- Joined
- Jul 26, 2003
May 22nd, 2:00 PM JST
Wind in the SouthWest at Daiichi, in the north at Daini
Daini
Six peripheral points (1.8, 1.4, 1.9, 1.6, 1.6, 1.6 ) microSieverts per hour
Manual point 9 AM JST 1.1 microSieverts per hour
Daiichi
Eight peripheral points ( 6, 25, 18, 16, 20, 42, 129, 107 ) microSieverts per hour
Main Office Building 383 microSieverts per hour
West Gate 15 microSieverts per hour
Cart near West Gate 16.0 microSieverts per hour
TEPCO Press Releases from May 21st and May 22nd
Extensive Report on Unit 2 and Unit 3 Radioactive Water
http://www.tepco.co.jp/en/press/corp-com/release/betu11_e/images/110521e5.pdf
Drawing showing where the leakage was, what the concrete seal of the leaking section looks like, and a drawing of a planned small sea water purification unit that will be used to filter water near the intake to Unit 2. More zeolite bags are planned as well (mapped near the Unit 1 and Unit 4 intakes) They have identified some additional 27 pits or trenches where radioactive water might collect and leak into the ocean, and are in the process of stopping them all up with concrete, intending to have all the work done by mid-June..
They estimate the Unit 3 leak as 250 cubic meters, and as having gone on for 41 hours.
Graphs of all the 30 some measuring points of seawater, submitted as a report to NISA, including a map of simulation of how cesium 137 has spread in seawater (3 maps over last months), essentially travelling south, and then spreading out to the east.
http://www.tepco.co.jp/en/press/corp-com/release/betu11_e/images/110521e7.pdf
Here's what NHK has to say:
Glitch halts nitrogen gas injection to reactor
If the pressure changed that little, there are no significant leaks in Unit 1.
Some progress has been made in removing radioactive debris
but Unit 3 has some highly radioactive stuff yet to be removed. The robots are at work!
and Kan may talk about solar and wind at the G8
http://www3.nhk.or.jp/daily/english/22_04.html
risking giving a chance to let Putin get off gibes at Japan's expense, as he did to Merkel, chancellor of Germany:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PtAbmvbG4mk
but what's really going on as a new energy policy is this:
and whether nuclear power plants are closed or not, this article reminds me that nuclear weapons are still around:
and that the only safe way to eliminate existing nuclear weapons is this way, using a nuclear reactor:
http://www.usec.com/megatonstomegawatts.htm
The Megatons to Megawatts Program, "Recylcing Nuclear Warheads into Electricity":
*LEU is Low Enriched Uranium
But there is some nice news out there. 500 kids is a drop in the bucket, but it is still a nice gesture, and much needed:
Wind in the SouthWest at Daiichi, in the north at Daini
Daini
Six peripheral points (1.8, 1.4, 1.9, 1.6, 1.6, 1.6 ) microSieverts per hour
Manual point 9 AM JST 1.1 microSieverts per hour
Daiichi
Eight peripheral points ( 6, 25, 18, 16, 20, 42, 129, 107 ) microSieverts per hour
Main Office Building 383 microSieverts per hour
West Gate 15 microSieverts per hour
Cart near West Gate 16.0 microSieverts per hour
TEPCO Press Releases from May 21st and May 22nd
They published a report showing that the uranium in the soil at the "Playground", the sampling spot they have used 500 m. west northwest of Units 1 and 2, is indistinguishable from the normal distribution in the soil, and that the ratios of the different isotopes is what it is in normal soil, rather than what the ratios would look like if the uranium were from the reactors.-In order to switch the facility for water injection to the reactor from reactor feed water system piping arrangement to electric water-injection pump placed on a hill, the conventional fire pump was stopped at 3:12pm on May 21st and electric water-injection pump was started up at 3:15pm (The amount of water injection is kept approx. 12m3/h).
-At 4:00pm on May 21st, we started to spray water to the spent fuel pool of Unit 4 by the concrete pumping vehicle (We added hydrazine from 4:23pm to 7:00pm). We finished spraying at 7:56pm on the same day.
-The transfer of accumulated water in Unit 6 turbine building to a temporary tank was started at 2 pm on May 21s. The transfer pump was stopped at 6:00 pm on the same day (approximately 80m3).
-At approx. 2:00 pm, May 21st, nitrogen injection to the vessel was stopped (The compressor stopped due to "High temperature".) The back-up supply facility was started up (approx. 20m3/h) at 5:00pm, May 21st. The amount of nitrogen was increased to approx. 26 m3/h at 8:31pm
-At 2:00 pm on 21st, we started transfer of accumulated water in the basement of Unit 6 into temporary tanks.
-As for the outflow of contaminated water from near the intake of Unit 3 (leakage was stopped at 6:45 pm on the same day), we estimated that the volume of outflow was approx. 250m3 and the radioactive dose is approx. 2 x 1013 Bq on the assumption that it flew at the same rate for approx. 41 hours (from 2:00 am on May 10 to 7:00 pm on May 11). As preventive measures and measures to prevent scattering to the outside of the port, we are planning to block the pits the contaminated water might run flow out from, isolation of pump rooms for Units 1 to 4, installation of sandbags containing zeolite inside of the intakes, and installation of a circular purification equipment to the screen area. In parallel, we will continue monitoring sea water inside and outside of the port and reinforce the monitoring system.
-At 9:35 on May 21st, Mega Float arrived at the shallow draft quay in Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station.
Extensive Report on Unit 2 and Unit 3 Radioactive Water
http://www.tepco.co.jp/en/press/corp-com/release/betu11_e/images/110521e5.pdf
Drawing showing where the leakage was, what the concrete seal of the leaking section looks like, and a drawing of a planned small sea water purification unit that will be used to filter water near the intake to Unit 2. More zeolite bags are planned as well (mapped near the Unit 1 and Unit 4 intakes) They have identified some additional 27 pits or trenches where radioactive water might collect and leak into the ocean, and are in the process of stopping them all up with concrete, intending to have all the work done by mid-June..
They estimate the Unit 3 leak as 250 cubic meters, and as having gone on for 41 hours.
Graphs of all the 30 some measuring points of seawater, submitted as a report to NISA, including a map of simulation of how cesium 137 has spread in seawater (3 maps over last months), essentially travelling south, and then spreading out to the east.
http://www.tepco.co.jp/en/press/corp-com/release/betu11_e/images/110521e7.pdf
Here's what NHK has to say:
Glitch halts nitrogen gas injection to reactor
The operator of the damaged Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant says injection of nitrogen gas into the Number 1 reactor came to a halt for more than 3 hours on Saturday due to mechanical trouble.
Tokyo Electric Power Company continues to inject nitrogen gas into the reactor's containment vessel to prevent the recurrence of a hydrogen explosion that took place in March.
On Saturday afternoon, a TEPCO worker found that the device to inject nitrogen, installed outside the reactor building, was not working. Injection later resumed using backup equipment.
The utility says data indicate that nitrogen gas had not been fed into the reactor for over 3 hours.
But TEPCO says pressure inside the containment vessel has changed little, and there is no increase in the risk of an explosion. The company is looking into the cause of the stoppage.
Sunday, May 22, 2011 12:55 +0900 (JST)
If the pressure changed that little, there are no significant leaks in Unit 1.
Some progress has been made in removing radioactive debris
but Unit 3 has some highly radioactive stuff yet to be removed. The robots are at work!
The operator of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant is facing the new challenge of removal of highly radioactive debris in order to proceed with efforts to stabilize the Number 3 reactor. Tokyo Electric Power Company on Friday found debris releasing 1,000 millisieverts per hour in an area south of the Number 3 reactor building. It is the highest level of radiation found in debris left outside. Materials emitting 900 millisieverts of radiation per hour have also been found in the plant's compound. These materials are believed to be part of the large amount of debris contaminated with radioactive substances that had been blown off in hydrogen explosions.
In the area around the Number 1 reactor where removal of debris is making progress, radioactivity fell to nearly half the reading of early April.
But radiation levels are still high in some areas around the Number 3 reactor, where the explosion was powerful.
The situation is hampering work to install devices to stably cool the reactor.
The company says it will expedite the removal of debris by using a remote-controlled vehicle so that it can bring the reactor under control by mid-July as planned.
Sunday, May 22, 2011 09:24 +0900 (JST)
and Kan may talk about solar and wind at the G8
http://www3.nhk.or.jp/daily/english/22_04.html
risking giving a chance to let Putin get off gibes at Japan's expense, as he did to Merkel, chancellor of Germany:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PtAbmvbG4mk
but what's really going on as a new energy policy is this:
Japan, China to resume gas field talks
The foreign ministers of Japan and China have agreed to resume talks on the development of gas fields in the East China Sea as soon as possible. The talks were suspended after last year's collisions between a Chinese trawler and Japanese patrol boats near the Senkaku Islands, which are near the gas project sites.
Takeaki Matsumoto told Yang Jiechi in Tokyo on Sunday that Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao had greatly promoted bilateral ties by visiting the disaster-hit prefectures of Miyagi and Fukushima in northeastern Japan.
Matsumoto said Wen told Prime Minister Naoto Kan at the meeting that China will work constructively with Japan for the 2 countries' future.
Matsumoto said Japan hopes to resume the talks as soon as possible.
Yang said China maintains that it will implement the development projects for gas fields in the East China Sea once the leaders of China and Japan have reached an agreement. He said he wants to work with Japan to restart the talks.
Matsumoto said the Senkaku Islands are an integral part of Japan and no territorial issue exists between Japan and China. Yang said the islands are under China's sovereignty.
Sunday, May 22, 2011 17:16 +0900 (JST)
and whether nuclear power plants are closed or not, this article reminds me that nuclear weapons are still around:
US develops new way to check nuclear weapons
US researchers have successfully completed experiments to verify the performance of the country's nuclear weapons without conducting underground nuclear tests.
The National Nuclear Security Administration of the US Energy Department said the experiments were conducted in November of last year and March of this year at Sandia National Laboratories in New Mexico.
A special device was used to generate powerful X-rays and create conditions similar to the explosion of a nuclear weapon.
The NNSA said the reaction of plutonium, a material used in nuclear weapons, was observed in the 2 experiments, and they both ended in success.
The organization said that, like a subcritical nuclear test, the new experiment needs no nuclear explosion.
The NNSA added that the experiment requires no gunpowder, and uses a smaller amount of plutonium than a subcritical test.
An NNSA official says the test helps to implement President Barack Obama's policy to maintain the safety and effectiveness of the US nuclear stockpile without underground nuclear tests.
Observers say the success of the experiment will help ensure that old nuclear weapons that the US built during the Cold War remain safe and secure.
But they also say it raises concern that it might lead to the development of new nuclear weaponry.
Sunday, May 22, 2011 11:11 +0900 (JST)
and that the only safe way to eliminate existing nuclear weapons is this way, using a nuclear reactor:
http://www.usec.com/megatonstomegawatts.htm
The Megatons to Megawatts Program, "Recylcing Nuclear Warheads into Electricity":
*HEU is Highly Enriched Uranium412 metric tons of bomb-grade HEU* have been recycled into 11,905 metric tons of LEU*, equivalent to 16,494 nuclear warheads eliminated.
*LEU is Low Enriched Uranium
But there is some nice news out there. 500 kids is a drop in the bucket, but it is still a nice gesture, and much needed:
.Wen invites young quake survivors to visit China
Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao has invited 500 young Japanese survivors of the March 11th earthquake and tsunami to visit China. He said he wants to offer them a place to refresh themselves, both physically and mentally.
Wen spoke to reporters in Tokyo on Sunday after the summit with Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan and South Korean President Lee Myung Bak.
He said Japan's reconstruction will influence the economic development of Asia and the rest of the world, and he repeated his pledge to offer China's support to help rebuild the affected areas.
Wen referred to plans to send Chinese tour groups to Japan beginning early next month along with inspection teams to further promote trade and investment.
He said China intends to ease the import restrictions on Japanese food that were imposed immediately after the accident at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant.
Wen also said that Japan, China and South Korea are neighbors and there are many nuclear power plants in these densely populated areas.
He said it is important for the 3 countries to share information on their plants and to work together to deal with accidents.
Sunday, May 22, 2011 17:08 +0900 (JST)