Concern in Tamil Nadu over spent nuclear fuel storage at Kudankulam site

Tamil Nadu flags concern over spent nuclear fuel storage at Kudankulam site https://indianexpress.com/article/cities/chennai/tamil-nadu-flags-concern-over-spent-nuclear-fuel-storage-at-kudankulam-site-7780809/
Chief Minister M K Stalin flagged the issue with Prime Minister Narendra Modi in a letter about the issue pertaining to the power plant located in Tamil Nadu’s Tirunelveli district.
The Tamil Nadu government on Friday opposed the Nuclear Power Corporation of India Limited’s proposal to store spent nuclear fuel (SNF) at the Kudankulam Nuclear Power Plant (KNPP) site and suggested it be sent back to Russia, according to an earlier agreement or store it in an uninhabited area.
Chief Minister M K Stalin flagged the issue with Prime Minister Narendra Modi in a letter about the issue pertaining to the power plant located in Tamil Nadu’s Tirunelveli district.
Six nuclear power reactors of 1000 MW each are envisaged in this project. Out of the six, units 1 & 2 have already been commissioned, while 3 & 4 are under construction and units 5 & 6 are yet to be established, Stalin said.
The Nuclear Power Corporation of India Ltd. proposes to construct Away from Reactor (AFR) facilities in the nuclear power plant site itself for the storage of the SNF generated from all six reactors,” the Chief Minister said.
In this regard, I wish to inform that when the Ministry of Environment, Forests and Climate Change had earlier accorded permission to Units 1 & 2, the agreement was to collect and store the spent fuel temporarily within the unit’s premises (At Reactor) and then send it back to the country of origin, Russia,” he said.
However, it was subsequently decided to store the SNF permanently in the AFR facility to be located within the unit premises. “This decision was taken without consulting the state government,” he said.
Stalin told the Prime Minister that there was “deep concern and apprehensions” among the people of Tamil Nadu, including various political parties, regarding the hazards and potential danger of the AFR storage facility of the SNF within the plant premises.
Several such facilities across the world have faced accidents leading to “disastrous impacts” on the environment and the people residing in and around such plants, he said.
The local people are apprehensive of the fallouts and have been protesting against the AFR facilities within the complex.
“Therefore, I request that in the interest of public safety, health and welfare of the people of Tamil Nadu, action may be taken to transport back the SNF to Russia. This must not only be for units 1 & 2, but also for the subsequent four units. In case this is not a feasible option, the spent fuel may be permanently stored in a Deep Geological Repository (DGR) in an uninhabited and ecologically non-sensitive area,” the Chief Minister told Modi.
Legal action on Fukushima nuclear disaster’s impact on health
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Fukushima Disaster’s Impact on Health Will Be Challenged in Court https://thediplomat.com/2022/02/fukushima-disasters-impact-on-health-will-be-challenged-in-court/
A link between radiation from the Fukushima nuclear disaster and cancer will be the focal point of the civil court case against operator TEPCO. By Thisanka Siripala, February 17, 2022
Almost 11 years have passed since the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant catastrophe. But even as Fukushima prefecture gets ready to launch a new revitalization slogan – “Making Fukushima’s reconstruction a reality one step at a time” – it is still struggling to overcome the lingering aftereffects of the accident. Earlier this month, a group of six men and women diagnosed with thyroid cancer as children filed a class action case against Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO), seeking $5.4 million in compensation.
Eastern Japan was hit by a massive magnitude 9.1 earthquake and 15-meter tsunami on March 11, 2011. The disaster shut off power and cooling to three reactors at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, triggering the release of radiation for up to six days.
The plaintiffs, who are aged between 17 and 27, are seeking to hold TEPCO responsible for the thyroid cancer they developed. Two have had one side of their thyroid removed and four others have had a complete thyroidectomy and are planning or undergoing radiation therapy. The treatment has forced them to drop out of school or college and give up on their dreams. The plaintiffs argue that their thyroid cancer has created barriers to their education and employment as well as marriage and starting a family.
The Fukushima Daiichi meltdown was the worst nuclear accident since Chernobyl in 1986, which was followed by a spike in cancer cases in the region. In Japan a health survey conducted by the Fukushima prefecture found 266 cases of cancer among the 380,000 people aged under 18 at the time of the accident. The lawyers representing the plaintiffs argue that pediatric thyroid cancer is extremely rare, with an annual incident rate of two cases in one million people
The plaintiffs added that in the past decade they have been forced to stay silent due to social pressure and the risk of public outrage over speaking out about the connection between the Fukushima nuclear accident and their thyroid cancer.
The Federation of Promotion of Zero-Nuclear Power and Renewable Energy, a civic group that includes five former Japanese prime ministers, sent a letter to the EU urging the elimination of nuclear power. In the letter, they stated that many children are suffering from thyroid cancer as a result of the Fukushima nuclear power plant accident.
However, the Japanese government believes there is no causal link between exposure to radiation from the accident and the children developing thyroid cancer. Prime Minister Kishida Fumio said at a House of Representatives Budget Committee meeting that “it is not appropriate to spread false information that children from Fukushima are suffering from health problems.”
At a press conference Takaichi Sanae, chairperson of the ruling LDP’s Policy Research Council refuted the letter sent by the federation. She stressed the government’s position that the cases of childhood thyroid cancer have been assessed by experts who have determined the accident is unlikely to have caused cancer.
Fukushima prefecture’s expert panel say there could be the possibility of “over-diagnosis” due to increased vigilance after the disaster, suggesting that some patients diagnosed with cancer did not need treatment. They say they are continuing to investigate the nature of each diagnosis. The Ministry of Environment also said they will continue to disseminate knowledge based on scientific findings to dispel rumors about the health effects of radiation.
Last week, the Fukushima reconstruction and revitalization council met to discuss the “diverse needs of the prefecture” and a long term response to support evacuees. Governor of Fukushima Uchibori Masao acknowledged that the prefecture is “facing many difficulties including the reconstruction and rehabilitation of evacuated areas and rebuilding the lives of evacuees and victims of the disaster.” There are also plans to establish a new national research and education organization in Fukushima that will devise measures to prevent and dispel rumors fueling discrimination toward evacuees and Fukushima food.
Taiwan recently lifted its blanket food import ban on Fukushima produce introduced in the wake of the disaster but there are 14 countries and regions that still maintain import restrictions. Additionally, Japan’s decision to discharge more than one million tonnes of low-level radioactive water from the crippled Fukushima nuclear power plant into the sea is another issue attracting negative publicity abroad.
UN to review Japan’s plan to release Fukushima water into Pacific

UN to review Japan’s plan to release Fukushima water into Pacific
Taskforce will ‘listen to local people’s concerns’, as government plans to release more than 1m tonnes, Guardian, Justin McCurry in TokyoFri 18 Feb 2022
A UN nuclear taskforce has promised to prioritise safety as it launches a review of controversial plans by Japan to release more than 1m tonnes of contaminated water into the ocean from the wrecked Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant.
Japan’s government announced last April that it had decided to release the water over several decades into the Pacific Ocean, despite strong opposition from local fishers and neighbouring China and South Korea……………
The Tokyo Electric Power company (Tepco) says its treatment technology can remove all radioactive materials from water except tritium, which is harmless in small amounts. It said the gradual release of the water, diluted with seawater, would not pose a threat to human health or the marine environment. In 2020, however, Greenpeace said the water still contained contaminants beside tritium and would have to be treated again.
The wastewater is being stored in about 1,000 tanks that officials say need to be removed so the plant can be decommissioned, an operation expected to take several decades. The tanks are expected to reach their capacity of 1.37m tonnes this summer.
The liquid includes water used to cool the damaged reactors, as well as rain and groundwater that seeps into the area.
Shaun Burnie, a senior nuclear specialist for Greenpeace East Asia, said he did not believe the IAEA would fully investigate and address safety and environmental concerns in its report.
Noting that the agency had welcomed the discharge option when it was announced last year, Burnie said: “The IAEA is not an independent agency in nuclear affairs – under statute its mission is to promote nuclear power. It has sought to justify radioactive marine pollution as having no impact and safe. But the IAEA is incapable of protecting the environment, human health or human rights from radiation risks – that’s not its job.
“The IAEA taskforce should be investigating the root cause of the contaminated water crisis and exploring the option of long-term storage and the best available processing technology as an alternative to the deliberate contamination of the Pacific.”
The IAEA team, which includes experts from South Korea and China, will report its findings at the end of April.
South Korea, which has yet to lift an import ban on Fukushima seafood introduced in 2013, has said that discharging the water would pose a “grave threat” to the marine environment. Pacific peoples have challenged Japan to prove the water is safe by dumping it in Tokyo.
Local fishers also oppose the water’s release, saying it would undo a decade’s work to rebuild their industry and reassure nervous consumers their seafood is safe………https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2022/feb/18/un-to-review-japans-plan-to-release-fukushima-water-into-pacific
Radiation fears after earthquakes at North Korea nuclear test site
North Korea’s underground nuclear test area has been struck by a series of small earthquakes, adding to fears that detonations have permanently altered the area’s geology and raised the risk of radiation leaks.
According to South Korean seismologists, at least four earthquakes have occurred over the past five days close to the Punggye-ri test site in the northern part of North Korea.
The scientists said they were natural tremors rather than those caused by explosions. The latest one this morning had a magnitude of 2.5, following a pair of 2.3 magnitude tremors yesterday and one of 3.1 on Friday, according to the Korea Meteorological Administration (KMA). None are large enough to cause significant physical damage.
However, the fact that they are occurring at all, in an area not prone to quakes, raises troubling questions.
Times 15th Feb 2022
Robots used to remove Fukushima’s highly radioactive used nuclear fuel, but they’re still problematic.
Plutonium problems won’t go away, By Chris Edwards, Engineering and Technology, February 15, 2022 ”’………………………………………At a conference organised by the International Federation of Robotics Research on the 10th anniversary of the accident, Toyota Research chief scientist Gill Pratt said the first robots “got there in the overhead luggage of commercial flights”. For all of them it was a baptism of fire.
Narrow staircases and rubble turned into insurmountable obstacles for some. Those that made it further failed after suffering too much radiation damage to key sensors and memories. Finally, some developed by the Chiba Institute of Technology were able to explore the upper floors of Reactor 2. The researchers designed their Quince to work for up to five hours in the presence of a cobalt-60 source that would generate an average dose of 40 grays per hour.
Direct radiation damage was not the only problem for the Fukushima robots. Reactors are protected by thick concrete walls. Wireless signals fade in and out and fibre-optic cabling becomes an impediment in the cluttered space of a damaged building.
To be close enough to the machines, operators had to wear bulky protective clothing that made teleoperation much harder than it would be in other environments. Several robots went into the building only to fail and get stuck, turning into obstacles for other machines.
The risk of these kinds of failure played into the nuclear industry’s long-term resistance to using robots for repair and decommissioning. Plant operators continued to favour mechanical manipulators operated by humans, separated by both protective clothing and thick lead-heavy glass.
Since Fukushima, attitudes to robots in the nuclear industry have changed, but remote control remains the main strategy. Pratt says humans remain generally better at control and are far better at dealing with the unstructured environments within many older and sometimes damaged installations.
The long-term aim of those working on these systems is to provide robots with greater degrees of autonomy over time. For example, surveillance drones will be flown with operator supervision but the machines are acquiring more intelligence to let them avoid obstacles so they need only respond to simpler, high-level commands. This can overcome one of the problems created by intermittent communications. One instance of this approach was shown when UK-based Createc Robotics recently deployed a drone at Chernobyl and Fukushima, choosing in the latter case to survey the partly collapsed turbine hall for a test of its semi-autonomous mapping techniques.
To get more robots into play in the UK, the NDA has focused its procurement more heavily on universities and smaller specialist companies, some of which are adapting technologies from the oil and gas industry.
The NDA expects it will take many years to develop effective robot decommissioning and handling technologies. It has put together a broad roadmap that currently extends to 2040. Radiation susceptibility remains an issue. Visual sensors are highly susceptible to damage by ionising radiation. However, a mixture of smarter control systems and redundancy should make it possible to at least move robots to a safe point for repair should they start to show signs of failure.
Another design strategy being pursued both in the UK and Japan is to build robots as though they are a moving, smart Swiss-army knife: armed with a variety of detachable limbs and subsystems so they can adapt to conditions and possibly even perform some on-the-fly repairs to themselves.
Slowly, the technology is appearing that can handle and at least put the waste out of harm’s way for a long time, though you might wonder why the process has taken decades to get to this stage of development. ……………. (Goes on to laser developments, again, far from a sure thing.) https://eandt.theiet.org/content/articles/2022/02/plutonium-problems-won-t-go-away/
Should the Taishan nuclear plant shutdown worry UK regulators?
Should the Taishan nuclear plant shutdown worry UK regulators? China is
not well known for its commitment to an open government. So the information
now published, as to why one of its new nuclear plants at Taishan has been
shut down for over six months, is potentially very worrying for the UK.
The closure is owing to cracked fuel rods that emerged after only one operating
cycle. Why is it worrying? Taishan is the only completed example in the
world of the prototype EPR being constructed at Hinkley Point in Somerset,
and scheduled for Sizewell in Suffolk. And the implications for the
viability of both of these £20bn+ ‘investments’ are potentially very
serious.
The Business Department is taking no responsibility for analysing
these implications. Instead, a spokesman told the Daily Telegraph that,
“If the British Office for Nuclear Regulation (ONR) considered that any
nuclear site was not safe or secure, it would not be allowed to operate.”
So, is the ONR keeping a beady eye upon the Taishan problems? Er, no. In
response to a Freedom of Information request from Sussex University this
January, the ONR admitted it ‘holds no information relating to design
flaws regarding Taishan, or indeed any information that suggests this
claimed design flaw has or may impact either Hinkley Point C or Sizewell
C’.
But this must mean the ONR cannot have made any inquiries as to these
possible design flaws, because if so they would by definition hold some
information. Given the amount of worldwide media attention the issue has
had, most people would rightly think the ONR is simply not discharging its
duty.
Electrical Review 16th Feb 2022
Latest look inside Fukushima ruins show mounds of melted nuclear fuel
A remote-controlled robot has captured images of melted nuclear fuel
inside Japan’s wrecked Fukushima nuclear plant. A massive earthquake and
tsunami in 2011 damaged cooling systems at the power plant, causing the
meltdown of three reactor cores. Most of their highly radioactive fuel fell
to the bottom of their containment vessels, making its removal extremely
difficult. A previous attempt to send a small robot with cameras into the
Unit 1 reactor failed, but images captured this week by a ROV-A robot show
broken structures, pipes and mounds of what appears to be melted fuel.
Metro 16th Feb 2022 https://metro.co.uk/2022/02/16/take-a-look-inside-the-radioactive-ruins-of-fukushima-nuclear-plant-16113689/
Statement calling for a review of the volcanic impact assessment in the new regulatory standards for the restart of nuclear power plants in light of the Tonga eruption
February 15, 2022
1. Occurrence of the Funga-Tonga-Hunga Ha’apai eruption
On January 15, 2022, a large-scale eruption occurred at the submarine volcano on the island of Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha’apai, located about 65 km north of Nuku’alofa (Tongatapu Island), the capital of the Kingdom of Tonga (hereinafter referred to as the “HTHH eruption”). The plume rose to an altitude of 15 to 6 km and formed an umbrella-shaped plume with a diameter of about 500 km (radius of about 250 km) in just a few tens of minutes. The aerosol is thought to have reached the stratosphere.
The shock wave (aerial vibration) from the HTHH eruption traveled around the globe, and it is said that the sound of the explosion was heard even in New Zealand, more than 2,000 km away.
A tsunami of up to 1.2 meters in height was also observed in Japan (Kominato, Amami City), causing damage such as the capsizing of fishing boats. The Tongan government announced that the tsunami reached a maximum height of 15 meters. These tsunamis are believed to have been events that cannot be explained by conventional tsunami mechanisms, and while some believe they were caused by aerial vibration, others point to changes in water levels caused by the caldera sinking.
Furthermore, discoloration of the seawater, thought to be caused by volcanic activity, has been confirmed to have spread as far as 300 km, and experts in Japan and abroad are not sure if this is the end of the eruption.
Based on the scale of the plume, it is believed that the eruption may have released about 10 km3 of volcanic material, about the same level as the 1991 eruption of Pinatubo volcano in the Philippines, which also caused global cooling, and the volcanic explosion index (VEI) is thought to be around 5-6.
2. Eruption that was not predicted or warned in advance
The islands of Hunga Tonga and Hunga Ha’apai are both separate islands at the edge of a huge submarine caldera crater (1,800 m high and 20 km wide), and although they are known to have been active about 1,000 years ago, they were quiet volcanoes until a major eruption occurred in 2009.
Then another eruption occurred in 2014-2015, and the land was united to form the island of Hunga Tonga-Funga Ha’apai (HTHH). However, although there were some who pointed out the possibility of activity, the island was basically considered to be normally quite quiet and so on.
In December 2021, prior to the HTHH eruption, HTHH erupted again. In December 2021, prior to the HTHH eruption, HTHH erupted again, this time to a height of about 16 km, but experts who visited the site afterwards said that they saw nothing unusual.
The HTHH eruption was not predicted or warned of such a large-scale eruption.
3. There are many things that we do not understand with our current knowledge
The cause of the tsunami that struck Japan is still unclear, and its mechanism has not been elucidated. Although it is comparable to the Pinatubo eruption, its behavior is very different from that of the Pinatubo eruption. Yujiro Suzuki, associate professor of volcanic physics at the Earthquake Research Institute of the University of Tokyo, analyzed the spread of the plume based on images taken by satellites and compared it to simulations of the volume of plumes from Pinatubo and other volcanoes, estimating that the volume of plumes per second is about three times that of Pinatubo. Associate Professor Suzuki said, “I’ve never seen a plume expand at such a rate before, and I’m very surprised.” I am very surprised. On the other hand, the amount of volcanic ash and pumice, as well as sulfur dioxide, which is considered to be the cause of climate change, is low, and it is predicted that climate change will be avoided, but it is not clear why the amount of sulfur dioxide is low.
The HTHH eruption is also a submarine volcano, and there is much less knowledge about it than about land volcanoes, so there is much we do not know. Janine Krippner, a volcanologist at the Smithsonian Institution in the U.S., says, “At this point, we have far more questions than we know,” but in any case, with the current level of science and technology, it is impossible to accurately understand all the events and phenomena associated with volcanic eruptions. In any case, with the current level of science and technology, it is impossible to accurately understand all the events and phenomena associated with volcanic eruptions, and it has become clear once again that predicting volcanic events is extremely difficult.
4. Similarities between Japan and Tonga, and the possibility of a large-scale submarine eruption in Japan Although the HTHH eruption is comparable to the Pinatubo eruption, which is said to be the largest eruption in the 20th century, it is not a rare phenomenon, as Japan has experienced many eruptions of a larger scale than this in the past. Japan is the world’s largest volcanic country, with about 7% of all active volcanoes (volcanoes that have erupted within the past 10,000 years), and 111 of them. As an island nation surrounded by the sea on all sides, about one-third of the active volcanoes are located in the Izu-Ogasawara Islands and the Nansei Islands. Professor Yoshiyuki Tatsumi of Kobe University points out the similarities between the geography of Tonga and the Japanese archipelago, especially the Izu-Ogasawara and Mariana Islands, and suggests that eruptions like the HTHH eruption could occur in Japan in the future. It is still fresh in our minds that the August 2021 eruption of Fukutoku Okanoba, a submarine volcano, caused a great deal of pumice to drift to the Japanese archipelago, which caused tension among those involved in nuclear power plants, but this was a much smaller eruption than the HTHH eruption. In recent years, it has become clear that a huge lava dome has formed in the Onikkai Caldera, which had a catastrophic eruption about 7,300 years ago, but this eruption is much larger than the HTHH eruption. There is no other way to say that we do not know.
5. Errors in volcanic impact assessment to date
(1) The HTHH eruption once again demonstrated the limitations of current volcanology and also showed that disasters caused by volcanic events are real and cannot be ignored.
However, the volcanic impact assessment conducted by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) as part of its determination of compliance with the new regulatory standards has, in effect, been trivialized as if a massive eruption (an eruption in which underground magma erupts to the surface at once, resulting in a massive pyroclastic flow with an eruption volume of more than tens of km3) could not occur. The March 7, 2018 “Basic Concept on ‘Evaluation of Volcanic Activity with Volcanic Events that Cannot be Designed for’ in the Volcanic Impact Assessment Guide for Nuclear Power Plants” (hereinafter referred to as the “Basic Concept on Mega Eruptions”) embodies this concept, and the injustice of this concept was explained by the Liaison Committee in its March 13, 2018 report. However, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) has since issued a report on this issue.
However, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) not only ignored our statement, but also revised the Volcanic Impact Assessment Guide on December 18, 2019, and formally incorporated the “Basic Concept on Massive Eruptions” into the Guide.
(2) The revised Volcanic Impact Assessment Guide acknowledges that the process leading to a major eruption is not fully understood and that a major eruption would cause serious and severe damage to a wide area if it were to occur. The risk is acceptable if (1) the current activity is not considered imminent (non-imminent), and (2) there is no scientifically reasonable concrete evidence for the possibility of a major eruption during the operational period (lack of concrete evidence) (Section 4.1(2)).
However, even catastrophic eruptions of VEI 7, which are even larger than giant eruptions, have occurred since prehistoric times, such as the eruptions of Mount Paektu (around 960) and Tambora (1815), and the Volcano Guide, which relies on the scientifically totally meaningless fact of whether there have been any observed cases since prehistoric times in areas around Japan, is wrong in its assumptions.
Since the process leading to an eruption has not been fully elucidated, it is difficult to show the imminence of (1) and the concrete evidence for (2), and in effect, the risk of a huge eruption is being ignored (there have been no cases in which the risk of a huge eruption has been considered).
(3) What is more problematic is that the framework seems to exclude even large eruptions that do not lead to large eruptions.
The Revised Volcanological Guide states that if a volcano has had a major eruption in the past and the possibility of a major eruption is judged to be sufficiently small, the largest eruption since the last major eruption should be assumed (Section 4.1(3)).
For example, Aso Caldera has had four catastrophic eruptions (ejecta volume of over 100 km3) in the past, but the largest eruption since the last catastrophic Aso 4 eruption was the Kusasenrigahama pumice eruption (ejecta volume of about 2 km3), which is not even a huge eruption.
(4) As mentioned above, the HTHH eruption may be a VEI6 class eruption, and we cannot deny the possibility that it will continue to be active and develop into a huge eruption. What we learned from this eruption is that large-scale eruptions can occur in Japan, and therefore we should not ignore the risk of such eruptions, and that there are many things we do not know with the current level of volcanology. Trying to downplay and trivialize the risk of a large-scale eruption is not a “socially accepted idea,” but merely a bias or desire of those who do not want to shut down nuclear power plants. The Nuclear Regulation Authority (NRA), whose mission is to protect the safety of citizens from nuclear disasters, should not be allowed to endanger the lives and bodies of many people living in the vicinity of nuclear power plants over a wide area based on such assumptions and wishes. If there were no nuclear power plants in the vicinity of a volcano, even if an eruption occurred, as in the case of the Pinatubo eruption, recovery and reconstruction would be possible within a few years to a decade. The presence of a nuclear power plant will cause the spread of radioactive materials, making the area around the plant uninhabitable for a long time. Without bringing up the rights of future generations or intergenerational ethics, it is hard to imagine that the law even permits the operation of nuclear power plants without taking such risks into consideration.
(5) Furthermore, in the past volcanic impact assessments, only a cursory assessment of the effects of submarine volcanoes has been made, but the August 2021 eruption of the Fukutoku Okanoba submarine volcano and the recent HTHH eruption have made it clear that there are too many things about the behavior of submarine volcanoes that are not understood by current science. It has become clear that there are too many things we don’t know about the behavior of underwater volcanoes. Rather than ignoring what science does not understand in this regard, it is necessary to thoroughly conduct conservative assessments to ensure the safety of nuclear power plants even in the event of unforeseen events.
6 The Nuclear Regulatory Commission should completely review the method of volcanic impact assessment and other aspects.
In this way, the HTHH eruption has shown how the volcanic impact assessment has been based on wrong criteria.
The government’s accident investigation report on the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant accident (TEPCO Fukushima Nuclear Accident Independent Investigation and Verification Commission) proposes a shift in risk perception, stating that before the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear accident, “natural phenomena can cause events that exceed the current state of academic knowledge, and the traditional precautionary approach of preparing for such extremely rare events must always be considered in parallel.
In other words, the report recommends that “Japan should bear in mind that it is a ‘disaster-prone country’ that has been struck by various natural disasters since ancient times, and humbly confront the threats of the natural world and the scale and time scale of tectonic movements. In the case of accidents and disasters that cause enormous damage over a wide area, such as the accident at the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant, it is necessary to establish a new concept of disaster prevention that requires appropriate safety and disaster prevention measures to be taken regardless of the probability of occurrence, both in government and business” (pp. 412-413 of the Final Report).
The current volcano guide clearly contradicts these recommendations. The Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) should take the opportunity of the HTHH eruption to completely review the methods of volcanic impact assessment, etc., based on the conservative assumption that a large-scale eruption will actually occur, correctly taking into account the indefiniteness of science and the limitations of current volcanology.
http://www.datsugenpatsu.org/bengodan/news/22-2-15/?fbclid=IwAR2K3y4tGW-_XTc0Vc7Sxkuq4Tm-B3YDIOeEH-EZhuFBq9Ne5nEaz3J1giA
EU plan to call nuclear power ”green”, but for Asia, nuclear’s outlook is poor
EU plans to label natural gas and nuclear ‘green’ ‘reflect Asia position’ Pinsent Masons, OUT-LAW NEWS | 11 Feb 2022 John Yeap john.yeap@pinsentmasons.com The EU executive arm the European Commission has presented a plan to classify some gas and nuclear power as “transitional” green investments.
Known as the EU Taxonomy Complementary Climate Delegated Act, the plan aims to define sustainable investment to guide spending on projects in line with EU’s climate goal to become climate neutral by 2050. The Commission said it would include certain gas and nuclear power activities as ‘transitional activities’.
………….. “Nuclear involves different considerations as its role in power generation in Asia has to date been and will likely continue to be limited. The small landmass of several nations as well as geological considerations of earthquake, volcanoes and tsunamis will likely inhibit the growth of nuclear in nations not currently deploying nuclear. Where nuclear is currently deployed in the region, its continued growth will continue to be influenced by policy, which remains generally negative to its continued use,” he said.
“China has the largest fleet of nuclear power plants in the region and with its advancing domestic technologies, may continue to champion nuclear power generation…….
…… Nuclear power must meet strict nuclear and environmental safety requirements, and natural gas must contribute to the transition from coal to renewables – investment must meet strict conditions and not squeeze out investment in renewables.
Nuclear-related activities classified as ‘sustainable’ under the Act include advanced technologies with closed fuel cycles; new nuclear power plant projects for energy generation, which will be using best-available existing technologies, will be recognised until the date of approval of construction permit in 2045; and modifications and upgrades of existing nuclear facilities for the purposes of lifetime extension will be recognised until the date of approval by competent authority in 2040.
……… The College of Commissioners has reached political agreement on the text of the Act, which will be formally adopted once translations are available in all EU languages, a statement by the Commission said.https://www.pinsentmasons.com/out-law/news/eu-plans-label-natural-gas-nuclear-green-reflect-asia-position
Proposed referendum ordinance to question the pros and cons of nuclear power plant restart: Mayor Kamisada submits opposing opinion
February 8, 2022
An extraordinary meeting of the city council of Matsue City was held today to discuss a draft referendum ordinance on the pros and cons of restarting the Unit 2 reactor of the Shimane Nuclear Power Plant.
A citizens’ group in Matsue City collected more than 11,000 signatures to request the enactment of a referendum ordinance on the pros and cons of restarting the Unit 2 reactor of the Shimane Nuclear Power Plant, and on the 31st of last month, they directly requested Mayor Kamisada to enact the ordinance.
On the 8th, an extraordinary meeting of the city council of Matsue City was held, and Mayor Kamisada submitted a draft ordinance with an opposing opinion, stating, “The most appropriate way to restart the nuclear power plant is not through a referendum, but through responsible discussions by the mayor and city council members, who have been entrusted by the citizens.
The extraordinary city council meeting of Matsue City will be held on March 9 to hear opinions from citizens’ groups, and on March 15, the last day of the meeting, the proposed ordinance will be voted on.
Yumiko Okazaki, co-chair of a citizens’ group that attended the council meeting, said, “I think that the lives and safety of citizens should be the top priority when restarting nuclear power plants. As the mayor of a municipality where a nuclear power plant is located, I would like him to make it a prerequisite to face the concerns and anxieties of the citizens.
https://www3.nhk.or.jp/lnews/matsue/20220208/4030011494.html?fbclid=IwAR2eyipGnCls3dHbqJJn0sPcRXz_rui4yXrb-bNo7Rn7p3nz6_vC6aaG8hI
India’s Nuclear Weapons Could Kill Millions Of People- a matter of pride?

What’s a few million dead. compared to national pride?
India’s Nuclear Weapons Could Kill Millions Of People, Caleb Larson, 7 Feb 22, India might be the nuclear weapons state many military analysts forget about. Nonetheless, New Delhi could start a nuclear war within just mere minutes: India’s indigenously developed technology—and a lot of Russian hardware and help—all keep Pakistan and China at bay.
No First Use. An NFU policy essentially constitutes a promise, backed by a survivable nuclear arsenal, to only use nuclear weapons in response to a nuclear attack,” explained a Carnegie publication. “The logic is simple and effective: you don’t nuke me, and I won’t nuke you. India and China both have declared no-first-use policies, whereas Pakistan and the United States, among others, do not rule out the first use of nuclear weapons in a conflict.”
Despite India’s formidable nuclear arsenal, India had since 2003 maintained it will not use said weapons of mass destruction first, but strictly in a retaliatory manner for deterrence.
However, 2019, India called their no first use policy into question when Indian Defense Minister Rajnath Singh said that “Till today, our nuclear policy is ‘no first use’. What happens in future depends on the circumstances.” This curious statement is perhaps an example of deliberate strategic ambiguity.
Triad
India maintains a nuclear triad—that is a three-pronged nuclear weapon delivery system that utilizes a diverse array of means for delivering nuclear payload on target. New Delhi has air-launched nuclear missiles, land-based nuclear missiles, and most recently submarine-launched missiles………………. https://www.19fortyfive.com/2022/02/indias-nuclear-weapons-could-kill-millions-of-people/
Russia, China concerned over Japan’s plans to dump Fukushima radioactive wate
Russia, China concerned over Japan’s plans to dump Fukushima radioactive water — statement, BEIJING, February 4. /TASS/. Russia and China are concerned over Japan’s plans to dump contaminated water from the wrecked Fukushima nuclear power plant into the ocean, both countries said in a joint statement on Friday.
“Japan’s plans to release nuclear contaminated water from the destroyed Fukushima nuclear plant into the ocean and the potential environmental impact of such actions are of deep concern to the sides,” the statement reads.
In this regard, Moscow and Beijing emphasized that “the disposal of nuclear contaminated water should be handled with responsibility” and carried out in a proper manner based on arrangements between the Japanese side, neighboring states and international organizations………..
At present, over 1.25 million tonnes of water are being stored in steel tanks on the territory of the accident-hit power plant. The water has reportedly been purified of all harmful radioactive substances except for tritium, as there is no technology to rid the water of it. The Japanese government officially permitted to release a significant amount of Fukushima-1 water into the ocean. The water is expected to be dumped into the ocean gradually in small amounts over 30 years. The International Atomic Energy Agency has already announced that it will control this process on a permanent basis…………….
Tokyo Electric Power (TEPCO) specialists constantly pump away this water and put it into special steel reservoirs located on the plant’s territory. However, more than a thousand of them have already been piled up there. The space for these tanks is running out and the limit may be reached already in the summer of 2022. About 140 tonnes of specially treated water are being pumped into them daily. As the Japanese side says, the liquid will be further treated to reduce the amount of tritium before its release into the ocean. https://tass.com/world/1398125
Japan to renew subsidies for plutonium nuclear recycling
Ministry to resume subsidies for stalled pluthermal plan https://www.asahi.com/ajw/articles/14526390
By JUNICHIRO NAGASAKI/ Staff Writer February 2, 2022 The economy ministry plans to bring back its subsidy program for areas that host pluthermal generation facilities in an attempt to break the logjam in the nuclear fuel recycling program.
The funds will be offered by the end of fiscal 2022.
The pluthermal program is part of the government’s nuclear fuel cycle policy, in which plutonium extracted from spent nuclear fuel produced at power plants in Japan is processed into plutonium-uranium mixed oxide (MOX) fuel and reused at reactors.
The Federation of Electric Power Companies of Japan plans to start pluthermal power production at 12 or more reactors by fiscal 2030.
But the technology has been in service at only four reactors: the No. 3 and No. 4 reactors in Kansai Electric Power Co.’s Takahama plant in Fukui Prefecture; the No. 3 reactor of Shikoku Electric Power Co.’s Ikata plant in Ehime Prefecture; and the No. 3 reactor of Kyushu Electric Power Co.’s Genkai plant in Saga Prefecture.
By distributing the local-revitalization subsidies, the ministry hopes to accelerate the formation of regional agreements on the fuel cycle project.
A reprocessing facility operated by Japan Nuclear Fuel Ltd. in Aomori Prefecture to recover plutonium is scheduled for completion in the first half of fiscal 2022, but the treatment plant cannot be put in full operation unless pluthermal generation spreads.
Unable to expand the use of MOX fuel, Japan now has 46 tons of plutonium stuck in storage, which has raised international concerns over its potential use in nuclear weapons.
Previously, prefectural governments that had agreed by fiscal 2008 to join the pluthermal circle could receive up to 6 billion yen ($52.4 million) in subsidies. Those that agreed by fiscal 2014 were eligible for a maximum of 3 billion yen in subsidies.
Eight prefectures, including Fukui, Ehime and Saga, have been receiving the subsidies. But currently there are no similar funding mechanisms for local governments under the pluthermal plan.
The economy ministry plans to incorporate a new system to finance prefectures with reactors that have not benefited from past subsidy programs.
Reactors at Japan Atomic Power Co.’s Tokai No. 2 nuclear power plant in Ibaraki Prefecture and elsewhere are expected to be eligible.
Although Chubu Electric Power Co.’s Hamaoka power plant in Shizuoka Prefecture and Chugoku Electric Power Co.’s Shimane plant in Shimane Prefecture are included on the list for past subsidies, it is unclear when they can restart operations because of difficulties in passing the Nuclear Regulation Authority’s screening and gaining consent from residents near the plants.
North Korea, Perpetual Victim of the US Military-Industrial Complex
North Korea, Perpetual Victim of the US Military-Industrial Complex. https://www.indepthnews.net/index.php/armaments/nuclear-weapons/5048-north-korea-perpetual-victim-of-the-us-military-industrial-complex
Viewpoint by Alice Slater 1 Feb 22, The writer is a Member of the Board of Directors of World BEYOND War. She is also the UN NGO Representative of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation. www.warbeyondwar.org
NEW YORK (IDN) — It seems hard to believe that in these possible end times in the midst of a global pandemic with an endless succession of catastrophic climate disasters and thousands of nuclear weapons poised and pointed in the US and Russia, ready to destroy life on earth, we are beset by a bought, corrupted mainstream media that assaults us with the “wrongdoings” of Russia and China, and most recently North Korea, with barely a mention in their assaultive reporting of how the US might be a cause.
Nor do they report on the many remedies that have been rejected by the United States in its drive for global domination. Instead of promoting the critical opportunities, we must now seize—all nations and peoples of the world—to work cooperatively to save Mother Earth, the western news reports serve up a steady daily diet of the harm that could be inflicted upon the ‘innocent’ United States, echoing shades of the dreadful 1950s McCarthy Era in a new Cold War II and maybe World War III.
North Korea is a case in point. Recent reports in The New York Times noted a series of renewed missile tests by North Korea and reported that for the first time, a veto in the UN Security by Russia and China blocked additional harsh sanctions proposed by the United States on that poor, struggling nation.
In its report, the Times quoted John Delury, professor of history at Yonsei University, South Korea as saying “no amount of sanctions could create the pressures that Covid-19 created in the past two years. Yet do we see North Korea begging and saying, ‘take our weapons and give us some aid’…the North Koreans will eat grass“, he said, rather than give up their nuclear weapons.
But this callous evaluation ignores the long, sorry history of failed negotiations between the US and North Korea.
North Korea has been testing its missiles and developing nuclear weapons since it walked out of the Non-Proliferation Treaty in 1973 claiming that the United States had singled it out as a target of a pre-emptive nuclear attack and had threatened it with a blockade and military punishment.
It now has about 40 to 50 nuclear weapons of the 14,000 nuclear weapons on the planet today, with 13,000 of them in the US and Russia, and the remainder in China, UK, France, India, Pakistan, and Israel.
North Korea was the only nuclear-armed country to vote in the UN Committee for Disarmament in favor of negotiations to go forward on the Treaty for the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons. At that historic meeting where the nations of the world voted 122 in favour of negotiations on a new treaty to ban the bomb, India, China, and Pakistan abstained and the US, Russia, UK, France, Israel and all the states under the US nuclear umbrella voted No.
This unique affirmative vote of North Korea, trying to get the world’s attention for ending the isolation and punishment it has suffered over the years, went totally unreported in the press.
During the negotiations with Trump and South Korea, in 2019 North Korea was willing to agree to forego its nuclear bomb program if it could get a peace treaty instead of the truce it has been living under since 1953, faced with 38,000 US troops situated near its border conducting war games with South Korea, not to mention the cruel and killing sanctions that deny food, fuel, medications to its people.
Trump in his desire to look good and get a deal offered to withdraw 10,000 of the US troops stationed there all these years. Both the Democrats and Republicans in Congress blocked him from making that deal, Biden never followed up, and Kim is waving his missiles again to get our attention.
North Korea’s demands for an agreement to eliminate their nuclear weapons are to end the truce and sign a peace treaty, finally ending the Korean War after nearly 70 years, stop the war games on its borders, and lift the punishing sanctions that are so destructive to the health and wellbeing of its people.
This would finally allow free travel back and forth from the US and South Korea that has been so heartbreaking for separated families that haven’t been able to cross the line to visit and see relatives and friends for decades. [IDN-InDepthNews – 31 January 2022]
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