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Monday, March 21, 2011

Japan Continues Efforts to Cool Crippled Reactors | Asia | English

Japan Continues Efforts to Cool Crippled Reactors | Asia | English

Smoke is seen coming from the area of the No. 3 reactor of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in Tomioka, Fukushima Prefecture in northeastern Japan on Mar 21 2011
Photo: REUTERS

Smoke is seen coming from the area of the No. 3 reactor of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in Tomioka, Fukushima Prefecture in northeastern Japan on Mar 21 2011

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Japan says it may be several more days before power is restored to the reactor for which a core containment vessel may have been damaged. It is one of three reactors at the Fukushima-1 nuclear power plant with cores that, officials say, may have partially melted. Seawater has been pumped into them to prevent the fuel from being exposed.

The Tokyo Electric Power Company says external lines have been re-connected to the crippled facility. That will allow plant operators to again properly monitor radiation levels, illuminate control rooms and stabilize the cooling process.

Hidehiko Nishiyama, the deputy director general of Japan's Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency, says stabilizing the Number-2 reactor is going to take some time.

Nishiyama says the electrical wiring has failed on the motor of the pump that circulates water in the pool for the used fuel rods. Replacement parts, he says, are being ordered.

For now, firefighters taking turns to avoid excessive radiation exposure are continuing to spray water on fuel pools at reactors where electricity has not been restored.

Scientists say the Number-3 reactor, containing mixed oxide fuel, presents the most severe risk among all of the six reactors. It would be expected to emit highly toxic plutonium in the event of a meltdown.

Another serious challenge is the Number-4 reactor. Its fuel was not in the reactor core at the time of the March 11 earthquake. Its fresher fuel rods - hotter in terms of radiation - are exposed because the roof of the reactor building was blown off in an explosion.

A tsunami triggered by the magnitude 9.0 earthquake destroyed the nuclear plant's cooling facilities.

Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan had planned to make a quick trip Monday to one of the communities hard hit by the natural disaster, as well as visit a base for workers of the nuclear plant. But officials say the helicopter flight was canceled because of bad weather.

The pounding rain also hampered search and relief efforts in the devastated Tohoku region. It also prompted unusual warnings from local government officials, advising people to avoid exposure to rain and to wipe themselves dry if they get wet.

Japanese authorities say while there are elevated levels of radiation in the air, soil and water, there is no immediate danger to human health.

Sunday, March 20, 2011

Nuclear officials prepare to vent radioactive gas from crippled Japanese reactor - The Washington Post

Nuclear officials prepare to vent radioactive gas from crippled Japanese reactor - The Washington Post

FUKUSHIMA, Japan — Japan prepared another risky venting of radioactive gas to relieve a new spike in pressure in one of its troubled nuclear reactors Sunday, a setback in efforts to bring the crippled, leaking plant under control just after some signs of improvement.

  • In this image taken from footage released by the Japan Defense Ministry, a fire engine from the Japan Self-Defense Forces sprays water toward Unit 3 of the troubled Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear complex as seen from another military vehicle on Friday, March 18, 2011. In the backgrounds is Unit 4. Military fire trucks sprayed the reactor units Friday for a second day, with tons of water arching over the facility in attempts to prevent the fuel from overheating and emitting dangerous levels of radiation. (AP Photo/Japan Defense Ministry) EDITORIAL USE ONLY ( The Associated Press )
  • In this image taken from footage released by the Japan Defense Ministry, Japan Self-Defense Forces personnel talk before starting to spray water toward the Unit 3 of the troubled Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear complex, Okumamachi, northeastern Japan, on Friday, March 18, 2011. Military fire trucks sprayed the reactor units Friday for a second day, with tons of water arching over the facility in attempts to prevent the fuel from overheating and emitting dangerous levels of radiation. (AP Photo/Japan Defense Ministry) EDITORIAL USE ONLY ( The Associated Press )
  • In this image taken from footage released by the Japan Defense Ministry, a fire engine from the Japan Self-Defense Forces sprays water toward Unit 3 of the troubled Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear complex on Friday, March 18, 2011. In the backgrounds is Unit 4. Military fire trucks sprayed the reactor units Friday for a second day, with tons of water arching over the facility in attempts to prevent the fuel from overheating and emitting dangerous levels of radiation. (AP Photo/Japan Defense Ministry) EDITORIAL USE ONLY ( The Associated Press )
  • In this image taken from a footage released by the Japan Defense Ministry, Unit 3 reactor, left, is seen damaged by explosions at the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear complex just before military fire trucks sprayed the reactor units at Okumamachi, northeastern Japan, on Friday, March 18, 2011. At right is Unit 4 reactor. Military fire trucks sprayed the reactor units Friday for a second day, with tons of water arching over the facility in attempts to prevent the fuel from overheating and emitting dangerous levels of radiation. (AP Photo/Japan Defense Ministry) EDITORIAL USE ONLY ( The Associated Press )


/ The Associated Press - CORRECTS CITY - Japan’s Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano speaks at a news conference at Prime Minister’s official residence in Tokyo Saturday afternoon, March 19, 2011. Edano said radiation levels in spinach and milk from farms near the tsunami-crippled Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear complex exceeded government safety limits, even though they represented no immediate health risk. (AP Photo/Kyodo News) JAPAN OUT, MANDATORY CREDIT, NO LICENSING IN CHINA, HONG KONG, JAPAN, SOUTH KOREA AND FRANCE

The planned release into the air of what officials said would be a densely radioactive cloud comes as traces of radiation are turning up well beyond the leaking Fukushima Dai-ichi plant after its cooling systems were knocked by the massive March 11 quake and tsunami on Japan’s northeast coast.

Radiation has seeped into the food supply, with spinach and milk from as far as 75 miles (120 kilometers) showing levels of iodine in excess of safety limits. Minuscule amounts are being found in tap water in Tokyo and rainfall and dust over a wider area. Taiwan even reported receiving a batch of contaminated fava beans imported from Japan.

“I’m worried, really worried,” said Mayumi Mizutani, a 58-year-old Tokyo resident shopping for bottled water at a neighborhood supermarket out of concern for her visiting 2-year-old grandchild. “We’re afraid because it’s possible our grandchild could get cancer,” she said.

The rising pressure at one of the reactors in the tsunami-damaged nuclear complex dealt a setback to the government just as it claimed progress in a spiraling crisis that has compounded recovery from the catastrophic natural disasters. On Saturday, officials cited headway in reconnecting power supplies at two of the plant’s six reactors and in cooling other reactors and fuel storage pools by pouring water on them.

After appearing to have stabilized, the plant’s Unit 3 reactor became troublesome again Sunday.

Pressure rose inside the vessel that contains the reactor core, necessitating a tricky venting of the gases inside to relieve the buildup, officials with the nuclear safety and the plant’s operator said.

The venting is an “unavoidable measure to protect the containment vessel,” nuclear safety agency official Hidehiko Nishiyama told reporters. He warned that a larger amount of radiation would have to be released than when similar venting was done a week ago because more nuclear fuel has degraded since then.

Nishiyama said experts were hoping to filter the released gas to reduce radiation, otherwise safety agency officials said “dry venting” could release 100 times more iodine as well as the radioactive elements krypton and xenon.

Growing concerns about radiation add to the overwhelming chain of disasters Japan has struggled with since the 9.0-magnitude quake. The quake spawned a tsunami that ravaged the northeastern coast, killing more than 8,100 people, leaving 12,000 people missing, and displacing another 452,000, who are living in shelters.

Fuel, food and water remain scarce for a 10th day in the disaster. The government in recent days have acknowledged being caught ill-prepared by an enormous disaster that the prime minister has called the worst crisis since World War II and that required an immediate, full-scale response.

In the latest admission, another nuclear safety official said Sunday that the government only belatedly realized the need to give potassium iodide to those living within 12 miles (20 kilometers) of the nuclear complex.

The pills help reduce the chances of thyroid cancer, one of the diseases that may develop from radiation exposure. The official, Kazuma Yokota, said the explosion that occurred while venting the plant’s Unit 3 reactor last Sunday should have triggered the distribution. But the order only came three days later.

“We should have made this decision and announced it sooner,” Yokota told reporters at the emergency command center in the city of Fukushima. “It is true that we had not foreseen a disaster of these proportions. We had not practiced or trained for something this bad. We must admit that we were not fully prepared.”

Contamination of food and water compounds the government’s difficulties, heightening the broader public’s sense of dread about safety. Consumers in markets snapped up bottled water, shunned spinach from Ibaraki — the prefecture where the tainted spinach was found — and overall express concern about food safety.

Experts have said the amounts of iodine detected in milk, spinach and water pose no discernible risks to public health unless consumed in enormous quantities over a long period of time.

Drinking one liter of water with the iodine at Thursday’s levels is the equivalent of receiving one-eighty-eighth of the radiation from a chest X-ray, said Kazuma Yokota, a spokesman for the prefecture’s disaster response headquarters.

No contamination has been reported in Japan’s main food export — seafood — worth about $3.3 billion a year, less than 0.5 percent of its total exports. But the island of Taiwan, just to the south and a huge market for Japanese goods, said Sunday that radiation had been detected in a batch of Japanese peas but at levels too small to harm human health.

___

Yamaguchi reported from Tokyo, as did Associated Press writers Elaine Kurtenbach, Tim Sullivan, Joji Sakurai, and Jeff Donn.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Friday, March 18, 2011

Chernobyl-like burial Japan’s final option for N-plant - The Times of India

Chernobyl-like burial Japan’s final option for N-plant - The Times of India


TOKYO: Japanese engineers conceded on Friday that burying the quake-ravaged Fukushima nuclear plant in sand and concrete may be a last resort to prevent a catastrophic radiation release, the method used to seal huge leakages from Chernobyl in 1986 after a fire and explosion in the Ukrainian plant. It was the first time the facility operator had acknowledged burying the sprawling 40-year-old complex was possible, a sign that piecemeal actions such as dumping water from military helicopters or scrambling to restart cooling pumps may not work.

On Friday, Japan's nuclear safety agency rated the severity of the crisis to 5 from 4 on a 7-level international scale. The partial meltdown at Three Mile Island in US in 1979 rated 5, and the Chernobyl disaster was a 7. "That solution (Chernobyl) is in the back of our minds, but we are focused on cooling the reactors down," said Hidehiko Nishiyama of Japan's nuclear safety agency. Japanese authorities maintained that the cores at the six battered reactors at the Fukushima Daiichi power plant are likely to be safely contained.

The worry, they added, was about the cooling pools for spent fuel. By Sunday, the government expects to connect electricity to pumps for its worst damaged reactor No.3 — a focal point in the crisis because of its use of mixed oxides, or mox, containing both uranium and highly toxic plutonium. As of now, that seems a tall order. "It is not impossible to encase the reactors in concrete, but our priority is to try and cool them down first," a Tokyo Electric Power official said on Friday. So far, the authorities have failed to cool the pools, where normally water circulates continuously, keeping racks of spent nuclear fuel rods at a benign temperature. The quake threw the cooling systems out of gear and fresh efforts to restart power failed. Helicopters and water cannon trucks have dumped tonnes of water on the reactors, but the water in the pools continues to evaporate, leaving the rods to heat up.

Thursday, March 17, 2011

Radiation Spread Seen - Frantic Repairs Go On - NYTimes.com

Radiation Spread Seen - Frantic Repairs Go On - NYTimes.com WASHINGTON — The first readings from American data-collection flights over the stricken Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant in Japan show that the worst contamination has not spread beyond the 19-mile range of highest concern established by Japanese authorities.
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But another day of frantic efforts to cool nuclear fuel in the stricken reactors and the plant’s spent-fuel pools resulted in little or no progress, according to United States government officials.

Japanese officials said they would continue those efforts, but were also racing to restore electric power to the site to get equipment going again, leaving open the question of why that effort did not begin days ago, at the first signs that the critical backup cooling systems for the reactors had failed.

The data was collected by the Aerial Measurement System, among the most sophisticated devices rushed to Japan by the Obama administration in an effort to help contain a nuclear crisis that a top American nuclear official said Thursday could go on for weeks. Strapped onto a plane and a helicopter that the United States flew over the site, with Japanese permission, the equipment took measurements that showed harmful radiation in the immediate vicinity of the plant — a much heavier dose than the trace levels of radioactive particles that make up the atmospheric plume covering a much wider area.

While the findings were reassuring in the short term, the United States declined to back away from its warning to Americans to stay at least 50 miles from the plant, setting up a far larger perimeter than the Japanese government had established.

American officials said their biggest worry was that a frenetic series of efforts by the Japanese military to get water into some of the plant’s six reactors — including water cannons and firefighting helicopters that dropped water but appeared to largely miss their targets — showed few signs of working.

“This is something that will likely take some time to work through, possibly weeks, as eventually you remove the majority of the heat from the reactors and then the spent fuel pool,” said Gregory Jaczko, the chairman of the United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission, briefing reporters at the White House. “So it’s something that will be ongoing for some time.”

The effort by the Japanese to hook electric power back up to the plant did not begin until Thursday and was likely to take several days to complete — and even then it was unclear how the cooling systems, in reactor buildings battered by a tsunami and then torn apart by hydrogen explosions, would help end the crisis.

“What you are seeing are desperate efforts — just throwing everything at it in hopes something will work,” said one American official with long nuclear experience who would not speak for attribution. “Right now this is more prayer than plan.”

After a day in which American and Japanese officials gave radically different assessments of the danger from the nuclear plant, the two governments tried on Thursday to join forces.

Experts met in Tokyo to compare notes. The United States, with Japanese permission, began to put the intelligence-collection aircraft over the site, in hopes of gaining a view for Washington as well as its allies in Tokyo that did not rely on the announcements of officials from the Tokyo Electric Power Company, which operates Fukushima Daiichi.

American officials say they suspect that the company has consistently underestimated the risk and moved too slowly to contain the damage.

Aircraft normally used to monitor North Korea’s nuclear weapons activities — a Global Hawk drone and U-2 spy planes — were flying missions over the reactor, trying to help the Japanese government map out its response to the last week’s 9.0-magnitude earthquake, the tsunami that followed and now the nuclear disaster.

President Obama made an unscheduled stop at the Japanese Embassy to sign a condolence book, writing, “My heart goes out to the people of Japan during this enormous tragedy.” He added, “Because of the strength and wisdom of its people, we know that Japan will recover, and indeed will emerge stronger than ever.”

Later he appeared in the Rose Garden at the White House to offer continued American support for the earthquake and tsunami victims, and technical help at the nuclear site.

But before the recovery can begin, the nuclear plant must be brought under control. So American officials were fixated on the temperature readings inside the three reactors that had been operating until the earthquake shut them down, and at the spent fuel pools, looking for any signs that their high levels of heat were going down. If they are uncovered and exposed to air, the fuel rods in those pools heat up and can burst into flame, spewing radioactive elements.
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So far they saw no signs of dropping temperatures. And the Web site of the International Atomic Energy Agency, the United Nations nuclear watchdog made it clear that there were no readings at all from some critical areas. Part of the American effort, by satellites and aircraft, is to identify the hot spots, something the Japanese have not been able to do in some cases.

Critical to that effort are the “pods” flown into Japan by the Air Force over the past day. Made for quick assessments of radiation emergencies, the Aerial Measuring System is an instrument system that fits on a helicopter or fixed-wing aircraft to sample air and survey the land below. The information is used to produce colored maps of radiation exposure and contamination.

Daniel B. Poneman, the deputy secretary of energy, said at a White House briefing on Thursday that one instrument pod was mounted on a helicopter, and the other on a fixed-wing aircraft.

“We flew those aircraft on their first missions,” he said. The preliminary results, he added, “are consistent with the recommendations that came down from the chairman of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission,” which led to the 50-mile evacuation guideline given to American expatriates. “ So the indications are that that looks like it was a prudent move,” Mr. Poneman said.

The State Department has also said it would fly out of the country any dependents of American diplomats or military personnel within the region of the plant and as far south as Tokyo. Space will be made for other Americans who cannot get a flight, it said.

Getting the Japanese to accept the American detection equipment was a delicate diplomatic maneuver, which some Japanese officials originally resisted. But as it became clear that conditions at the plant were spinning out of control, and with Japanese officials admitting they had little hard evidence about whether there was water in the cooling pools or breaches in the reactor containment structures, they began to accept more help.

The sensors on the instrument pod are good at mapping radioactive isotopes, like Cesium-137, which has been detected around the stricken Japanese complex and has a half-life of 30 years. Its radiation can alter cellular function, leading to an increased risk of cancer.

Cesium-137 mixes easily with water and is chemically similar to potassium. It thus mimics the way potassium gets metabolized in the body and can enter through many foods, including milk.

On Wednesday when the American Embassy in Tokyo, on advice from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, told Americans to evacuate a radius of “approximately 50 miles” from the Fukushima plant, the recommendation was based on a specific calculation of risk of radioactive fallout in the affected area.

In a statement, the commission said the advice grew out of its assessment that projected radiation doses within the evacuation zone might exceed one rem to the body or five rems to the thyroid gland. That organ is extremely sensitive to Iodine-131 — another of the deadly byproducts of nuclear fuel, this one causing thyroid cancer.

A rem is a standard measure of radiation dose. The commission says that the average American is exposed to about 0.62 rem of radiation each year from natural and manmade sources.

The American-provided instruments in Japan measure real levels of radiation on the ground. In contrast, scientists around the world have also begun to draw up forecasts of how the prevailing winds pick up the Japanese radioactive material and carry it over the Pacific in invisible plumes.

The former are actual measurements, whereas the latter are projections based mostly on predicted weather patterns.

Private analysts said the United States was also probably monitoring the reactor crisis with a flotilla of spy satellites that can see small objects on the ground as well as spot the heat from fires — helping it independently assess the state of the reactor complex from a distance.

Jeffrey G. Lewis, an intelligence specialist at the Monterey Institute, a research center, noted that the Japanese assessment of Reactor No. 4 at the Daiichi complex seemed to depend in part on visual surveillance by helicopter pilots.

“I’ve got to think that, if we put our best assets into answering that question, we can do better,” he said in an interview.

One of the particular concerns at No. 4 has been a fire that was burning there earlier in the week, but American officials are not convinced that the fire has gone out.

Even the weather satellites used by the Defense Department have special sensors that can monitor fires. Experts said their detectors are sensitive enough to detect smoldering fires underground — suggesting they might also be able to see radioactive fires inside the stricken reactors.

The No. 4 reactor has been of particular concern to American officials because they believe the spent fuel pool there has run dry, exposing the rods.


David E. Sanger reported from Washington, and William J. Broad from New York. Thom Shanker contributed reporting from Washington.

CTV Edmonton - Task force created to help displaced residents in Fort McMurray - CTV News

CTV Edmonton - Task force created to help displaced residents in Fort McMurray - CTV News

Task force created to help displaced residents in Fort McMurray

Hundreds of Fort McMurray residents have been forced out of their apartments due to serious structural problems with the buildings.

Hundreds of Fort McMurray residents have been forced out of their apartments due to serious structural problems with the buildings.

Updated: Thu Mar. 17 2011 13:03:50

ctvedmonton.ca

A task force has been created to help 300 people who have been forced from their Fort McMurray apartments due to serious structural concerns.

Residents who have questions can now call 780-743-7924 during regular business hours or 780-370-3325 after hours.

After being forced to evacuate Friday, some residents were finally allowed back inside Wednesday to pack up a few more belongings.

Some residents say their expectations are low Penhorwood Apartments will ever be a place they call home again.

"It's very depressing because we are still paying on our mortgage and we don't have anywhere to live," said Marciel Ceceron.

Ceceron and her family were told last Friday they had to leave because it wasn't safe. So for the past few days, they have been living inside their vehicle.

"It's the first time we've experienced this. We don't have any family, relatives here in Fort McMurray -- we don't know where we're going."

Residents were given a chance to sign up for a 15-minute time slot between Wednesday and Saturday.

The next structural inspection is expected to happen next Tuesday. Residents may learn at that time what the fate of the seven apartment buildings will be.

Engineer reports show all seven buildings are shifting from the foundation and it may be too expensive to repair.

Japan nuclear crisis deepens as radiation keeps crews at bay | World news | The Guardian

Japan nuclear crisis deepens as radiation keeps crews at bay | World news | The Guardian

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World news
Japan earthquake and tsunami

Japan nuclear crisis deepens as radiation keeps crews at bay

Race is on to restart cooling systems with emergency power after dropping water on damaged reactors has little effect

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Ian Sample, science correspondent
guardian.co.uk, Thursday 17 March 2011 19.20 GMT
Article history

Handout shows steam rising from the No. 3 reactor at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power complex An aerial view taken from a Japanese military helicopter shows part of the nuclear crisis scene: the ruined reactor 3 building at the Fukushima Daiichi power plant. Photograph: Reuters

Helicopter crews and teams of police officers in water cannon trucks are battling intense radiation at the crippled Fukushima power station in Japan in a desperate bid to douse overheating fuel rods with tonnes of water.

Authorities have drafted in extra workers and turned to ever more radical tactics as fears grow that pools used to cool down spent fuel rods have leaked, leaving the rods exposed and in danger of catching fire, which could release huge amounts of radiation into the air.

Tepco, the company that operates the plant, has increased its workforce at the power station from 180 to 322 and replaced those who have reached – or in some cases surpassed – the maximum allowed dose of radiation.

The emergency workers focused their efforts on the storage pool at reactor 3, the only unit at the site that runs on mixed oxide fuel, which contains reclaimed plutonium. The strategy appeared to conflict with comments made by US nuclear officials and Sir John Beddington, the UK government's chief science adviser, who are most concerned about the storage pool at reactor 4, which they say is now completely empty.

"The water is pretty much gone," Beddington said, adding that storage pools at reactors 5 and 6 were leaking. "We are extremely worried about that. The reason we are worried is that there is a substantial volume of material there and this, once it's open to the air and starting to heat up, can start to emit significant amounts of radiation."

The storage pools are supposed to be kept below 25C to keep the spent fuel rods from heating up, but temperature readings at the ponds in reactor buildings 4, 5 and 6 show temperatures have been rising this week, to around 60C in pools 5 and 6 and at least 84C at reactor 4.

The government has urged British citizens to move at least 50 miles from the Fukushima 1 plant, in line with an exclusion zone declared by the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission. Britain's Met Office said it had begun sophisticated modelling of the radiation plume and was passing that information to the Cobra emergency committee but not making it public. The Japanese authorities maintained that their 20km exclusion zone was sufficient, with those within 30km advised to seal their homes and stay indoors.

The concern with reactor 3 appears to stem from an explosion on Monday that is thought to have damaged the primary containment facility around the reactor's core. If the storage pool at the reactor runs dry, radiation levels could soar so high that engineers cannot approach the reactor to try and bring it under control. David Lochbaum, a nuclear physicist for the Union of Concerned Scientists and a former Nuclear Regulatory Commission safety instructor, said the level of radiation beside the exposed rods would deliver a fatal dose in 16 seconds.

The frantic attempts to refill the leaking storage pool came as engineers installed a kilometre-long power cable to replace those destroyed in last Friday's earthquake and reconnect the power plant to the grid. Engineers said the power supply would first provide electricity to reactor 2. Japan's Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency (Nisa) said three of the plant's six reactors – numbers 1, 5 and 6 – were relatively stable.

The fresh power supply will be used to drive pumps that are needed at three of the reactors to circulate seawater and prevent their nuclear cores from going into meltdown. The water levels in all three reactors are dangerously low, exposing between 1.4m and 2.3m of the fuel rods, according to Nisa. The fuel rods should be covered with water at all times to prevent meltdown.

The UN nuclear watchdog said engineers were able to lay an external grid power cable to reactor 2 and would reconnect it "once the spraying of water on the unit 3 reactor building is completed". It said water cannons had temporarily stopped spraying reactor 2 at 1109 GMT.

Five teams of police officers in water cannon trucks have tried to get close enough to reactor 3 to douse the storage ponds but were forced back after an hour when radiation rose to a dangerous level.

Minutes later military helicopters flew overhead and dropped 30 tonnes of water, but from such a height much of it appeared to miss the target. The storage pools are located in the top level of the reactor buildings and are exposed at reactors 1 and 3 because hydrogen explosions have torn their roofs off. Hidehiko Nishiyama, deputy director general of Nisa, said it was unclear whether the strategy had succeeded in topping up the ponds.
Japanese helicopters drop water on nuclear reactor
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Nishiyama added that radiation levels of 250 millisievert an hour had been detected 30 metres above the plant. On Tuesday Japan's health ministry raised the cumulative maximum level for nuclear workers from 100 millisievert to 250 millisievert. The US said it was using U-2 spy planes and a Global Hawk drone and using infrared cameras to assess the temperatures of reactors and storage pools.

"One of the problems with the ponds is that the water, as well as providing cooling, also provides shielding so workers can come up to the edge of the pool and see what state the fuel is in," said Richard Wakeford, an expert in epidemiology and radiation at the Dalton nuclear institute of Manchester University. "If the water goes you've got no shielding and it's like having a great gamma-ray searchlight shining into the sky and that is presumably what the helicopters are seeing. That makes life extremely difficult for those trying to deal with this.

"Even though they are in Chinooks they haven't got much in the way of shielding. They would need lead on the bottom to protect people who are operating it."

The intense gamma rays released by the exposed fuel rods are likely to hamper efforts to cool the storage pools by air, but the radiation is a problem for workers on the ground too because it reflects off the atmosphere and causes "skyshine", which can irradiate large areas of land.

More than 20 Tepco workers, subcontractors, police and firefighters have been reported to the International Atomic Energy Agency as having radiation contamination, according to Yukio Edano, the government's chief spokesman. Seventeen people had radioactive material on their faces but were not taken to hospital because the level was low. Two policemen were decontaminated after being exposed and one worker was taken offsite after receiving a dose of radiation while venting radioactive steam from one of the reactors. An undisclosed number of firefighters are said to be under observation after being exposed. At least 25 Tepco workers and subcontractors are being treated for injuries sustained in explosions at the plant and other accidents.

There are fears the site might soon become too radioactive for engineers to work there. "You can arrive at the stage where unless you want to receive a very serious dose of radiation, you are in such an intense field that by the time you've run to wherever you need to do the work, you have to run back again. And they may very well be getting to that stage," said Wakeford. At that point any hope of cooling the reactors or the storage pools would rest on being able to bring heavy lead shielding into the area or cooling the plant from the air.

Vincent de Rivaz, the chief executive of EDF in Britain, said the energy company was making arrangements to ship 100 tonnes of boric acid to Japan. The chemical helps slow down nuclear reactions by absorbing neutrons.

On Wednesday people in towns and villages yet to evacuate the 20km exclusion zone around the plant were advised to take potassium iodide pills as a precaution against thyroid cancer, which is caused by radioactive iodine.

Sunday, March 13, 2011

Nuclear Power Plant explodes in Japan

Japan quake: Possible meltdown in nuclear plants, say officials

Japan quake: Possible meltdown in nuclear plants, say officials




Tokyo: Japanese officials struggled on Sunday to contain a widening nuclear crisis in the aftermath of a devastating earthquake and tsunami, saying they presumed that partial meltdowns had occurred at two crippled reactors and that they were facing serious cooling problems at three more.

video of Nuclear Power Plant explodeing



The emergency appeared to be the worst involving a nuclear plant since the Chernobyl disaster 25 years ago. The developments at two separate nuclear plants prompted the evacuation of more than 200,000 people. Japanese officials said they had also ordered up the largest mobilization of their Self-Defence Forces since World War II to assist in the relief effort.

On Saturday, Japanese officials took the extraordinary step of flooding the crippled No. 1 reactor at Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station, 170 miles north of Tokyo, with seawater in a last-ditch effort to avoid a nuclear meltdown.

Then on Sunday, cooling failed at a second reactor - No. 3 - and core melting was presumed at both, said the top government spokesman, Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano. Cooling had failed at three reactors at a nuclear complex nearby, Fukushima Daini, although he said conditions there were considered less dire for now.

With high pressure inside the reactors at Daiichi hampering efforts to pump in cooling water, plant operators had to release radioactive vapor into the atmosphere. Radiation levels outside the plant, which had retreated overnight, shot up to 1,204 microsieverts per hour, or over twice Japan's legal limit, Mr. Edano said. (Watch: Japan, the day after)

NHK, Japan's public broadcaster, flashed instructions to evacuees: close doors and windows; place a wet towel over the nose and mouth; cover up as much as possible. At a news conference, Mr. Edano called for calm. "If measures can be taken, we will be able to ensure the safety of the reactor," he said.

One result of the venting may have been setting off an explosion, caused by either steam or hydrogen, that tore the outer wall and roof off the building housing reactor No. 1, although the steel containment of the reactor remained in place, officials said.

Even before the statement on Sunday by Mr. Edano, it was clear form radioactive materials turning up in trace amounts outside the reactors that fuel damage had occurred. The existence or extent of melting might not be clear until workers can open up the reactors and examine the fuel, which could be months. (See pics: Japan earthquake triggers tsunami)

A meltdown occurs when there is insufficient cooling of the reactor core, and it is the most dangerous kind of a nuclear power accident because of the risk of radiation releases. The radiation levels reported so far by the Japanese authorities are far above normal but still too small to pose a hazard to human health if the exposure continued for a brief period. The fear was that more core damage would bring bigger releases.

The Japanese Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency said that as many as 160 people may have been exposed to radiation around the plant, and Japanese news media said that three workers at the facility were suffering from full-on radiation sickness.

Even before the explosion on Saturday, officials said they had detected radioactive cesium, which is created when uranium fuel is split, an indication that some of the nuclear fuel in the reactor was already damaged.

How much damage the fuel suffered remained uncertain, though safety officials insisted repeatedly through the day that radiation leaks outside the plant remained small and did not pose a major health risk.

However, they also told the International Atomic Energy Agency that they were making preparations to distribute iodine, which helps protect the thyroid gland from radiation exposure, to people living near Daiichi and Daini.

Worries about the safety of the two plants worsened on Saturday because executives of the company that runs them, Tokyo Electric Power, and government officials gave confusing accounts of the location and causes of the dramatic midday explosion and the damage it caused.

Late Saturday night, officials said that the explosion at Daiichi occurred in a structure housing turbines near its No. 1 reactor at the plant, rather than inside the reactor itself. But photographs of the damage did not make clear that this was the case.

They said that the blast, which may have been caused by a sharp buildup of hydrogen when the reactor's cooling system failed, destroyed the concrete structure surrounding the reactor but did not collapse the critical steel container inside. This pattern of damage cast doubt on the idea that the explosion was in the turbine building.

"We've confirmed that the reactor container was not damaged," Mr. Edano said in a news conference on Saturday night. "The explosion didn't occur inside the reactor container. As such there was no large amount of radiation leakage outside. At this point, there has been no major change to the level of radiation leakage outside, so we'd like everyone to respond calmly."

Japanese nuclear safety officials and international experts said that because of crucial design differences, the release of radiation at Daiichi would most likely be much smaller than at Chernobyl even if the plant had a complete core meltdown, which they said it had not.

After a full day of worries about the radiation leaking at Daiichi, Tokyo Electric Power said an explosion occurred "near" the No. 1 reactor at Daiichi around 3:40 p.m. Japan time on Saturday. It said four of its workers were injured in the blast.

The decision to flood the reactor core with corrosive seawater, experts said, was an indication that Tokyo Electric Power and Japanese authorities had probably decided to scrap the plant. "This plant is almost 40 years old, and now it's over for that place," said Olli Heinonen, the former chief inspector for the I.A.E.A., and now a visiting scholar at Harvard.

Mr. Heinonen lived in Japan in the 1980s, monitoring its nuclear industry, and visited the stricken plant many times. Based on the reports he was seeing, he said he believed that the explosion was caused by a hydrogen formation, which could have begun inside the reactor core. "Now, every hour they gain in keeping the reactor cooling down is crucial," he said.

But he was also concerned about the presence of spent nuclear fuel in a pool inside the same reactor building. The pool, too, needs to remain full of water to suppress gamma radiation and prevent the old fuel from melting. If the spent fuel is also exposed -- and so far there are only sketchy reports about the condition of that building -- it could also pose a significant risk to the workers trying to prevent a meltdown.

Both Daiichi and Daini were shut down by Friday's earthquake, but the loss of power in the area and damage to the plants' generators from the ensuing tsunami crippled the cooling systems. Those are crucial after a shutdown to cool down the nuclear fuel rods.

The malfunctions allowed pressure to build up beyond the design capacity of the reactors. Early Saturday, officials had said that small amounts of radioactive vapor were expected to be released into the atmosphere to prevent damage to the containment systems and that they were evacuating people in the area as a precaution.

Those releases apparently did not prevent the buildup of hydrogen inside the plant, which ignited and exploded Saturday afternoon, government officials said. They said the explosion itself did not increase the amount of radioactive material being released into the atmosphere. However, safety officials urged people who were not evacuating but still lived relatively nearby to cover their mouths and stay indoors.

David Lochbaum, who worked at three reactors in the United States with designs similar to Daiichi, and who was later hired by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to teach its personnel about that technology, said that judging by photographs of the stricken plant, the explosion appeared to have occurred in the turbine hall, not the reactor vessel or the containment that surrounds the vessel.

The Daiichi reactor is a boiling-water reactor. Inside the containment, the reactor sends its steam out to a turbine. The turbine converts the steam's energy into rotary motion, which turns a generator and makes electricity.

But as the water goes through the reactor, some water molecules break up into hydrogen and oxygen. A system in the turbine hall usually scrubs out those gases. Hydrogen is also used in the turbine hall to cool the electric generator. Hydrogen from both sources has sometimes escaped and exploded, Mr. Lochbaum said, but in this case, there is an additional source of hydrogen: interaction of steam with the metal of the fuel rods. Operators may have vented that hydrogen into the turbine hall.

Earlier Saturday, before the explosion, a Japanese nuclear safety panel said the radiation levels were 1,000 times above normal in a reactor control room at Daiichi. Some radioactive material had also seeped outside, with radiation levels near the main gate measured at eight times normal levels, NHK quoted nuclear safety officials as saying.

The emergency at Daiichi began shortly after the earthquake struck Friday afternoon. Emergency diesel generators, which kicked in to run the cooling system after the electrical power grid failed, shut down about an hour after the earthquake. There was speculation that the tsunami had flooded the generators, knocking them out of service.

For some time, the plant was able to operate in a battery-controlled cooling mode. Tokyo Electric Power said that by Saturday morning it had also installed a mobile generator to ensure that the cooling system would continue operating even after reserve battery power was depleted. Even so, the company said it needed to conduct "controlled containment venting" in order to avoid an "uncontrolled rupture and damage" to the containment unit.

Why the controlled release of pressure did not succeed in addressing the problem was not immediately explained. Tokyo Electric Power and government nuclear safety officials also did not explain the precise sequence of failures at the plant.

Daiichi and other nuclear facilities are designed with extensive backup systems that are supposed to function in emergencies to ensure the plants can be shut down safely.



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Saturday, March 12, 2011

'Unsafe' Fort McMurray apartments evacuated - Calgary - CBC News

'Unsafe' Fort McMurray apartments evacuated - Calgary - CBC News

Posted: Mar 12, 2011 7:05 PM MT

Last Updated: Mar 12, 2011 7:05 PM MT

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More than 300 people have been evacuated from the seven apartment buildings in Fort McMurray, Alta. after a structural engineer's report found the buildings unsafe.

The report, commissioned by the Penhorwood Condominium Association, said parts of the buildings could shift and cause a break in gas line, leading to a fire that would be difficult to control.

'Some people were angry, some people were upset, some people were afraid, some people were really concerned.'—Allan Vinni, president of the Penhorwood Condominium Association

Tyran Ault, a spokesperson for the Regional Municipality of Wood Buffalo, said his office received the report Friday and began evacuating the 168 units shortly before midnight under an emergency order pursuant to the Safety Codes Act.

"We were told around 11 o'clock and then we were able to organize our emergency personnel and start the door-knocking at 11:30 last night," Ault said Saturday.

Tenants of the Penhorwood apartments were given 10 minutes to gather some belongings before they had to leave.

'Pretty traumatic'

Allan Vinni, president of the Penhorwood condominium association, said the evacuation was "pretty traumatic" for many of the residents.

"Some people were angry, some people were upset, some people were afraid, some people were really concerned," Vinni said.

"Those are all valid things to feel when you get rousted our of your home at midnight with no understanding of what's going on or when you can go back."

The Regional Municipality of Wood Buffalo set up an information and reception centre across the street from some of the apartment buildings in a gymnasium at the Syncrude Sport and Wellness Centre on Franklin Ave.

Penhorwood Street, Fort McMurray, AlbertaPenhorwood Street in Fort McMurray, Alta.,

"We're making sure that all residents have proper lodging for however long they may be affected, as well as food services and personal services should they require it," Ault said.

Approximately 190 people registered with the reception centre, but only two required lodging by Saturday afternoon, he said. Most are staying with friends and family and no one spent the night in the gymnasium Friday night.

Ault said it is now up to the property management association to secure a structural engineer to examine the facilities and recommend or oversee necessary changes.

Knew it was coming

Although the evacuation was sudden, Ault said, "it seemed that a lot of people knew this was coming."

"The condo association has been aware of these structural concerns in the past and this report seems to reaffirm those for them," he said.

For the past few years, the condo association has been engaged in a lawsuit with the developer over deficiencies in the buildings.

Vinni, speaking as a member of the condo board, said the board had engaged the services of "a very experienced" professional structural engineer. The engineer told Vinni and others in a conference call on Friday that he was concerned about the immediate structural integrity of the buildings.

"He saw a lot of fresh failures of load-bearing structural pieces, like beams, rim blocks and mash blocks," Vinni said. "He issued a letter in his capacity as a registered engineer that he didn't think it was safe for people to be in that building — in any of those buildings."

The decision to evacuate was made at 4:30 p.m. MT, Vinni said.

A day later, many of the displaced residents are calmer. "They're better today than they were last night," Vinni said Saturday afternoon.

But the upheaval is not over: "We still don't know, to this minute, when anybody will be able to go back in to retrieve any more personal possessions," he said.

A team of engineers is flying up Sunday morning to determine how to safely let residents back inside to retrieve their belongings.

The Penhorwood apartments are located at Penhorwood Street in the lower townsite of Fort McMurray, Alta.

With files from CBC's Andrea Huncar in Edmonton

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Japanese authorities rush to save lives, avert nuclear crisis - CNN.com

Japanese authorities rush to save lives, avert nuclear crisis - CNN.com

Sendai, Japan (CNN) -- Japanese authorities are operating on the presumption that possible meltdowns are under way at two nuclear reactors, two days after a massive earthquake, a government official said Sunday.

Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano added, however, that there have been no indications yet of hazardous emissions of radioactive material into the atmosphere.

The attempts to avert a possible nuclear crisis, centered on the Fukushima Daiichi facility in northeast Japan, came as rescuers frantically scrambled to find survivors following the country's strongest-ever earthquake and a devastating tsunami that, minutes later, brought crushing walls of water that wiped out nearly everything in their paths.

Edano told reporters there is a "possibility" of a meltdown at the plant's No. 1 reactor, adding, "It is inside the reactor. We can't see." He then said authorities are also "assuming the possibility of a meltdown" at the facility's No. 3 reactor.

A meltdown is a catastrophic failure of the reactor core, with a potential for widespread radiation release.

Edano said only a "minor level" of radiation has been released into the environment -- saying it all came from a controlled release of radioactive steam, insisting there have been no leaks and it is not harmful to human health.

About 180,000 people were being evacuated from within 10 to 20 kilometers (6 to 12 miles) of the Daiichi plant, in addition to the thousands that have already been taken away who live closer by. More than 30,000 more were being evacuated from their homes within 10 kilometers of the Fukushima Daiini nuclear facility located in the same prefecture.

The news of the possible meltdowns came as rescue efforts resumed Sunday morning in areas devastated by the 8.9-magnitude quake and subsequent tsunami, which unleashed a wall of seawater that decimated entire neighborhoods.

Rescuers dug through mud and rubble to find the buried, both alive and dead. Japan's Prime Minister Naoto Kan said more than 3,000 people have been rescued, according to the nation's Kyodo News Agency.

The death toll from the earthquake and tsunami rose to 801, with hundreds more missing, authorities said Sunday.

At least 678 are missing, according to the National Police Agency Emergency Disaster Headquarters. The number of dead is expected to go up as rescuers reach more hard-hit areas

The number is expected to rise as rescuers reach more hard-hit areas. In one coastal town alone -- Minamisanriku, in Myagi Prefecture -- some 9,500 people, half the town's population, were unaccounted for.

With most stores and gas stations closed, a main task for many in the hardest-hit areas Sunday morning was getting by -- and, in some cases, getting out. Scores lined up at the few gas stations, drug stores, and supermarkets that had opened, with the shelves largely empty amid the rush to get food and the difficulty in restocking it.

They also braved an seemingly endless barrage of aftershocks. The U.S. Geological Survey reported more than 140 such quakes -- magnitude 4.5 and higher, including a 6.2-magnitude quake just before 10:30 a.m. Sunday -- in, near, or off of the east coast of the Japanese island.

Friday's quake was centered about 130 kilometers (80 miles) from Sendai, a coastal city with a population of about a million. While there was little visible earthquake damage in that city, the tsunami brought devastation at least several miles inland.

Sunday's sunshine highlighted muddy tsunami debris on every street. The force of the water wiped away houses, stacked cars on top of each other, and left the ground covered in thick, brown mud.

Search-and-rescue helicopters flew over the city to rescue anyone trapped in the rubble. A few hundred people were still unaccounted for in just one neighborhood of Sendai.

Meanwhile, millions more around Japan were dealing with other repercussions of Friday's quake.

About 2.5 million households -- just over 4% of the total in Japan -- were without electricity Sunday, according to Ichiro Fujisaki, the nation's U.S. ambassador. This marks a drop from the previous number, when 6 million households had no power.

A desire to conserve power prompted decisions to turn off lights Saturday at a host of landmarks all around Japan -- some of them hundreds of miles from the main quake's epicenter, like the Tsutenkaku Tower in Osaka, Tokyo Tower and Rainbow Bridge in Tokyo, and Bay Bridge in Yokohama, the Kyodo News Agency reported.

Japan plans to dispatch 100,000 members of its defense forces to the quake-ravaged region -- double the previous number -- Defense Minister Toshimi Kitazawa said Sunday, according to Kyodo.

Japan's government also has made a formal request for U.S. aid, including military support, and full planning for deployment is in effect, with the U.S. military in Japan taking the lead, according to Sgt. Maj. Stephen Valley with U.S. Forces Japan.

The nuclear-powered aircraft carrier USS Ronald Reagan arrived off Japan's coast Sunday morning to support Japanese forces in disaster relief operations, the U.S. Department of Defense said in a statement.

The U.S. Agency for International Development sent two search and rescue teams of about 150 people and 12 rescue dogs trained to find survivors. They were expected to arrive Sunday morning and immediately begin working alongside Japanese and international teams.

At least 48 other countries and the European Union also have offered relief to Japan, and supplies and personnel are already on the way.

Friday's quake is the strongest earthquake in recorded history to hit Japan, according to U.S. Geologic Survey records that date to 1900. The world's largest recorded quake took place in Chile on May 22, 1960, with a magnitude of 9.5, the USGS said.

CNN's Tom Watkins, Anna Coren, Kyung Lah, Paula Hancocks, Brian Walker, Kevin Voigt and Sean Morris contributed to this report.