Japanese Earthquake, Tsunami, and Nuclear Reactors | Page 35 | Golden Skate

Japanese Earthquake, Tsunami, and Nuclear Reactors

That's a beautiful story, and he's right. I'm glad he's sticking with his quest. Indeed, the elderly are at far less risk than younger people from any effects of low level radiation. I hope he and his fellow pensioners are able to help,and if the government will not let them help at Daiichi, I hope they let them help in checking up radiation levels and cleaning up towns, prior to the evacuees returning to them? Towns where the radiation level is back below 20 milliSieverts per year should be repopulated as soon as possible, as property deteriorates dreadfully when left vacant, particularly during the rainy season.

If you see a follow up on this story (whether the government says yes or no, and what the pensioners do), I hope you will post it..
 
German government wants to come off nuclear. http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/may/30/germany-to-shut-nuclear-reactors?CMP=twt_gu

It seems that their motivation is as much environmental as political.

Angela Merkel has committed to shutting down all of the country's nuclear reactors by 2022, a task said by one minister to be as mammoth as the project to reunite East and West Germany in 1990.

Monday's announcement, prompted by Japan's nuclear disaster, will make Germany the first major industrialised nation to go nuclear-free in decades. It gives the country just over 10 years to find alternative sources for 23% of its energy.

The move, hammered out at a mammoth 14-hour overnight sitting at the Kanzleramt, came amid mass nationwide protests against nuclear power and at a low point for the chancellor's Christian Democratic party (CDU), support for which has crumbled at the ballot box in five regional elections this year.

Although the proposal was welcomed among the general population, who have long been opposed to nuclear power, it was a move derided by one of Merkel's own MPs as "knee-jerk politics".

And it will not be an easy thing to achieve.

The French poured scorn on Germany's decision. "Germany will be even more dependent on fossil fuels and imports and its electricity will be more expensive and polluting," said the French industry minister, Éric Besson. German households pay twice as much for power than homes in France, where 80% of electricity comes from atomic plants, he said.

Germany last year was a net exporter of power to France, according to data from the French grid operator, RTE. This trend was reversed last month after the accident at Fukushima and Merkel's decision to halt Germany's oldest reactors.

"Germany's energy policy will only work if there are improvements at the same time," the EU energy commissioner, Günther Oettinger, said on Monday.

He said there was a need for better grid infrastructure, storage capacity and forward planning as well as a more pronounced rise in renewable supply.

Germany plans to cut electricity usage by 10% and double the share of renewable energy to 25% by 2020.
 
Doris, thanks so much for information on PV panels. I need to study more carefully on this before giving a go ahead to installation of more PV panels on the projects I am involved with (not as a designer but as a client design advisor), though the cost argument is often stronger than the environmental one when it comes to making the final decision... sigh...
 
That is not what I meant. Yes, life is life. But it is very unlikely the older people will suffer any harm at all from the radiation. While for the very young there is a risk, for the old, there is much less risk, and in fact, probably no risk at all, when you are talking about the evacuated areas rather than at the plant.

The reason for this is that radiation preferentially affects fast growing cells. This fact is why it is used to kill cancers (which are very fast growing cells) while leaving the ordinary cells around them relatively unaffected. It is well documented that those most affected by radiation are people who are still young and growing.

As to TEPCO's news of the day:

June 1st 9:00 PM JST
Cloudy, wind West North West

Daini
Six peripheral points (1.7, 1.4, 1.8, 1.6, 1.6, 1.5) microSieverts per hour
Manual point 9:00 AM JST 1.1 microSieverts per hour

Daiichi
Eight peripheral points (5, 24, 15, 15, 18, 39, 121, 104) microSieverts per hour
Main Office Building 374 microSieverts per hour
West Gate 15 microSieverts per hour
Cart near West gate 14.7 microSieverts per hour

In neither the water from the unit 4 spent fuel pool, nor from the surge skimmer of Unit 2 is there any measurable plutonium and the amount of uranium is not all that large, considering uranium is a common element in nature, and that a lot of seawater has been boiled down in both the spent fuel pool and the reactors.

Uranium normally in sea water. 3 micrograms per liter in the sea
Spent fuel pool 30 micrograms per liter
Unit 2 Surge Skimmer 286 micrograms per liter

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0039914010010003
http://www.tepco.co.jp/en/press/corp-com/release/betu11_e/images/110531e19.pdf

TEPCO continues to lower the rate of water injection into Unit 1. It is now at the same rate of water injection as Unit 2

- At 8:30 pm on May 31 We changed the rate of water injection to the reactor through reactor feed water system piping arrangement from approx. 6 m 3/h to approx. 5 m 3/h. The current rate of water injection is approx. 5 m 3/h.

They are also continuing to change the rate of flow at Unit 3
At 10:10 am on June 1, we changed the rate of water injection to the reactor through reactor feed water system piping arrangement from approx. 12.5 m3/h to approx. 11.5 m3/h. The current rate of water injection is approx. 11.5 m3/h through the reactor feed water system piping arrangement.


The Oil Leak followup is done.

We completed installing oil-absorbing mat around seawall at approximately 2:00 pm and also completed installing oil fences at 4:50 pm. We plan to protect pipes around seawall and collect the oil.

- Since we finished monitoring trends of parameters, at 8:30 pm on May 31, we changed the rate of water injection to the reactor of Unit 1 from approx. 6 m3/h to approx. 5 m3/h.

This results from the measurement showed absolutely no plutonium and very, very little uranium for both Unit 2 and Unit 4's spent fuel pool.
- On April 16th, in order to check the condition of the water in the spent fuel pool of Unit 2, we collected and conducted a nuclide analysis of approximately 400 ml of water that flowed out of the pool into the skimmer surge tanks, and as a result iodine-131, cesium-134, and cesium-137 were detected. Later we conducted detailed analysis, and on May 31we concluded that the large portion of spent fuel is sound.
- On April 12, in order to check the condition of the water in the spent fuel pool of Unit 4, we collected approx. 200ml of the water in the pool using concrete pumping vehicle. On April 13, we conducted nuclide analysis of the sample and detected Cesium 134, Cesium 137, and Iodine 131. Later we conducted detailed analysis, and on May 31 we concluded that the large portion of spent fuel is sound.

They report on the Unit 2 spent fuel pool heat exchanger conversion.
- At 11:40 am on May 31, we conducted leakage test on the primary system of the alternative cooling system of the spent fuel pool at Unit 2. At 5:21 pm on the same day, we started the operation. At 6:11 pm we reached to the rate flow (approx. 100m3/h). Later at 1:47 am on June1, we adjusted the flow rate to 80m3/h. At 5:06 am on June 1, we stopped primary pumps. From 6:06 am, we started fresh water injection through spent fuel pool cooling and filtering system of Unit 2. At 6:53, we finished the injection and at 7:06 am we reactivated primary pumps.

- At approximately 2:30 pm on May 31, big sound was confirmed at the southern side of the reactor building of Unit 4, where wireless unmanned heavy machineries were removing rubbles. We confirmed that it was the impact sound when the unmanned heavy machinery tucked and broke some cylinder. Nobody got injured. There was no change in the data of the monitoring post.

- On May 31, we sprayed dust inhibitor to the area of approx. 8,750m2 including near the main gate.
and
- We analyzed strontium in seawater collected on May 9 and detected strontium 89 and 90.
The strontium 90 (which is the isotope of strontium that has a similar half life to cesium 137)
http://www.tepco.co.jp/en/press/corp-com/release/betu11_e/images/110531e16.pdf
According to the analyzing group, "Sr-89 and Sr-90 were detected at both coast and offshore. It is conceivable that this is due to the accident. However, the results are below the density limit in water by the announcement of Reactor Regulation."
In fact, on May 9th, when the samples were take, the strontium 90 concentration was about a factor of 200 less than that of cesium 137, and were at less than 1% of the regulatory amount.
 
The IAEA has submitted its report to the Japanese government.

You can download the report here:
http://www.iaea.org/newscenter/focus/fukushima/missionsummary010611.pdf

Here's what's on the IAEA website:

UPDATE: IAEA Fact-Finding Team Completes Visit to Japan (1 June 2011)


A team of international nuclear safety experts today completed a preliminary assessment of the safety issues linked with TEPCO's Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station accident following the Great East Japan Earthquake and Tsunami. The team - created by an agreement of the IAEA and the Government of Japan - sought to identify lessons learned from the accident that can help improve nuclear safety around the world.

To conduct its work, the team held extensive discussions with officials from the full range of Japanese nuclear-related agencies and visited three nuclear sites, including the nuclear power plant at TEPCO's Fukushima Daiichi. These visits gave the team a first-hand appreciation of the scale of devastation wreaked by the earthquake and tsunami on 11 March and of the extraordinary efforts Japanese workers have been applying ever since to stabilize the situation.

"Our entire team was humbled by the enormous damage inflicted by the tsunami on Japan. We are also profoundly impressed by the dedication of Japanese workers working to resolve this unprecedented nuclear accident," said team leader Mike Weightman, the United Kingdom's Chief Inspector of Nuclear Installations.

The team was comprised of international experts with experience across a range of nuclear specialties. They came from 12 countries: Argentina, China, France, Hungary, India, Indonesia, Russia, South Korea, Spain, Turkey, United Kingdom and the United States.

In a draft report summary delivered to Japanese authorities today, the team prepared a set of preliminary conclusions and identified lessons learned in three broad areas: external hazards, severe accident management and emergency preparedness. The final report will be delivered to the Ministerial Conference on Nuclear Safety at IAEA headquarters in Vienna from 20 to 24 June.

The expert team made several preliminary findings and lessons learned, including:

•Japan's response to the nuclear accident has been exemplary, particularly illustrated by the dedicated, determined and expert staff working under exceptional circumstances;

•Japan's long-term response, including the evacuation of the area around stricken reactors, has been impressive and well organized. A suitable and timely follow-up programme on public and worker exposures and health monitoring would be beneficial;

•The tsunami hazard for several sites was underestimated. Nuclear plant designers and operators should appropriately evaluate and protect against the risks of all natural hazards, and should periodically update those assessments and assessment methodologies;

•Nuclear regulatory systems should address extreme events adequately, including their periodic review, and should ensure that regulatory independence and clarity of roles are preserved;

and
•The Japanese accident demonstrates the value of hardened on-site Emergency Response Centres with adequate provisions for handling all necessary emergency roles, including communications.

"I appreciate the high level of cooperation and access that our team has received from Japan, as the devastating natural events and subsequent accident at TEPCO's Fukushima Daiichi have provided a unique opportunity for learning," Weightman said. "It is of fundamental importance for all with responsibility for nuclear safety across the world to seek to learn from this unique event."
 
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And NHK stories:

NHK says today:

TEPCO to use additional facilities to store water
The operator of the Fukushima Daiichi plant, which is struggling to remove radioactive water, says it may use 2 additional buildings inside the compound as storage.


Tokyo Electric Power Company said on Wednesday that water levels are rising in underground tunnels extending from the No. 2 and 3 reactors and the basements of their turbine buildings. It said the levels rose for 24 hours through Wednesday evening. The water in the tunnel of the No. 2 reactor is now 30.6 centimeters below ground level, and 25.2 centimeters at the No. 3 reactor. The levels are causing concerns that the water may overflow from the shaft in the event of heavy rain.

TEPCO hopes to use the two buildings, but with just one basement floor each they can hold only a limited amount of radioactive water.

The firm says it will start operating a filtering system in the middle of this month to speed up the purification of highly toxic water.

It adds that water levels have been falling in the basement of the No.1 reactor since Tuesday evening, possibly because of steam and evaporation. Radiation levels remain too high to determine the reason first hand.

The firm is gauging radioactivity in underground water around the No. 1 reactor and checking if radioactive water is leaking from the building.
Thursday, June 02, 2011 01:55 +0900 (JST)

If Unit 1 is leaking, they will have to seal it.

This action is in response to this request, but TEPCO was already working on it

NISA urges TEPCO to set policy for decontamination
Japan's Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency is urging Tokyo Electric Power Company to lay out its plans for decontaminating the radioactive water that continues to accumulate at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant.

TEPCO says the heavy rain until Tuesday has increased the volume of highly radioactive water inside the plant.

The utility says the level of radioactive water rose by 6.2 centimeters in an underground tunnel extending from the No.2 reactor building during the 24 hours through Wednesday morning.

In the basement of the reactor's turbine building, the water rose by 6 centimeters.

Water levels also rose by more than 2 centimeters in the tunnel of the No.3 reactor, and in the basement of the reactor's turbine building.

The government's nuclear safety agency is asking TEPCO to secure new storage sites to which the contaminated water can be quickly transferred, and to lay out its plans for decontamination.

It is asking the utility to come up with the plans later on Wednesday, as the rainy season is approaching, bringing increased risks that the water will seep out.

Contaminated water is already flooding the basements of the turbine and reactor buildings, partly due to water injections to cool down the reactor cores.
Wednesday, June 01, 2011 12:25 +0900 (JST)

IAEA team submits report to Japan government
A team from the International Atomic Energy Agency has submitted to the Japanese government a summary report of its investigation into the disaster at Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant.

The 18-member team inspected the plant and other nuclear facilities from May 24th, before an IAEA ministerial meeting on nuclear safety starts on June 20th in Vienna.

Team leader Michael Weightman handed the report to the prime minister's advisor Goshi Hosono in Tokyo on Wednesday.

The report points out that Japan underestimated the impact of the tsunami. It urges the government to correctly assess the risks of all natural disasters, and draw up protective measures in the design and operation of nuclear power plants.

The report adds that Japan's Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency should be independent and given a clear role based on IAEA standards, so it can respond appropriately to disasters.

Hosono thanked the team for its extensive and detailed investigation, and said the Japanese government will make the best use of the report as it probes the crisis.

Weightman said his team had been given access to all the information it needed, and was able to compile the report quickly. He said the accident in Fukushima has lessons that can be shared by all countries.
Wednesday, June 01, 2011 15:59 +0900 (JST)

10,000 children move out of Fukushima
Japan's education ministry says about 10,000 children have moved out of Fukushima Prefecture following the March 11th disaster and crisis at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant. On Wednesday, the ministry announced that the number of school-age children who have left Fukushima -- from kindergarteners to high school students -- reached 9,998 as of May 1st.

They include 974 kindergarten pupils, 5,785 elementary school children, 2,014 junior high school students and 1,129 senior high school students. The prefectures of Saitama, Niigata and Tokyo have each welcomed more than 1,000 children from Fukushima. The other children relocated elsewhere across the country.The Fukushima board of education attributes the exodus to the nuclear accident, as the number of children who left the prefecture accounts for about 85 percent of the total from the 3 hardest-hit regions of Iwate, Miyagi and Fukushima.

An additional 5,500 children have changed schools within Fukushima Prefecture.
Wednesday, June 01, 2011 16:52 +0900 (JST)

Utilities report 342 faults near nuclear plants
Japan's electric power companies have reported 342 faults and geographical changes near nuclear power plants that they previously did not consider to be risks.The companies filed the reports with the industry ministry's Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency. An aftershock of the March 11th earthquake on April 11 th is known to have shifted a fault about 50 kilometers from the troubled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant. The fault had been believed to be inactive.

The agency instructed the utilities to reassess their plants' earthquake resistance and reexamine faults and geographical changes where plant operators had said the risk of earthquake damage was little or none. The utilities said previous studies had located 342 faults and geographical changes but that they had not taken them into account in assessing their plant's earthquake resistance.

These locations are said to have posed less risk because they have been inactive for more than 120,000 years or have not been regarded as faults as a result of erosion.The agency will assess the companies' reports and conduct field studies if necessary. The utilities are to reconsider the possible risks these faults may pose to their plants.
Wednesday, June 01, 2011 10:32 +0900 (JST

Evacuees pick up their cars from no-entry zone
Evacuees from the no-entry zone around the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant have returned briefly to their homes to collect their cars.21 evacuees from Kawauchi Village and 38 from Minami-soma City participated in the 1st car pickup operations on Wednesday. The participants from Kawauchi gathered in a gymnasium to receive instructions.They then changed into protective clothing and boarded a bus that took them to their homes.

They were allowed to stay in the area for about 2 hours and had up to 10 minutes to start their cars. Vehicles whose engines would not restart had to be left behind. Japan Automobile Federation workers accompanied the participants to help them deal with problems.

The participants were told to keep the windows of their vehicles closed and to refrain from using air conditioners to keep out radioactive materials. After the cars are driven out of the no-entry zone, tests will be conducted to determine whether the vehicles are contaminated with radiation.
Wednesday, June 01, 2011 13:47 +0900 (JST)
 
NEI has a new update

Plant Status


A team from the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), which has been investigating the accident at Fukushima Daiichi, said, in addition to being highly complimentary to the plant operators for their actions following the accident, the risk of tsunamis has been underestimated at several plant sites in Japan. In its preliminary findings, the IAEA said hazards should be reassessed and updated periodically. Included among a number of recommendations is that "regulatory independence and clarity of roles are preserved" during severe accidents. IAEA will present the report at a conference on nuclear safety beginning June 20 in Vienna.

Tokyo Electric Power Co. (TEPCO) has installed a new circulating water cooling system-the first such system installed at the plant since the accident-for the used fuel storage pool for reactor 2 at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear energy facility. Previously, the company had pumped cooling water into the pool using a fire pump. The new system will circulate water through a heat exchanger and return the cooled water to the pool in an effort to reduce the high humidity that has been hampering recovery work at that reactor. The utility plans to install similar systems for other fuel storage pools at the site.

Workers have replaced a broken pump at reactor 5 at the Fukushima Daiichi site. The reactor had been safely shut down since before the March 11 earthquake and tsunami. The pump is one of several that provides cooling water for the reactor.

TEPCO is evaluating exposure of two employees to high levels of radiation. The company said that shortly after the March 11 accident, the workers may have received a dose exceeding the 25 rem emergency level set by the government. The government has ordered TEPCO to test more workers at the plant for radiation exposure.

The government also is urging TEPCO to finalize plans for processing contaminated water that is collecting at Fukushima Daiichi. Heavy rain this week exacerbated rising levels of contaminated water in some of the plant's buildings. The government has asked TEPCO to provide additional storage facilities for the water.

The company also plans to install seawater purifiers near the water intakes for reactors 2 and 3. It expects to treat up to 30 tons of water per hour from inside the underwater silt fences that were installed earlier to help reduce contamination into the ocean. The company expects treatment to begin Thursday.

TEPCO has launched a live Web video stream from the Fukushima Daiichi site. The camera, installed about 250 meters northwest of reactor 1, shows images of reactors 1-4.

About 1,800 people have not evacuated from their homes near the Fukushima Daiichi site, despite passage of a government deadline to relocate. The government advised about 10,000 residents outside the 12.5-mile evacuation zone to relocate by the end of May. Those who remain include cattle farmers and those who cannot secure housing.

Industry/Regulatory/Political Issues

The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission will hold a public meeting on the petition to suspend General Electric Mark I boiling water reactor operating licenses June 8 at NRC headquarters in Rockville, Md.

Media Highlights


NEI's chief nuclear officer, Tony Pietrangelo, is scheduled to appear on CNN International today live at 7:30 p.m. EDT. He will discuss recent nuclear energy developments, including Germany's decision to phase out nuclear energy by 2022.

The German government on Monday said it plans to shut all of the nation's nuclear power plants within the next 11 years, a sharp reversal for Chancellor Angela Merkel after the Japanese disaster at Fukushima caused an electoral backlash by voters opposed to reliance on nuclear energy, The New York Times reported. Reaction to the chancellor's announcement has been mixed, and companies that operate the country's reactors have said they will sue the German government over the early closures.

New Products


NEI has updated its graphic illustrating Major Modifications and Upgrades to U.S. Boiling Water Reactors with Mark I Containment Systems and its graphic included in the related fact sheet, U.S. Nuclear Power Plants Reconfirming Safety, Response Programs in Light of Japan Situation.

Upcoming Events


International Panel on Fissile Materials Presentation and Discussion on Spent Fuel Management: Lessons from Around the World, June 3, American Association for the Advancement of Science Headquarters, Washington, D.C.

Lessons Learned From Fukushima Daiichi, Department of Energy Nuclear Safety Workshop, June 6-7, Arlington, Va.
 
Japantimes reported that TEPCO senior officials said on Sunday that stabilizing the crisis at Fukushima plant by the end of this year may be impossible.

Meanwhile the Education Ministry in Tokyo weakened nuclear safety standards in schools. Under the new guidelines kids can be exposed to 20 times more radiation than was previously permissible.
www.abc.net.au/am/content/2011/s3225020.htm
 
The ABC story is from May 24th. The government is scraping the dirt off the Fukishima school playgrounds to get the radiation level down, in response to the parents' request. Whether that is enough to satisfy the parents has not yet been reported. Certainly, 10,000 children have been sent out of the prefecture to live, that were previously enrolled in schools in Fukushima, and that are not from evacuated areas.

I saw that from Japan Times, but there is no mention of a schedule slip either from TEPCO itself on its website, from the IAEA, or from NHK. The senior officials were not named. It is certainly possible that TEPCO will slip on the schedule, but it is not official at this time.

As to today's status:

Junes 2nd, 2:00 PM JST
Wind SSE, weather cloudy/rainy
Six peripheral points ( 1.7, 1.4, 1.8, 1.6, 1.6, 1.5) microSieverts per hour
Manual point 9:00 AM JST 1.0 microSieverts per hour
Daiichiu
Eight peripheral points ( 5, 24, 16, 15, 18, 40, 123, 104 ) microSieverts per hour
Main Building 365 microSieverts per hour
West Gate 14 microSieverts per hour
Cart by Main Gate 31.3 microSieverts per hour

3:00 PM JST Status
-From 12:50 pm on June 2, we started transferring water from Unit 3 condenser to Unit 3 condenser storage tank.

-At 2:00 pm on June 2, we resumed transfer of accumulated water in the basement of Unit 6 turbine building to a temporary tank.

-On June 2, we are spraying dust inhibitor to prevent discharge of radioactive materials to the roof and exterior wall of reactor building of Unit 2 using a bending spray tower vehicle. On June 2, we are spraying dust inhibitor to areas including near the Main Gate.
http://www.tepco.co.jp/en/press/corp-com/release/betu11_e/images/110602e9.pdf
The cesium level is going down at the Daiichi discharge channels.
Perhaps that zeolite filtration rig they set up is working.

NHK articles

Kan survived the vote of no confidence, but is planning to step down after he feels that his role in dealing with the tsunami, earthquake and nuclear accident is finished. This may be relatively soon, and NHK is reporting that Hatoyama says Kan will step down at the end of June.

TEPCO plans to plug all potential leaks

The Tokyo Electric Power Company, or TEPCO, plans to plug all potential leaks of highly radioactive water from the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in June.

TEPCO submitted its plan to the Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency after finding in April and May that highly radioactive water was flowing into the sea via seaside concrete maintenance pits. The water apparently came from turbine buildings of the plant's No.2 and 3 reactors.

The utility says it identified 5 concrete tunnels and 39 pits around the plant as possible points from which radioactive water could flow out to the sea.

The firm says it filled all the tunnels and some of the pits with concrete, and that it will finish work at 17 of the pits and repair cracked seawalls in June.
TEPCO is under pressure to also find places to store an increasing amount of contaminated water in the turbine buildings, as the current rainy season is raising fears of overflows. The utility plans to install a water purification system to recycle the water.
Thursday, June 02, 2011 19:31 +0900 (JST)

Nagasaki staffers exposed to Fukushima radiation

Nagasaki University Hospital says that at least 40 percent of local people sent to Fukushima Prefecture, host to the crippled nuclear plant, suffered internal radiation exposure.

The hospital checked staffers and medical experts sent to Fukushima by Nagasaki's prefectural government. They spent around a week helping local government offices and medical institutions in Fukushima after the nuclear plant accident in March.

The hospital says radioactive iodine was detected in the bodies of 34, or about 40 percent, of 87 examinees. Some were also detected for radioactive cesium. Neither substance occurs naturally in human bodies.

Officials at the hospital insist, however, that the level of radioactive contamination is very low and poses no health concerns.

Nagasaki University Professor Naoki Matsuda, who joined the survey, says Fukushima residents should also be checked for levels of internal exposure.

The survey results will be reported at a conference in Hiroshima City on Sunday.
Thursday, June 02, 2011 21:20 +0900 (JST)

and indeed

Fukushima to check internal radiation exposure
Fukushima Prefecture has decided to check the internal radiation exposure of residents near the crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant and adjacent areas with high radiation levels. In Fukushima, there are mounting concerns among locals over the health effects of radiation after the nuclear accident at Fukushima Daiichi plant.The prefecture had already decided to conduct health checks on all citizens, but will now assess residents' internal exposure to radiation from breathing and eating.

The targets will be residents near the plant and people who live in adjacent areas with high radiation levels.A device called a "whole-body counter" will be used to precisely measure radiation.

But the prefecture currently has only one device and can screen just 10 people per day. It is urging research institutes and others with the device outside the prefecture to help them.

Fukushima is also studying whether it can fetch 2 devices from Okuma Town, which lies inside the no-go zone.
Thursday, June 02, 2011 16:28 +0900 (JST)
I think the SDF should fetch the 2 whole body scan machines. Or Tepco should donate one or two.

Okinawa to invite Fukushima children during summer
A youth hostel in Okinawa Prefecture is inviting children in Fukushima Prefecture to spend time there this summer free of charge, away from fears of radiation from the troubled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant.

Up to 100 children, from elementary to senior high school age, can apply for the program, which runs from July 26th to August 23rd at Okinawa International Youth Hostel.

During their stay, the children will get help with their school work from local university students, and have opportunities to experience traditional Okinawa arts and culture.

The organizer of the program, the Okinawa Youth Hostel Society, says all the expenses will be covered by a donation from a German organization for people affected by the March 11th disaster.

The society says it will offer free stays for children in Fukushima beyond the summer vacation, if they continue to live in fear of radiation.
Thursday, June 02, 2011 17:01 +0900 (JST)

A comment from Areva on the German nuclear plant closings, citing a Reuters article:
http://us.arevablog.com/2011/06/01/germany-out-and-saudi-arabia-in/
Germany Out Saudi Arabia in

[quhttp://af.reuters.com/article/energyOilNews/idAFLDE75004Q20110601
However, we should point out that oil-rich Saudi Arabia is making the reverse move announcing a dramatic expansion of its domestic nuclear capacity. According to Reuters, a Saudi-based newspaper reported today that the country “plans to build 16 nuclear power reactors by 2030.” As the world’s top crude exporter, Saudi Arabia has been struggling to keep up with a rapidly rising power demand, and is now considering nuclear reactors to boost its domestic energy capacity
and
Neighbouring United Arab Emirates in December 2009 awarded a South Korean consortium the contract to build four nuclear power plants worth $20.4 billion. (Reporting by Sara Anabtawi; Editing by Jon Herskovitz)

And Italy, which not had nuclear power since Chernobyl, is scheduled for a referendum to vote on whether to pursue getting it to lower reliance on foriegn coal, gas, and oil. Berlasconi attempted to put off this referendum, but the courts say it must go on.

and some things are gradually getting back to normal

Regular sumo tourneys to resume in July
Japan's regular sumo tournaments are to resume in July after the suspension of two ordinary rounds due to a bout-fixing scandal. The board of the Japan Sumo Association agreed on the resumption on Thursday, saying that conditions have been satisfied for resuming tournaments.On Wednesday, Association Chairman Hanaregoma reported to the sports ministry on the association's effort and its intention to resume the tournaments.

The July Grand Sumo Tournament in Nagoya will be the first regular event since the New Year tourney in January.

The association is expected to release rankings of its wrestlers for the Nagoya tourney in late June. The tournament will open on July 10th.
In February, a match-fixing scandal broke out and the association was forced to cancel the March and May tourneys. The association also punished 25 wrestlers and stable masters for their involvement.

In May, the association held a free tournament called a skill test instead of a regular competition, while introducing measures to prevent a recurrence.
Thursday, June 02, 2011 19:31 +0900 (JST)
Sumo wrestlers have been very good about visiting evacuees; they went early and cooked sumo food back in April and set up an evacuee fund.
In June:
Hakuho visits Fukushima evacuees in Saitama
Sumo grand champion Hakuho has visited a facility near Tokyo where people fleeing the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant crisis are taking shelter.Residents of Futaba town in Fukushima Prefecture have evacuated to a facility in Kazo, Saitama Prefecture.

On Wednesday, they welcomed Hakuho and 2 other wrestlers. The highest level champion, or yokozuna, spoke with the evacuees, wrestled young children and signed autographs.A singer-songwriter who accompanied the wrestlers later performed Hakuho's fight song.

The yokozuna said the children have suffered a lot but he hopes they never give up their dreams.
Thursday, June 02, 2011 09:37 +0900 (JST
 
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I finished reading the IAEA's mission team's summary report. I think it is worth while reproducing it here. The point I have bolded was not reported on NHK, and I think it is very important. The government has not really come to terms with determining which evacuees will be able to go home, which will not, when they will be able to go home, and what remediation must be done, and by home.

I'd like to see a plan.


http://www.iaea.org/newscenter/focus/fukushima/missionsummary010611.pdf

The main preliminary findings and lessons learned are:
• The Japanese Government, nuclear regulators and operators have been extremely open in sharing information and answering the many questions of the mission to assist the world in learning lessons to improve nuclear safety.

• The response on the site by dedicated, determined and expert staff, under extremely arduous conditions has been exemplary and resulted in the best approach to securing safety given the exceptional circumstances. This has been greatly assisted by highly professional back-up support, especially the arrangements at J-Village to secure the protection of workers going on sites.

• The Japanese Government’s longer term response to protect the public, including evacuation, has been impressive and extremely well organized. A suitable and timely follow-up programme on public and worker exposures and health monitoring would be beneficial.

• The planned road-map for recovery of the stricken reactors is important and acknowledged. It will need modification as new circumstances are uncovered and may be assisted by international co-operation. It should be seen as part of a wider plan that could result in remediation of the areas off site affected by radioactive releases to allow people evacuated to resume their normal lives. Thus demonstrating to the world what can be achieved in responding to such extreme nuclear events.

• The tsunami hazard for several sites was underestimated. Nuclear designers and operators should appropriately evaluate and provide protection against the risks of all natural hazards, and should periodically update these assessments and assessment methodologies in light of new information, experience and understanding.

• Defence in depth, physical separation, diversity and redundancy requirements should be applied for extreme external events, particularly those with common mode implications such as extreme floods.

• Nuclear regulatory systems should address extreme external events adequately, including their periodic review, and should ensure that regulatory independence and clarity of roles are preserved in all circumstances in line with IAEA Safety Standards.

• Severe long term combinations of external events should be adequately covered in design, operations, resourcing and emergency arrangements.

• The Japanese accident demonstrates the value of hardened on-site Emergency
Response Centres with adequate provisions for communications, essential
plant parameters, control and resources. They should be provided for all
major nuclear facilities with severe accident potential. Additionally, simple
effective robust equipment should be available to restore essential safety
functions in a timely way for severe accident conditions.

• Hydrogen risks should be subject to detailed evaluation and necessary
mitigation systems provided.

• Emergency arrangements, especially for the early phases, should be designed
to be robust in responding to severe accidents.
 
The IAEA has finally updated its status report for the first time since May 18. The Seawater Monitoring section is particularly informative. I wish NHK would read it, rather than going scare-mongering every time one or another measurement is slightly higher in the inner harbor.

On Thursday, 2 June 2011, the IAEA provided the following information on the status of nuclear safety in Japan:

Overall, the situation at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant remains very serious.

The IAEA receives information from various official sources in Japan through the Japanese national competent authority, the Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency (NISA). This Update Brief is based on information issued by the IAEA Incident and Emergency Centre up to 16:00 UTC on 31 May 2011.

1. Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant Status

Tables 1 - 4 track progress for Units 1 - 4 towards fulfilling the three basic safety functions of the IAEA safety standards: prevention of criticality, removal of decay heat and mitigation of radioactive releases. The tables replace the three-colour table that was used previously. The charts are cross-referenced to the Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO) "Roadmap" plan to bring the nuclear reactors and the spent fuel pools at the Fukushima Daiichi plant to a stable cooling condition and to mitigate radioactive releases.

On 17 May 2011, TEPCO provided a status report against the TEPCO "Roadmap" showing progress since the Roadmap was issued on 17 April 2011. While the basic policy and targets defined in the Roadmap remain, several changes were made to account for new information obtained and progress made to date.

On 13 May TEPCO commenced the preparatory work for the installation of a cover for the reactor building of Unit 1. The reactor building cover will be installed as an emergency measure to prevent the dispersion of radioactive substances until mid- to long term measures, including radiation shielding, are implemented.

TEPCO has reported that information obtained after calibration of the reactor water level gauges of Unit 1 shows that the actual water level in the Unit 1 reactor pressure vessel was lower than was indicated, showing that the fuel was completely uncovered. The results of provisional analysis show that fuel pellets melted and fell to the bottom of reactor pressure vessel at a relatively early stage in the accident.

TEPCO reported that "most part of the fuel is considered to be submerged in the bottom of reactor pressure vessel and some part exposed." TEPCO also reported that leakage of cooling water from the reactor pressure vessel is likely to have occurred. However, TEPCO considers that the actual damage to the reactor pressure vessel is limited, on the basis of the temperatures now being measured around the reactor pressure vessel.

The results of the analysis are provisional; TEPCO will continue to conduct investigations. Similar analyses will be conducted for Units 2 and 3 when radiation levels allow calibration of the instrumentation.

Nitrogen gas is still being injected into the containment vessel in Unit 1 to reduce the possibility of hydrogen combustion inside the containment vessel.

In Units 1, 2 and 3 fresh water is being continuously injected both via the feed water system lines and the fire extinguishers lines into the reactor pressure vessel; temperatures and pressures remain stable.

To protect against potential damage as a result of future earthquakes, TEPCO started work on 9 May to install a supporting structure for the floor of the spent fuel pool of Unit 4. TEPCO has formulated the hypothesis that the damage to the Unit 4 building could have been caused by hydrogen generated at Unit 3 that flowed into Unit 4.

Fresh water is being injected as necessary into the spent fuel pools of Units 1 - 4. Water supply from concrete pump trucks is being gradually replaced by the Fuel Pool Cooling and Clean-up system in Units 1 to 3. However, closed loop cooling has not been yet established.

Stagnant water with high levels of radioactivity in the basement of the turbine buildings of Units 1 and 3 is being transferred to the condensers, the radioactive waste treatment facility, the high-temperature incinerator building and temporary storage tanks. Stagnant water in the basement of the turbine building of Unit 6 is being transferred to a temporary tank. Countermeasures against the outflow of water to the sea and to prevent and minimize the dispersion of radionuclides in water have been put in place.

Full-scale spraying of anti-scattering agent is continuing at the site with the use of both conventional and remote controlled equipment.

2. Radiation Monitoring

The daily monitoring of the deposition of caesium and iodine radionuclides for 47 prefectures is continuing. Since 17 May, deposition of I-131 has not been observed. Low levels of Cs-137 deposition were reported in a few prefectures on a few days since 18 May; the reported values range of from 2.2 to 91 Bq/ m2 for Cs-137.

Gamma dose rates values for all 47 prefectures are reported daily by the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT) of Japan. On 31 May the gamma dose rate reported for Fukushima prefecture was 1.5 µSv/h. In all other prefectures, reported gamma dose rates were below 0.1 µSv/h; with a general decreasing trend. Meanwhile, the decrease of the gamma dose rate has slowed down, since the short-lived radionuclides have decayed away.

Gamma dose rates reported specifically for the monitoring points in the eastern part of Fukushima prefecture, for distances of more than 30 km from the Fukushima Daiichi plant, showed a general decreasing trend, ranging from 0.1 µSv/h to 17 µSv/h, as reported for 31 May.

On-site measurements at the west gate of the Fukushima Daiichi plant indicate the presence of I-131 and Cs-137 in the air in the close vicinity of the plant (within approximately 1 km). The concentrations in air reported for 29 May were about 3 Bq/m3 for I-131 and about 9 Bq/m3 for Cs-137. The values observed in the previous days show daily fluctuations with an overall decreasing tendency.

Protective Actions

In April, the Government of Japan announced protective actions to reduce the external exposure to the population beyond a distance of 30 km from the Fukushima-Daiichi Nuclear Plant. NISA has reported that the evacuation of the "Planned Evacuation Zones" within Iitate village and Kawamata town commenced on 15 May. Confirmation of completion of the evacuation is awaited.

Food Monitoring and Food Restrictions

Food Monitoring (Reported from 19 to 31 May)

Food monitoring data were reported from 19 to 31 May by the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare for a total of 818 samples collected in 18 different prefectures. Most of the monitoring continues to be concentrated in Fukushima prefecture, where 328 out of the 818 samples (over 40%) were collected.

Analytical results for 766 samples (over 93%) of the 818 samples indicated that Cs-134 and Cs-137 or I-131 were either not detected or were below the regulation values set by the Japanese authorities. However, 52 samples were above the regulation values for radioactive caesium and/or iodine.

In Fukushima prefecture, five samples of fishery products collected on 16 and 17 May; one sample of unprocessed tea leaves collected on 17 May; three samples of shiitake mushrooms and nine samples of bamboo shoots collected on 19 May; five samples of seafood collected on 20, 21 and 23 May, and; one sample of Japanese apricot, two samples of shiitake mushrooms and seven samples of bamboo shoots collected on 26 May were above the regulation values for Cs-134/Cs-137. One sample of algae collected on 21 May was also above the regulation values for Cs-134/Cs-137 and I-131.

In Chiba, Gunma, Ibaraki and Tochigi prefectures, eighteen samples of unprocessed raw tea leaves collected on 17, 19, 24 and 26 May were above the regulation values for Cs-134/Cs-137.

Food Restrictions

Consolidated and updated information on food restrictions in Fukushima prefecture were reported on 30 May by the Ministry of Health Labour and Welfare indicating that restrictions on the distribution of bamboo shoots were lifted in the Hirata-Mura area. However, restrictions remain in effect on the distribution of raw unprocessed milk, turnips, bamboo shoots and ostrich fern in specific areas of the prefecture. Restrictions on the distribution and consumption of sand lance fish (the whole prefecture) and specific non-head type (e.g. spinach) and head-type leafy vegetables (e.g. cabbage), flower head brassicas (e.g. broccoli, cauliflower) and shiitake mushrooms (specific areas of the prefecture) also remain in effect.

In Ibaraki prefecture there is a continuing restriction on the distribution of spinach produced in the cities of Kitaibaraki and Takahagi.

3. Marine Monitoring
The marine monitoring programme is carried out both near the discharge areas of the Fukushima Daiichi plant by TEPCO at 22 locations and at off-shore stations by MEXT on 16 stations. The radioactive contamination of the marine environment had occurred by aerial deposition and by continuing discharges and outflow of water with various level of radioactivity from the four damaged reactors at Fukushima Daiichi.

Seawater Monitoring
The activity concentrations of I-131, Cs-134 and Cs-137 in seawater close to the Fukushima Daiichi plant at the screen of Unit 2 have been measured every day since 2 April. Concentrations of Cs-134 and Cs-137 decreased from of more than 100 MBq/L initially to less than 5 kBq/L on 7 May but increased again to levels of around 20 kBq/L at the 16 May and to about 10 kBq/L on the 17 May. Since then the concentrations dropped slowly to less than 2 kBq/L but increased to about 5 kBq/L on 29 May. The levels of I-131 are varying significantly and the activity ratio to radio-caesium is not constant. On 28 and 29 May the concentrations were around 20 kBq/L. The variability of I-131 relatively to the radio-caesium concentrations could be an indication of retention of caesium by the zeolite sandbags in place, which would have almost no effect on iodine or further production of decay products in the reactor.

Monitoring of the marine environment is performed by TEPCO on the near field area and by MEXT at off-shore sampling positions. The monitoring of MEXT includes also measurement of ambient dose rate in air above the sea, analysis of ambient dust above the sea, analysis of surface samples of sea water and analysis of samples of sea water collected at 10 m above the sea bottom and in a mid-layer as well at a few locations for sediments. On most of the offshore stations I-131, Cs-134 and Cs-137 reached levels below the applied detection limit of 10 Bq/L. There will be a further decrease of the concentration during the propagation of contaminated waters in the sea. The activity found in surface sediments at the near shore stations close to the reactors was between 24 and 320 Bq/kg for Cs-137 in the middle of May. The activity in sediments decreases with distance, but is also highly dependent upon the sediment type. The contamination of marine sediments indicates the enrichment of radio-caesium on particulate matter and its removal from the water column into the sea floor.
 
Interesting events on the US front. It is fascinating the way that Fukushima Daiichi has brought all the chickens home to roost in every country, but the the results of what happens are so unpredictable:

In the midst of a budget cutting spree at the Department of Energy, the US house of Representatives restored funding for the Yucca Mountain nuclear waste storage site. Certainly, the spent fuel pools at Daiichi have put a spotlight on waste accumulating at nuclear power plants. However, neither the earthquakes, tsunamis, nor explosions have done any harm to dry cask storage at Daiichi (storage for fuel cool enough to be transported to somewhere like Yucca Mountain):

http://www.platts.com/RSSFeedDetailedNews/RSSFeed/ElectricPower/6148275

The subcommittee's bill would increase funding in one area that DOE did not request. The Obama administration has sought to kill the long-planned Yucca Mountain nuclear waste repository in Nevada, and proposed no funding for the project. But that move has been attacked by Republicans in Congress, and the subcommittee proposed $35 million to continue work on the project, and would forbid DOE from using funds to close the project.

Closing Yucca Mountain before it opens was a key feature of getting Senate Majority Leader Harry Reed reelected, and of getting Obama elected, since Nevadans are strongly against the facility. Consequently, Republicans are for Yucca Mountain. However support of the project is now, surprisingly bipartisan.

http://www.globalsecuritynewswire.org/gsn/nw_20110602_1053.php
Yucca Mountain Decision Takes a Bipartisan BeatingThursday, June 2, 2011

By Amy Harder

National Journal

WASHINGTON -- Energy Secretary Steven Chu’s decision to scuttle the nuclear waste repository project at Yucca Mountain faced rare bipartisan condemnation at a House hearing on Wednesday (see GSN, May 16). Chu didn’t testify, but one of his top aides did -- Acting Assistant Secretary for Nuclear Energy Peter Lyons -- and he got an earful from virtually every member who questioned him.

“Regardless of who the administration is, the abject failure to follow federal law here is most disturbing, and it’s unacceptable,” Representative Jay Inslee (D-Wash.) bellowed at an Energy and Commerce subcommittee hearing. “It’s unacceptable by any administration of any party.”

Inslee hails from a state that houses nuclear waste once intended for Yucca Mountain. Lyons confronted similar criticism from other Democrats with a less direct stake in the project, including Representatives John Dingell of Michigan and G.K. Butterfield of North Carolina.
More liberal Democrats like Energy and Commerce ranking member Henry Waxman of California, did not question Lyons, although Waxman was at the hearing early on..

The members charged that the administration is breaking federal law -- the Nuclear Waste Policy Act -- by terminating Yucca Mountain based in part on local objections to the project. The project has taken nearly 30 years of the government’s time and cost taxpayers about $15 billion, according to a Government Accountability Office report issued last month that was critical of the administration’s decision to end the project.

The unused money that utility commissions are collecting for the Nuclear Waste Fund is another reason lawmakers like Butterfield seem frustrated with the administration.

“I’m embarrassed to tell my constituents that their contributions have amounted to very little,” said Butterfield, whose constituents have paid (via their electricity bills) almost $2.8 billion in fees to the Nuclear Waste Fund.

Lyons struggled to respond. He repeatedly said he was not a lawyer and thus couldn’t answer many of the questions. He kept referring to testimony Chu has made saying the administration was going to find a more workable solution based on technical criteria and “social acceptance.” Lyons struggled to justify local objections as a legal grounds for terminating the project. He said the department’s application for the project submitted to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission in 2007 was technically and scientifically acceptable.

In 1987, the Nuclear Waste Policy Act designated Yucca Mountain as the nation’s permanent nuclear waste repository. Shortly after taking office, President Obama zeroed out funding for the project and appointed a commission to find another long-term solution for nuclear waste. The commission will issue an interim report in July and a final report next year. The legality of the decision to terminate the project is being examined by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission and in the courts, but it’s unclear if or when a final decision will come from either venue.

In House Republicans’ fiscal 2012 Energy-Water spending bill, introduced on Wednesday and slated for a markup Thursday, Republicans restored $35 million in funding for Yucca Mountain, including $10 million for the NRC to continue its review of the license. The bill includes provisions to forbid the use of funds to close the program.

On the other hand, some cuts have been proposed in cleaning up radioactive sites:

Spending on the clean up of nuclear waste at former Cold War nuclear weapons sites under the agency's environmental management program would be cut to $4.9 billion, down $469 million from the request of $5.4 billion.

DOE has legally binding agreements that set a timelines for cleaning up radioactive waste from some sites, including the Hanford Site in Washington and portions of Idaho National Laboratory.

And then there's the case of Germany, which I want to discuss at length, and hope that some of my readers have more insight to add on that country's actions.
 
And this is where I think the discussion should start, with an OpEd by the Editorial board of the Washington Post. In some ways, it's a shocker. The WP and the NYT here in the US have been consistently nuclear alarmist in tone. On the other hand, they have always represented global warming as a fact, and as being caused by increased global warming gases (like CO2 and methane). Germany's decision to close all their nuclear plants has apparently caused the Post editorial board to find some mismatch between their previous editorial opinions, hence this OpEd.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/opini...energy-blunder/2011/05/31/AGjjGkGH_story.html

Editorial Board Opinion
Germany’s nuclear energy blunder Editorial, Published: June 1

THE INTERNATIONAL Energy Agency reported on Monday that global energy-related carbon emissions last year were the highest ever, and that the world is far off track if it wants to keep temperatures from rising more than 2 degrees Celsius, after which the results could be very dangerous.

So what does Germany’s government decide to do? Shut down terawatts of low-carbon electric capacity in the middle of Europe. Bowing to misguided political pressure from Germany’s Green Party, Chancellor Angela Merkel endorsed a plan to close all of the country’s nuclear power plants by 2022.



.German environmentalists cheered, apparently satisfied that the government will be able to scale up renewable energy sources and scale back electricity demand enough to compensate for the loss of the power plants, which produce a quarter of the nation’s electricity. But the Breakthrough Institute, a think tank, points out that renewables would have to generate an incredible 42.4 percent of the country’s electricity in 2020 to displace nuclear. The government could bring that number down some with very aggressive reductions in energy use. But, even then, all that will merely hold the German power industry to its current carbon footprint. The country has an ambitious goal to reduce emissions, which will require yet more drastic reforms to its electricity sector — and all, apparently, over the course of a single decade.

European financial analysts aren’t convinced, estimating that Germany’s move will result in about 400 million tons of extra carbon emissions by 2020, as the country relies more on fossil fuels. Nor is Donald Tusk, Poland’s prime minister, who ominously announced that Germany has put coal-fired power “back on the agenda” — good for his coal-rich nation directly to Germany’s east but terrible for the environment and public health.

Germany is also likely to import more power from its neighbors, regardless of how well it does in ramping up renewables, since sometimes the wind does not blow and the sun does not shine. Utilities across Europe may end up burning more coal or natural gas. Anne Lauvergeon, chief executive of French nuclear parts manufacturer Areva, predicts that after shunning nuclear, the Germans will end up buying electricity generated in nuclear plants in nations such as France.

Instead of providing a model for greening a post-industrial economy, Germany’s overreaching greens are showing the rest of the world just how difficult it is to contemplate big cuts in carbon emissions without keeping nuclear power on the table. Panicked overreaction isn’t the right response to the partial meltdowns in Japan’s Fukushima Daiichi nuclear complex. Instead, countries aiming to provide their citizens with reliable, low-carbon electricity should ask how to minimize inevitable, if small, risks — making their nuclear facilities safer, more reliable and more efficient

Because of course, if you believe in "Green", it's darn hard to justify an action that has this result:

European financial analysts aren’t convinced, estimating that Germany’s move will result in about 400 million tons of extra carbon emissions by 2020, as the country relies more on fossil fuels. Nor is Donald Tusk, Poland’s prime minister, who ominously announced that Germany has put coal-fired power “back on the agenda” — good for his coal-rich nation directly to Germany’s east but terrible for the environment and public health.

Because coal causes some 13,000 deaths a year, every year, in the US, according to the American Lung Association., 1000 or so in New York State alone, while operating normally.

http://www.lungusa.org/associations...ases/2010-2011/rel-toll-from-coal-9-9-10.html

“There’s no excuse in 2010 that power plant pollution cuts short the lives of nearly 1,000 people per year in New York when technology is available that could virtually eliminate this pollution,” said Laura Haight, senior environmental associate with NYPIRG. “We call upon EPA and Congress to finish the job of cleaning up power plant pollution.”

On a national level, other key findings of the report were:

· Coal-fired power plants remain among the top contributors to fine particle pollution, particularly SO2 and NOx, in the country. This pollution is expected to cause over 13,000 premature deaths in 2010, as well as almost 10,000 hospitalizations and more than 20,000 heart attacks per year.

Depending on how much filtration and scrubbing of coal stack gases is done, the mortality and illness rate could be less or more in Europe than in the US, but coal burning is not healthy for people in any case.

Germany apparently is claiming to be closing its NPPs "for the environment," but its a hard case to make.

Does anyone have any particular insight why Germans are more nuclear-averse than any other country?

Certainly, they were the first to withdraw from Tokyo World Figure Skating Championship, almost when the word "nuclear" was first spoken. Granted, Merkel's aboutface on nuclear is due to having to deal with a very strong Green Party, but why is the Green Party more than an asterisk in Germany's political spectrum?

(I have no expertise in that kind of political sociology, so I'm interested in any insights you all have).
 
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And here's another interesting cleanup technique being used in Japan-it seems to work like Silly Putty on newsprint-spread on, peel off.

mot, I'll bet you can think of some good uses for this stuff!

http://www.popsci.com/science/article/2011-05/cleaning-japans-radioactive-mess-novel-new-blue-goo

Apparently, it's from Hawaii

A clever technology is helping hazmat crews in Japan contain and clean up the contamination caused by the ongoing nuclear disaster there: a blue liquid that hardens into a gel that peels off of surfaces, taking microscopic particles like radiation and other contaminants with it. Known as DeconGel, Japanese authorities are using it inside and outside the exclusion zone on everything from pavement to buildings.

DeconGel was stumbled upon by accident at Hawaiian venture capital firm and technology incubator Skai Ventures. A researcher conducting an experiment got a bit of solution from an experiment on the floor; when it was cleaned up the next morning, the solution came off the floor taking everything foreign with it. Underneath, the floor was so clean they couldn’t make the rest of the surface look the same with any amount of scrubbing.


Now commercialized, the blue goo hasn’t seen much publicity. But after donating 100 five-gallon buckets of the stuff to Japanese cleanup efforts, the orders are rolling in.

When DeconGel goes onto a surface, it encapsulates absolutely everything that isn’t native to the material itself--including microscopic bits of contamination, like radiation or other pollutants. That in itself is a huge innovation. Conventionally, radiation is literally scrubbed from surfaces, essentially with soap and water. In doing so cleanup crews essentially mobilize the dangerous waste, increasing the chances that it might escape into water supplies or into the soil, while also increasing the hazard to workers themselves. The byproduct is contaminated water that is heavy and difficult to contain.

DeconGel captures contaminants first, then hardens around them, neutralizing the threats. Workers can then remove the contaminants safely, without worrying about pollutants escaping into the air or seeping into surrounding soil.

It sounds like, a pretty remarkable improvement in the way environments are remediated, and one that is likely to keep hazmat workers safer while they do their jobs. Those who do that unenviable work seem to think so. DeconGel’s maker has doubled its business every year since 2008, and with the Fukushima disaster elevating nuclear awareness around the globe, the company’s CEO told CNN Money he predicts 20 times more business over the next few years.

[CNN Money]

Japan-saved by Kitty Litter, Blue Goo, and US Robots.
 
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I hadn't seen this, but it is good news both ways. Good that UNSCEAR will do a study, and good that results so far haven't shown problems.:

http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/05/23/us-japan-fukushima-un-idUSTRE74M3VT20110523

U.N. body to probe Fukushima radiation impact

VIENNA | Mon May 23, 2011 4:29pm EDT

VIENNA (Reuters) - A U.N. scientific body said on Monday it would study the radiation impact of Japan's nuclear disaster on people and the environment, but it did not expect to detect any major health effects.

The United Nations Scientific Committee on the effects of Atomic Radiation (UNSCEAR), which has published reports about the 1986 Chernobyl accident, said it would take at least two years to produce a full report on the issue.

"Everybody wants answers tomorrow or next week ... but this is not possible. We need time," UNSCEAR Chairman Wolfgang Weiss told a news conference, adding that preliminary findings were expected in May 2012.

"So far what we have seen in the population, what we have seen in children with thyroid screening, what we have seen in workers ... we wouldn't expect to see health effects," he said.
The U.N. committee groups scientists from 21 countries.

Weiss said experts would "provide scientific insight on the magnitude of the releases to atmosphere and to the ocean, and the range of radiation doses received by the public and workers."

Engineers are battling to plug radiation leaks and bring the plant northeast of Tokyo under control more than two months after a 9.0 magnitude earthquake and deadly tsunami on March 11 that devastated a swathe of Japan's coastline.

After Chernobyl, where a reactor exploded and caught fire and radiation was sent billowing across Europe, several thousands of children developed thyroid cancer due to exposure.

Weiss said the number of people affected by the Fukushima disaster was much smaller than at Chernobyl. People living within a 20 km (12 mile) radius of the plant have been evacuated.

(Reporting by Fredrik Dahl)
 
Morning News June 3rd

- As to the vertical shafts of Unit 2 and 3, we began to blockade them in preparation for tsunami and have finished it on June 2nd.

- On June 2, we sprayed dust inhibitor to prevent discharge of radioactive materials to the roof and exterior wall of the reactor building of Unit 2 using a bending spray tower vehicle (approximately 7,200 m2). On June 2, we sprayed dust inhibitor to areas including near the Main Gate (approximately 8,525m2).

NHK
TEPCO says the cooling system they installed on the Unit 2 pool is working, and working better than expected.
TEPCO cools storage pool in No.2 reactor building
The operator of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant says it has succeeded in lowering the temperature in a storage pool for used nuclear fuel at the No.2 reactor after it started operating a cooling system there.

Tokyo Electric Power Company says the temperature in the pool dropped to 38 degrees Celsius on Thursday from about 70 degrees previously.

TEPCO had anticipated that it would take about one month to lower the temperature to about 40 degrees. In the No. 2 reactor building, steam released by the storage pool has been pushing up the humidity level to 99.9 percent. Such excessive humidity has prevented recovery efforts so far. The company installed a circulatory cooling system to lower the pool temperature in order to reduce humidity and began operating the system on Tuesday.

Since the temperature has sharply decreased TEPCO plans to inspect the interior of the building as it suspects humidity has also declined. If the situation has improved, it will install systems to remove radioactive substances.

The company plans to start operating similar cooling systems at the storage pools in the No.1 and 3 reactor buildings in June, and in the No.4 reactor building in July.
Friday, June 03, 2011 05:11 +0900 (JST)
Some details are coming out from the water containment plan that TEPCO delivered to NISA:
TEPCO needs to store 100,000 tons of tainted water
Tokyo Electric Power Company says more than 100,000 tons of highly radioactive water has been leaked from the damaged reactors of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant.

The operator warns that the water may overflow later this month during the rainy season and says it is struggling to find a place to store the water after filtering.

The basements of the first 4 reactor buildings are full of water that was injected to cool down the damaged reactors.

The situation is hampering efforts to achieve the ultimate goal of stabilizing the reactors.

TEPCO says 16,200 tons of water has been leaked outside Number One, 24,600 tons at Number 2, 28,100 tons at Number 3 and 22,900 tons at Number 4. It says another 13,300 tons of water has already been moved to a storage facility.

It says the 105,100 tons of water contains an estimated 720,000 terabecquerels of radioactive substances. Tera stands for one trillion.

On June 15th, TEPCO plans to start using equipment that can filter 1,200 tons of toxic water a day. In mid-August, it will also install an underground storage tank that can hold 100,000 tons of highly radioactive water.

TEPCO fears that the toxic water could overflow if the filter fails to work. It plans to secure more storage facilities.
Friday, June 03, 2011 14:05 +0900 (JST)
This is sort of a nothing article, but it is in Top Stories. IAEA wants Japan to continue sending it the same detailed info it is currently receiving.
IAEA wants latest information on nuclear accident
The International Atomic Energy Agency has called on Japan to report the latest, most detailed information on the accident at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant. The IAEA explained to its member nations the current status of the accident at a meeting at its headquarters in Vienna on Thursday. The agency plans to hold an international, ministerial-level meeting to discuss the accident later this month.

Deputy Director General Denis Flory told reporters after the meeting that the agency has so far received adequate information on the accident from Japan.
He added that Japan should report the latest information, including the status of the nuclear reactors and why highly contaminated water leaked into the sea, at the coming meeting.


Flory also said countries must follow common safety standards to rebuild confidence in nuclear energy and that the IAEA standards should be their basis.
Friday, June 03, 2011 01:25 +0900 (JST)
 
Doris, you may have said it somewhere, but I missed it. Your job/ex-job/specialization is/was related somehow to the nuclear stuff, or it's just your hobby? If the first is the case, what is your general prediction of the situation in total? I mean when and where and what the possible solutions can come? It looks like the situation is affecting the nuclear market in Europe too, where they hardly ever have any earthquakes, not saying of tsunami. Btw, I am an amature. I know nothing about the stuff and have no relation to it, except that I live in Japan.
 
let's talk, I was an engineer/scientist for IBM. My specialization area was solid state physics, but a large part of my publications and patents were in the area of laser machining, optical inspection and optical components for laser machining systems. When I was younger, I worked as one of a group developing software for a finite element process modelling system for semiconductor processing, & writing software for electrical testers for oxide depth, doping, and silicon doping profiles. When you do your course work in physics, you take a lot of quantum mechanics, thermodynamics, and atomic physics, all of which have application in this crisis. However, I have never worked as a nuclear engineer, myself, although I have had to handle radioactive substances in several projects that I was working on. I have been extremely interested in energy issues for some time, exactly because my area of specialization in optical systems and components build makes me very aware of the way photovoltaic solar is being both oversold for what it can do, and for being clean, when it is not.

Additionally, as a child growing up here in Groton, I was at the launching of the first nuclear submarine, the Nautilus. There have been up to 100 floating reactors in submarines near my home town since I was a little, little girl. And there are two big commercial reactors within 7 miles of my home today. Consequently, it has been important to me since I was young to understand exactly what goes on with them, what my risks are, what my children's risks are.

So I would say I am an educated amateur of the subject.

In some ways, predictions IMO, need sociologists, because different countries seem to have behaved very differently to what they have learned from Daiichi, and from nuclear accidents in their past.

Russia has had more nuclear accidents than any other country, and its solution has always been to create an exclusion zone around the debacle and walk away from it. The overwhelming fact of Russia is its huge size. It can throw away huge tracts of land the size of Rhode Island to avoid the expense of cleaning up. However, it has plenty of coal, natural gas, and oil, and it still likes nuclear power. Furthermore, it has not shut any of the flawed RMBK reactors (same model as Chernobyl's that exploded). Likewise, Ukraine, actual home of Chernobyl, is heavily vested in nuclear power and does not seem to be getting that excited about Fukushima.

The Poles are considering starting up a new reactor to sell power to the Germans. The Czechs are already doing the same. I think to both, they do not want to be at the end of Russia's Gazprom natural gas line, with the Russians able to coerce them by threatening to turn the switch off and on.

The French chose long ago to have nuclear power their main source, between 75 and 80 percent of their power these days. Furthermore, last I checked, electricity was their number 4 export, and they had some of the cheapest electrical power to the customer in Europe. The Greens could only get 100 people to an anti-nuclear rally. The French seem happy with their choice, and Fukishima has not changed that. They have no oil, gas or coal, and wish to be independent of other countries.

The English are continuing on the same nuclear path they were treading before, saying, we have no tsunamis and no earthquakes. Furthermore, we have lots of rain and not much sunshine; solar does not do it for us. Also, average wind in GB has dropped below what was predicted-they are less thrilled with wind than you might think. Likewise, being an island nation, you can't just run a gasline to it.

In the US, it is unclear what will happen. The only state where people seem severely upset about their own local reactors is Vermont, and they were that way before Fukushima. OTOH, many of our people in the media are very loud about reactors. Our government is split, but their are pronuclear folk in both parties. Surprisingly, Yucca Mt. waste storage is looking like being funded again. With respect to our past nuclear accidents, we have been brought, if only by legal action, to clean up their results.

And new reactors are moving ahead in South Carolina and Georgia, perhaps other states, too.

To return to the question of our most iffy reactor situation, in VT, the legislature voted to close Vermont Yankee, but unfortunately Yankee contracts to sell power to Massachusetts and other parts of New England, and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission is the US agency that determines whether a reactor is safe, not the state of VT. The state can only judge whether it is usually operational, and if not, to close it. Yankee has both a good performance and a good safety record, so Entergy, which owns Yankee, is suing Vermont, as it is indeed an interstate commerce issue, and so the jurisdiction for the case is federal.

The Canadians do not seem to be rushing to close their Candu reactors, which have performed very well over time, except for the original one at Chalk River in the early 1950's.

The Germans have a large Green Party, quite a few reactors that have never given anyone any trouble, and a long-term uneasy relationship to them. I do not quite understand why, although it may have to do with the press going on and on about radioactive mushrooms and radioactive wild boars. Some Germans claim it is the women who vote Green Party, and that's why (?) I didn't quite get that, but that's what 2 of them said. Another claimed (again talking about radioactive wild boars and truffles) that German engineers could make the weaknesses of solar and wind become unimportant, because the engineers are wonderful. Again, then why does she distrust the reactors made by German engineers? I still don't understand the Germans on this subject.

The Italians decided to close all reactors after Chernobyl. Berlasconi was considering changing that policy, but they will be holding a referendum on it. I expect no new nuclear plants in Italy, but that has been the Italian direction for some time.

The Swiss and Belgians look like one or both will be closing their plants. In Switzerland, there was a 25,000 person antinuclear rally, and the next day the government said it would close its nuclear plant (s). The Swiss do not seem to like demonstrations. These are the two countries taking a perhaps unexpected change of direction.

This is kind of a long rundown, but it seems to me that the situation at Fukushima Daiichi has affirmed people in different countries in whatever path they were treading already with respect to nuclear power before the disaster.

So in Japan, the original path was to build nuclear, perhaps some of the plants in questionable places, like Daiichi, near a subduction fault. I would hope that better site planning would be done in future if any new plants are to be built. I would hope that if any new plants were to be built, they would not be Boiling Water Reactors like the ones at Daiichi. What I am most eager to see in Japan is what is done to recover the contaminated land and fields and waterways. Japan is densely populated. They did not throw away Hiroshima & Nagasaki. I am hoping that Fukushima prefecture will be restored in the next 20 years.

At this time, the government is planning to go with at least 20% unreliable sources of electricity. I am not sure at all how the Japanese people will like late, unairconditioned trains, manufacturing plants with brownouts, 'smart grids' that turn off the electricity at their homes when the windmills are not turning, working on weekends rather than at nights, and the other results of drastically cutting the available electrical power. It is possible, that like the Ukrainians, who at first were going to close the other Chernobyl reactors, and then did not, and eventually replaced them with new reactors. The Ukrainians did not like the high price of buying fuel from Russia.

I have listed in this thread a number of things that I hope someone will work with to help remediate land and water. I hope to see new innovations in that direction in Japan.

The first four reactors will all of course be scrapped, and the area somewhat cleaned up; but it will take at least 10 years.. This is expensive but doable. The US has coped with a similar situation at Hanford and at the Idaho National Lab. A great deal has been learned. I am very interested and excited to see how Tepco and the Japanese government are coping now and will cope in future with the clean up.

The interesting question is whether the reactors not at Daiichi will be allowed to restart, after a complete safety check out is done.

I think, let's talk, that you will be better able to guess what way the Japanese people will choose, ultimately. Will they prefer high expense, unreliable power? Global warming gas producing power whose fuel they must buy at exhorbitant cost from other countries? Will they choose to go back to some nuclear power, but with better safety controls? I do not feel confident enough in my knowledge of Japan to say.


As to the plants, the cooling plans for the spent fuel pools will work, since the plan for Unit 2 has already worked. The same technology is going to be used on the reactors themselves. There is no reason that the heat exchangers won't work on the reactors as well, especially given that they are all pretty well cool already.

TEPCO has shown a lot of ingenuity with storing and cleaning up water--they have been warning that the water may run over, but they have a huge barge docked there, nominally for low concentration water. I think they are angling to get the government's OK to pump some of the intermediate contaminated water into the barge, and then say they will dilute that with the output of the water purification system they are installing later this month in concert with Areva. They can always pump it back through the water purification system at some later date.

My one worry for the current situation is the endless pumping of nitrogen into reactor one, to avoid hydrogen explosion. The pressure there keeps slowly increasing. That is something you cannot do forever-at some point, they have to decide to back off on adding nitrogen. The fact that they are trying to put on a better pressure gauge today leads me to believe that they are concerned about this too, but they haven't discussed it.
 
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