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Japanese nuclear disaster

Update at 5 p.m. ET: Radiation Rises At Nuclear Plant.

Safety officials say that radiation levels are now 1,000 times above normal at a reactor at Japan's Fukushima nuclear power plant, according to Kyodo News.

Japan's nuclear safety agency is extending the evacuation zone around the plant. The agency has also declared its first-ever state of emergency
 
Update at 5 p.m. ET: Radiation Rises At Nuclear Plant.

Safety officials say that radiation levels are now 1,000 times above normal at a reactor at Japan's Fukushima nuclear power plant, according to Kyodo News.

Japan's nuclear safety agency is extending the evacuation zone around the plant. The agency has also declared its first-ever state of emergency

did they flood the plant with sea water already?
 
did they flood the plant with sea water already?

Not the plant, the reactors. They are filling reactor 1 & 3 with sea water with help of fire-water pumps since this afternoon. They have started the same with reactor 2 also recently at Fukushima.

However, there is a low level emergency declared at one more pwer plant (other then Fukushima). Not much news coming through though for the second location.
 
Olli Heinonen, a former deputy head of the IAEA, who left last year, has been talking to the FT’s James Blitz. Logistically, he said, this is a hugely demanding situation.

“The very fact that you have engineers combating problems at a number of reactors simultaneously means this is already a bigger crisis than the one at Three Mile Island [in 1979]. It is certainly the most serious since Chernobyl [in 1986].”
 
There is no problem with the cooling process at Tohoku Electric Power Co’s Onagawa nuclear power plant, Japan’s nuclear safety agency said. A low-level state of emergency was declared at that plant earlier. The agency said a rise in radiation levels there was due to leakage at another plant in a neighbouring prefecture.
 
A former nuclear power plant designer has said Japan is facing an extremely grave crisis and called on the government to release more information, which he said was being suppressed. Masashi Goto told a news conference in Tokyo that one of the reactors at the Fukushima-Daiichi plant was "highly unstable", and that if there was a meltdown the "consequences would be tremendous". He said such an event might be very likely indeed. So far, the government has said a meltdown would not lead to a sizeable leak of radioactive materials.
 
A pump within the cooling system of one of the reactors at the Tokai nuclear power plant has stopped working, according to the Kyodo news agency. The plant is located in the Naka district of the central prefecture of Ibaraki, and is operated by the Japan Atomic Power Company.

The 1,100MW Tokai plant, about 120km (75 miles) north of Tokyo, was automatically shut down after Friday's earthquake.

This is a new development.
 
6.17pm GMT: More details are beginning to emerge about the breakdown of one of two cooling systems pumps at Tokai No. 2 nuclear power plant in the village of Tokai, Ibaraki prefecture.

The Japan Times says that a report submitted to the Ibaraki prefecture government has confirmed that one of two pumps used to cool the water of a suppression pool for the nuclear reactor has stopped working. The other pump is still working though, and Japan Atomic Power has said the reactor core is being cooled without any problem.
 
Japan's nuclear fears intensify at two Fukushima power stations
Authorities scramble to control overheating reactors at one plant, as state of emergency declared at second nearby

Ian Sample, Science correspondent guardian.co.uk,
Sunday 13 March 2011 19.39 GMT

Fears of a major nuclear accident in Japan have intensified as authorities scramble to bring under control several overheating reactors at one power station, and declared a state of emergency at another, where radiation levels soared above normal limits.

Workers at the Fukushima 1 nuclear power plant in the north-east of the country pumped seawater into three reactors in a last-ditch attempt to make them safe after emergency cooling systems failed to stabilise the radioactive cores.

More than 200,000 people were evacuated as officials imposed a 20km exclusion zone around the power station and a 10km zone surrounding the Fukushima 2 power plant nearby. Japanese officials told the International Atomic Energy Agency they would distribute potassium iodide pills as a precaution against an increased risk of thyroid cancer from radiation.

The most urgent crisis centred on Fukushima 1, where officials were braced for an explosion similar to one that blew the roof off the building that housed reactor 1 yesterday morning, after hydrogen escaped from the reactor as engineers vented steam from the pressurised vessel.

The failure of the cooling system caused uranium fuel rods to overheat and split the cooling water into hydrogen and oxygen. The hydrogen exploded, devastating the building, but the containment vessel around the reactor was undamaged, Japan's chief cabinet secretary, Yukio Edano, said.

Desperate engineers were forced to vent steam from two other reactors at the power station before pumping in seawater, despite the risk of triggering further explosions.

Edano said a partial meltdown of fuel rods in reactor 1 was possible and that engineers were pumping seawater into the others to prevent the same happening there. He said the fuel rods in reactor 3 might be deformed, but a meltdown was unlikely. Reactor 3 uses a mixed-oxide fuel which contains plutonium, but the plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Company (Tepco) said this did not present unusual problems.

"The use of seawater means they have run out of options," said David Lochbaum, director of the Union of Concerned Scientists nuclear safety project.

Two of three diesel generators used to drive cooling pumps stopped working at the Tokai 2 nuclear power plant, 75 miles north of Tokyo in Ibaraki prefecture.

The intentional release of steam from the nuclear reactors caused levels of radiation around the Fukushima 1 power station. Levels measured at the power station boundary reached 500 microsieverts an hour, a quarter of the dose the general population receives from natural background radiation in a year.

Tepco officials said radiation around the Fukushima 1 station had risen above the safety limit, but it did not mean an "immediate threat" to human health.

The radioactive substances released from the site suggest at least part of the core in reactor 1 has broken down. Japan's nuclear and industrial safety agency confirmed that radioactive caesium-137 and iodine-131 had been detected in the vicinity of the Fukushima power station. These radioactive isotopes are produced by fission reactions inside the core and can only have contaminated the cooling water if fuel rods overheated and melted the cladding surrounding them.

A state of emergency was declared at the Onagawa nuclear plant north of Sendai after radiation rose to 400 times the usual level, but Japanese officials said the increase was due to radiation from the Fukushima plant and was not a risk to health. The reactors at Onagawa were said to be under control.

Paddy Regan, a nuclear physicist at Surrey University, said it could take several days to cool the reactors and make them safe. If any of the reactors continued to heat up, the core could go into complete meltdown. This raises the danger of a major release of radiation if the molten core breaches the containment vessel.

The sheer scale of the crisis in Japan has stretched emergency services to breaking point and prompted criticism that authorities were ill-prepared for a natural disaster that struck first with an earthquake and next with a devastating tsunami.

The nuclear power stations shut down automatically when Friday's earthquake rocked the region, but emergency generators crucial for cooling the reactors were knocked out in the following tsunami. The decision to wait until Sunday before filling two of the reactors with seawater has been criticised as a potentially serious delay.

An anti-nuclear energy group in Japan said the government and industry should have foreseen the danger. "A nuclear disaster which the promoters of nuclear power in Japan said wouldn't happen is in progress," the Citizens' Nuclear Information Centre said. "It is occurring as a result of an earthquake that they said would not happen."
 
There are some unconfirmed reports of another explosion at reactor #3. Could be a pressure release.
 
• Nuclear officials confirm hydrogen explosion at Unit 3 of Fukushima Dai-ichi plant; six injured
• Japanese media say 2,000 bodies found in two coastal locations in Miyagi prefecture
• Tsunami warning appears to have been false alarm
 
Tokyo Electric Power Company, which runs the Fukushima Dai-Ichi plant, says radiation levels at the unit are well below the legal limits following this morning's hydrogen explosion. Radiation at Unit 3 measured 10.65 microsieverts; operators must inform the government if a level of 500 microsieverts is reached.

Health experts have stressed that the risk from radiation appears low. Reuters has spoken to the Gregory Hartl of the World Health Organisation, who told the agency:


"At this moment it appears to be the case that the public health risk is probably quite low. We understand radiation that has escaped from the plant is very small in amount."

That has not stopped people from worrying. Singaporean authorities have announced they will test imported Japanese produce for potential radiation "as a precautionary measure".


---------- Post added at 09:15 AM ---------- Previous post was at 09:14 AM ----------

According to a piece in the New York Times, a US aircraft carrier, Ronald Reagan, passed through a radioactive cloud from the Japan nuclear reactors. It is reported that the crew on deck received a month's worth of radiation in an hour.

There is no indication any of the personnel have experienced ill effects from the exposure, officials said
 
:angry: Damn Japanese!
Why nuclear power plant built in the Seaside? Do you want to destroy the Western Pacific?

God forbid if another Chernobyl happens in Japan, the coriolis effect will work in Japan's favor as it will blow all the radioactive material to the East into the Pacific ocean, which would lessen the impact on the population.
 
10.02am GMT: The No 2 reactor at the Fukushima Dai-Ichi plant has lost all its cooling capacity, according to Japan's Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency.

NHK World is reporting that Tokyo Electric Power Company, which owns the plant, has notified the agency of an emergency at the No 2 reactor.

This is the second emergency notice for the reactor. The utility firm told the agency shortly after the quake on Friday that the reactor's emergency cooling power system had failed.

Since then, the company tried to cool the reactor by circulating water by steam power, instead of electricity. But an attempt to lower the temperature inside the vessel that houses the reactor did not work well.

Fears of a hydrogen explosion at the vessel housing building are growing as the water level of the reactor is falling. A reaction with the steam and exposed fuel rods generates a large amount of hydrogen.
 
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