Responsibility’

All Japan’s 43 operational reactors have been offline since September 2013 for safety checks after the disaster. The government has said atomic power is essential to energy supply and reactors that meet safety standards will be allowed to restart.

The first in line belongs to Kyushu Electric Power Co., which today said it has finished refueling one of its units in southern Japan. It plans to restart the plant in August, which means generation of more nuclear waste.

It will be a “failure in our ethical responsibility to future generations,” to restart reactors without a clear plan for waste storage, the Science Council of Japan said in April.

No Thanks

Japan’s Nuclear Waste Management Organization, known as NUMO, has been searching for a permanent storage site for years, initially inviting districts to apply as a host.

In 2007, it got one when the mayor of a town called Toyo submitted interest. Like the residents near Yucca Mountain in the U.S., Toyo’s citizens didn’t like the idea and voted him out of office. His successor canceled the plan.

Now facing the accelerated shutdown of some reactors post-Fukushima, NUMO in May ditched the idea of waiting for a volunteer. Instead, scientists will nominate suitable regions.

“We’d like all citizens to be aware and feel ownership of this situation,” said Takao Kinoshita, a NUMO official. “We should feel grateful for the community that’s doing something for the benefit of the whole country and respect their bravery.”

Deep Underground

NUMO’s plan for a final underground repository was drawn up in 2007 and would cost 3.5 trillion yen ($29 billion).

It would contain about 40,000 canisters, each weighing half a ton and holding waste at temperatures above 200 degrees Celsius (392 Fahrenheit). The contents would give off 1,500 sieverts of radiation an hour, a level that would instantly kill a human being.

The canisters need to cool in interim storage for as long as 50 years before heading 300 meters below ground. Their stainless steel inner layer is wrapped in bentonite clay to make sure water can’t leak inside.

“That’s the biggest risk we see, water leaking through,” said Kinoshita.

Finland and Sweden are the only two countries so far to have selected and reached a public agreement on a final site and storage technology for high-level nuclear waste. Finland’s is expected to open in 2020.

Taking apart a reactor, known as decommissioning, produces a few tons of highly radioactive material, usually the used fuel and coolant. The buildings and equipment account for thousands of tons of so-called low-level waste.

Disposal Confusion

Japan’s government is responsible for dealing with the most radioactive waste. The plant operator handles the rest.

“Even in the low-level category there is the relatively higher-level waste and the nation’s technical solutions are not ready,” Makoto Yagi, the president of Kansai Electric Power Co., said at a June briefing in Tokyo.

Shaun Bernie, senior nuclear specialist with Greenpeace Germany, said this shows Japan’s reactor program and high-level nuclear waste policy is “in a state of crisis.”

Without a clear disposal strategy, costs to take apart the reactors can end up being double original estimate, said Colin Austin, senior vice president at Energy Solutions, which has worked on every decommissioning project in the U.S.

Another wrinkle in Japan for finding a final disposal site is that the country sits on a mesh of colliding tectonic plates that make it one of the most earthquake-prone countries in the world.

Former NRC chief Macfarlane, who is also a seismologist, said that doesn’t make it impossible to bury the waste. A repository hundreds of meters underground is partly protected against quakes in the same way submarines are during high storms, she said.

Leaving nuclear waste on the surface indefinitely means it will get into the environment so Japan has to solve this, she said.

“An adequate place underground is better than waiting for the best possible place.”

Source: Bloomberg Business

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-07-10/japan-s-17-000-tons-of-nuclear-waste-in-search-of-a-home

July 11, 2015 Posted by | Japan | | Leave a comment

Sellafield workers join Fukushima clean-up operation

Sellafield workers are helping clean up the destroyed ‪#‎Fukushima‬ nuclear plant A group of Sellafield Ltd workers have spent five days at the tsunami-stricken Fukushima plant in Japan, which is in the process of “being decommissioned” after being devastated in 2011.
The trip is part of Sellafield Ltd’s ongoing commitment to support Tepco FDEC (Fukushima Daiichi Decontamination and Decommissioning Engineering Company), the company charged with the task of cleaning up the site.
During the most recent visit, Sellafield Ltd experts toured the facility and surrounding area, seeing first hand a decontamination effort of unprecedented scale, while providing advice and technical expertise on environmental management and radiation protection.
This was a follow-up to a successful trip to west Cumbria last year by their Japanese counterparts, who are already implementing some of the environmental practices used at the Sellafield site.
Members of the leadership team, including the recently appointed Managing Director, Paul Foster, also toured the plant to see the progress being made and provide a more long-term, strategic insight into decommissioning programme.
“My first impression of Fukushima was something I will never forget,” said Mr Foster.
“We’ve probably all seen the news footage of the reactor buildings which were severely damaged by the explosions, but to actually be there and see it first hand was a humbling experience.
“We’re keen to help them as much as we can and the fact that they are so keen to access the skills and expertise that exists in west Cumbria is something of which I am extremely proud.”
Although there is much more work to be done, the progress at Fukushima to date indicates that the benefits of the arrangement are already being realised, with experts from west Cumbria actively contributing to the clean-up.
Mr Foster added: “During the visit we shared our approach to managing large, complex programmes as well as some of our technical and tactical issues. They want to learn from us and, in time, we will learn much from them.”
“Seeing the sheer scale of the task at Fukushima highlights why we must continue to share experience and technical expertise amongst the global nuclear family, and this now resonates with me more strongly than ever.
“This was always the intention of the agreement and the benefits already emerging prove that it is happening in reality, making us both better equipped to deliver our respective missions.”
This mutual commitment between Sellafield Ltd and Tepco FDEC was formalised in a co-operation agreement, signed by the two companies in 2014, which would see them exchange knowledge, experience and skills on an on-going basis to ultimately help “decommission both plants as quickly and safely as possible.” 

Source: News and Star

http://www.newsandstar.co.uk/news/1.1222143

July 11, 2015 Posted by | Japan | | Leave a comment

Kyushu Electric finishes loading fuel into nuclear reactor

Kyushu Electric has completed loading nuclear fuel into a reactor at Sendai Nuclear Station,
The last rod assembly —the 157th — was embedded into the reactor at 12:12 a.m. Friday, ending an operation that engaged some 50 workers around the clock since the loading process started Tuesday at the station in Kagoshima Prefecture, a company official said.
Subject to inspection clearance by the government’s Nuclear Regulation Authority in the coming days, Kyushu Electric is envisaging firing up the reactor around Aug. 10 to start trial power transmission three days later.
The reactor is expected to be geared up to full steam later in the month before starting commercial power transmission in September, a move that would likely bring relief to the company, which has been reeling from losses caused by hefty fossil fuel costs to run conventional power plants with all its six nuclear reactors idled.
The resumption of the reactor — one of the two at the Sendai plant — will mark the restart of nuclear power generation in Japan that has been at a standstill due to safety concerns following the ongoing triple meltdown disaster at the Fukushima plant. None of Japan’s commercial reactors has been online for nearly two years.
If the nuclear authority finds any problem, Kyushu Electric will be required to address it and this may result in the restart being delayed.
The utility is aiming to reload fuel into the second reactor at the Sendai plant in early September and reboot it in mid-October. 

Source: Japan Times 

http://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2015/07/10/national/kyushu-electric-finishes-loading-fuel-nuclear-reactor/#.VZ_o5PmFSM9

July 11, 2015 Posted by | Japan | , | Leave a comment