Japanese Earthquake, Tsunami, and Nuclear Reactors | Page 27 | Golden Skate

Japanese Earthquake, Tsunami, and Nuclear Reactors

That's awful about the salt in the reservoir. It makes me realize I have no sense of the size of the area affected, or the population density there. My only benchmark is that the city of Sendai had a million people in it.

Great that they're giving the radiation detectors to schools. Surely that will help allay anxiety and give families the feeling of at least a little control over their chaotic environment.
 
IAEA Status for April 27th, 6 PM UTC

1. Current situation

Overall, the situation at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant remains very serious, but there are signs of recovery in some functions, such as electrical power and instrumentation.


Changes to Fukushima Daiichi plant status

The IAEA receives information from various official sources in Japan through the Japanese national competent authority, the Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency (NISA). Additional detail is provided in the IAEA Incident and Emergency Centre (IEC) status summary with information received by 17:00 UTC on 27 April 2011.

Management of on-site contaminated water

According to the 25 April evaluation by NISA of the report submitted by the Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO), there is a little less than 70,000 tonnes of stagnant water with high level radioactivity in the basement of the turbine buildings of Units 1, 2 and 3.

Plant status

On 25 April the power supply for the temporary electrical pumps that supply water to the reactor pressure vessel of Units 1, 2 and 3 was switched from the off-site power supply to temporary diesel generators to allow work to enhance the off-site power supply. The power supply has now been returned to the off-site supply.

White smoke continues to be emitted from Units 2 and 3. No more white smoke was seen coming from Unit 4 as of 21:30 UTC on 25 April.

In Unit 1 fresh water is being continuously injected into the reactor pressure vessel through the feedwater line at an indicated flow rate of 6 m3/h using a temporary electric pump with off-site power.

In Unit 2 and Unit 3 fresh water is being continuously injected into the reactor pressure vessel through the fire extinguisher line at an indicated rate of 7 m3/h using temporary electric pumps with off-site power.

In Unit 4 140 tonnes of fresh water was sprayed over the spent fuel pool on 23 April and 165 tonnes of fresh water was sprayed over the spent fuel pool on 24 April using a concrete pump truck. The nuclear emergency response headquarters reported that temperature measurements showed the spent fuel pool temperature to be 83 °C before spraying and 66 °C after spraying on 23 April, and the spent fuel pool temperature to be 86 °C before spraying and 81 °C after spraying on 24 April.

Nitrogen gas continues to be injected into the containment vessel in Unit 1 to reduce the possibility of hydrogen combustion in the containment vessel. The pressure in the reactor pressure vessel is increasing.

The reactor pressure vessel temperatures in Unit 1 remain above cold shutdown conditions. The indicated temperature at the feedwater nozzle of the reactor pressure vessel is 134.7 °C and at the bottom of reactor pressure vessel is 110.9 °C.

The reactor pressure vessel temperatures in Unit 2 remain above cold shutdown conditions. The indicated temperature at the feed water nozzle of the reactor pressure vessel is 121.2 °C. The reactor pressure vessel and the dry well remain at atmospheric pressure. Fresh water injection (a total of 135 tonnes) to the spent fuel pool via the spent fuel pool cooling line was carried out from 19 to 25 April.

The temperature at the bottom of the reactor pressure vessel in Unit 3 remains above cold shutdown conditions. The indicated temperature at the feed water nozzle of the reactor pressure vessel is 67.9 °C and at the bottom of the reactor pressure vessel is 110.4 °C. The reactor pressure vessel and the dry well remain at atmospheric pressure.

There has been no change in the status in Unit 5 or Unit 6 or in the common spent fuel storage facility.

2. Radiation monitoring

On 25 April deposition of Cs-137 was detected in five prefectures, the values reported ranging from 3.2 to 20 Bq/m2.

Gamma dose rates are measured daily in all 47 prefectures. A general decreasing trend has been observed in all locations since around 20 March. For Fukushima prefecture, gamma dose rates in recent days were in the range 1.7-1.8 μSv/h. In Ibaraki prefecture, gamma dose rates were slightly below 0.12 μSv/h. In all other prefectures, reported gamma dose rates were below 0.1 μSv/h with similar decreasing trends.

Gamma dose rates reported specifically for the eastern part of Fukushima prefecture, for distances beyond 30 km from Fukushima Daiichi, showed a similar general decreasing trend, ranging from 0.1 to 19.4 μSv/h, as reported on 25 April. The other 45 prefectures had gamma dose rates of below 0.1 μSv/h, falling within the local natural background range.

In drinking water, I-131 or Cs-137 is detectable, but in only a few prefectures. As of 1 April, the one remaining restriction on the consumption of drinking water relating to I-131 (at a level of 100 Bq/L) applies to only one village in the Fukushima prefecture, and the restriction applies only to infants.

Food monitoring

Food monitoring data were reported by the Japanese Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare on 26 April for a total of 39 samples taken on 22 and 24-26 April from eight prefectures (Chiba, Fukushima, Gunma, Hokkaido, Ibaraki, Kanagawa, Niigata and Yamagata). Analytical results for all of the samples of various vegetables, mushrooms, beef, seafood and raw unprocessed milk indicated that I-131, Cs-134 and Cs-137 were either not detected or were below the regulation values set by the Japanese authorities.

3. Marine monitoring

Marine monitoring programmes

The marine monitoring programme is carried out both near the discharge areas of the Fukushima nuclear power plant by TEPCO and at off-shore stations by the Japanese Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT). The locations of the sampling positions, including several new additional positions, were given in the briefing of 26 April (see Fig. 1). Contamination of the marine environment occurred by aerial deposition and by discharges and outflow of contaminated water.
 
Introduction
http://www.jaif.or.jp/english/news_images/pdf/ENGNEWS01_1303969491P.pdf
Main essay
http://www.jaif.or.jp/english/news_images/pdf/ENGNEWS01_1303969266P.pdf

By Tohiko Kitamura
Experience in Evacuation Life

Kitamura is a JAIF consultant, who had been living near the Daiichi power plants.

It is worth reading.

Particularly distressing is the fact that the people are not getting anything to eat but sweet buns and rice balls and water, even yet.

Also, the TEPCO people are not visiting-however, if you should know anyone who is in an evacuation shelter, please be sure they have the phone number for getting compensation. It is on the TEPCO main page.

And it is clear that TEPCO did not handle this the way Dominion does in CT-where they do not say an accident is impossible; they say it is unlikely, if it occurs it will be serious, and here's what planning you should do, here's where you should go, here's what you should do with your animals, and so forth.

By the way, I did order a copy of the Farmer's version of the Radiological Disaster brochure. I haven't received it yet though.
 
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Morning JAIF and TEPCO reports

Daini 2:00 PM JST April 28th
Six peripheral measurement points ( 2.1, 1.6, 2.3, 1.9, 1.9, 1.8 ) microSieverts per hour

Daiichi 2:00 PM JST April 28th
Wind is in the east
Mobile cart near West Gate 21.9 microSieverts per hour
Eight peripheral points ( 7, 29, 22, 21, 30, 56, 151, 145 ) microSieverts per hour
Main Building 424 microSieverts per hour
Main Gate 49 microSieverts per hour
West Gate 19 microSieverts per hour
JAIF air graphs
http://www.jaif.or.jp/english/news_images/pdf/ENGNEWS01_1303953470P.pdf
JAIF water report
http://www.jaif.or.jp/english/news_images/pdf/ENGNEWS01_1303953503P.pdf
JAIF report of MEXT data (30 and 40 km offshore): Only measure point 10 showed any radioactive material, and that only at the surface of the water ( 21.5 becquerels per liter, which is .0215 becquerels per cubic centimeter)
Today's sand lances are OK
TEPCO's 16 points outside their inner harbor
3 had no radioactive material found
10 were in limits
1 measurement just north of Daiichi's north discharge canal was just over limits
1 measurement 3 km off Iwaki City was just over limits.
1 measurement 8 km off Iwasawa shore was just over limits

*In order to identify the appropriate injection amount of water in making the fuels submerged in water, at 10:02 am on April 27th, we started the operation to gradually change the injection amount of water to the reactor of Unit 1 from approx. 6 m3/h to approx. 14 m3/h at a maximum. We are injecting approx 10 m3/h of water to the reactor at 9:00 am, April 28th.

*At 12:18 pm on April 27th water spray by a concrete pumping vehicle to the spent fuel pool of Unit 4 was started, and suspended at 2:01 pm. At 2:32 pm water spray was resumed and finished at 3:15 pm, April 27th.

*Out of the soil samples gathered on March 28th, we conducted the nuclides analysis on two samples from which Plutonium were detected to confirm Americium and Curium. We detected Americium 241 and Curium 242, 243 and 244.

*On April 27th, we sprayed approx 7,500m2 of the dust inhibitor to the seaside area of Unit 3 by a remote controlled crawler dump truck.
 
NHK news

AREVA unveils water processing facility

French nuclear energy company Areva has shown footage of a technology for decontaminating radioactive water, which will be used at the Fukushima power plant.

Areva says the footage was taken at its nuclear reprocessing plant in La Hague in northern France last Friday.

It shows the decontamination of huge quantities of radioactive water, produced in the reprocessing of spent nuclear fuel.

Radioactive substances in the water are settled out by chemical agents and the water is purified.

Workers are seen remotely operating the facility from a control room.

Tokyo Electric Power Company will set up the system at the crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant and hopes to begin operating it in June.

Areva will provide full technical support.
Thursday, April 28, 2011 07:52 +0900 (JST)
Thailand to send gas-turbine generators to Japan
The Thai government is to soon send 2 gas-turbine power generators to Japan to help restore electricity supplies amid possible power shortages this summer.

The Electricity Generating Authority of Thailand has been using the Japanese-made generators in times of emergency near Bangkok since 1995.

The government decided to lend the generators for 3 to 5 years free of charge to the Tokyo Electric Power Company, the operator of the troubled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, at the utility's request.

The 10-meter-long, 4-meter-wide cylindrical generators, each weighing more than 200 tons, were lifted slowly by a crane and loaded onto a trailer truck on Wednesday.
The devices, with total generation capacity of 240,000 kilowatts, are expected to be able to meet the power demand of up to 240,000 households.

Upon arriving in Japan, the generators are to be set up in Tokyo and the neighboring city of Kawasaki, and become operational in August.
Wednesday, April 27, 2011 20:02 +0900 (JST)
Chile holds ceremony for Japan disaster victims
The Chilean government has held a ceremony to mourn the people in Japan who died in the massive March 11 earthquake and tsunami.

Chileans are looking at the disaster in Japan with deep concern as the South American country itself experienced a Magnitude 8.8 quake and resultant tsunami in February 2010. Those disasters claimed over 520 lives.

More than 200 people attended the memorial for Japan in the capital Santiago on Wednesday. The participants held a minute of silence.

The Japanese ambassador to Chile, Wataru Hayashi, said at the event that Japan is facing unprecedented hardship, but it will surely rebuild itself as a new Japan which will be a safer and better place to live.
Hayashi added that Japan needs solidarity with and assistance from friendly countries like Chile.

Chilean Foreign Minister Alfredo Moreno said his country appreciates the aid Japan provided after last year's Chilean quake.

He said it is Chile's turn to help and that he is confident Japan will rebuild as it has overcome many earthquakes in the past.

In Chile, businesses are leading a campaign to raise funds for survivors of the disaster.
Thursday, April 28, 2011 11:41 +0900 (JST)
Palestinians also feel a fellow feeling with the Japanese

Dance performed for war, disaster victims

Japanese and Palestinian dancers have staged a joint performance to highlight the plight of refugees and survivors of natural disasters in the wake of the March 11th earthquake and tsunami in Japan.

40 dancers and Japanese singer Shizuru Otaka performed together at a theater in the West Bank city of Ramallah on Wednesday.

The stage was designed to symbolize the insecurity of the life of Palestinian refugees with a cubic frame rolling on it. The performance also expressed hope for rebirth.

It showed dancers engulfed in a huge cloth likened to huge waves, then rising to resume their performance.

The audience appeared to enjoy the unique collaboration of Palestinian traditional dance and Japan's avant-garde artists.
Thursday, April 28, 2011 12:48 +0900 (JST)
 
Unit 1 is cooling down with the injection of more water.

The pumping is dropping the water in the Unit 2 trench, and the sea water concentration in the little harbor near Unit 2 dropped in half.

The request of the heads of prefectures and mayors of cities to reevaluate earthquake zones is well taken. When Ski was stationed on an ice-breaker in Alaska after the 9.2 quake hit there, it was found that ocean depth charts throughout the region were wrong, because the sea bottom had shifted that much. Quakes of that scale literally rearrange the world.

And Qatar is sending a huge sum of money for hospitals and schools in the quake stricken area of Japan.


TEPCO continues test for water injection
One of the damaged reactors at the troubled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant is being checked to assess the feasibility of a plan to submerge and cool the hot fuel rods by July.

The test is being conducted by Tokyo Electric Power Company. The utility says the temperature in the reactor of Unit 1 is falling on Thursday, after it increased the amount of water being injected from 6 tons per hour to 10 tons on Wednesday morning.

The temperature at the top of the reactor was 107 degrees Celsius as of 11 AM on Thursday, down 25 degrees from before the water increase. The pressure inside the reactor has slightly fallen. The utility is watching the pressure carefully and injecting nitrogen to prevent a possible hydrogen explosion.

The firm is monitoring the state of the containment vessel carefully to determine whether to maintain the current level of water injection.

In a separate development, the company says the level of highly radioactive water in a tunnel linked to Unit 2 fell to 90 centimeters from the surface. The water level fell 10 centimeters in the 9 days since TEPCO started moving contaminated water from the tunnel.

But it says the levels of contaminated water are gradually rising at the tunnels of Units 3 and 4.

The water level in a tunnel linked to Unit 3 rose 6 centimeters in 3 days through Thursday.
Thursday, April 28, 2011 19:40 +0900 (JST)
Qatar has announced it will provide 100 million dollars to help rebuild quake-hit regions in Japan.

The pledge came during a meeting between Qatar's International Cooperation Minister Khalid Bin Mohamed Al-Attiyah and Japan's Foreign Minister Takeaki Matsumoto on Wednesday. The Qatari minister expressed readiness to provide support to help Japan rebuild as soon as possible.

Japan's Foreign Ministry says the sum of 100 million dollars is more than total the amount of donations sent from 76 governments.

The Qatari government says it wants the money to be spent on building hospitals and schools in the disaster areas.

The 2 countries will set up a joint committee to decide where the money will go.

The Gulf state earlier announced it will increase its shipment of liquefied natural gas to Japan to help the country operate thermal power plants to make up a power shortage since the disaster.
Thursday, April 28, 2011 04:02 +0900 (JST)

Govt to set up nuclear accident probe committee
Prime Minister Naoto Kan says his government will set up an independent committee by mid-May to investigate the ongoing nuclear crisis. At a Lower House plenary session on Thursday, Kan said he fully understands he bears most responsibility for bringing the Fukushima Daiichi power plant under control.

He noted that the government will take all necessary measures, including those to decommission the plant's reactors.

Kan said he hopes that thoroughly investigating the accident will help Japan share its experience with other countries through the International Atomic Energy Agency and other organizations.

He added that he hopes the probe will contribute to improving the safety of nuclear power plants across the globe.
Thursday, April 28, 2011 22:09 +0900 (JST)
Operator expects Hamaoka reactor to reopen in July
A nuclear power company in central Japan has released its earnings projection in the business year through March, with a view to restarting one of its reactors in July.

The Fukushima nuclear crisis has forced Chubu Electric Power Company to shelve a plan to reopen the No.3 reactor at Hamaoka nuclear plant in Shizuoka Prefecture by the end of April. The plant was shut down for a regular inspection.

Company President Akihisa Mizuno told reporters on Thursday that the results assume that the reactor will remain closed until the end of June.

He said the company devised the tentative timetable to present some form of yardstick to shareholders and investors.
But Mizuno said that the company will seek local understanding for restarting the No. 3 reactor.

The operator says the delay in restarting the reactor should not affect summer electricity supplies. But an abnormally hot summer like last year's might cause a shortage, considering the current interchange of electricity with struggling Tokyo and Tohoku Electric Power Companies.

The Governor of Shizuoka Prefecture, Heita Kawakatsu, responded by criticizing Chubu's measures to counter a large tsunami at the Hamaoka plant.

He said unless the company gave more concrete measures, it would be extremely difficult to green light the reopening of the No.3 reactor in July.
Thursday, April 28, 2011 22:09 +0900 (JST)

Reassessment on nuclear power plants'quake-safety
Japan's Nuclear Safety Commission has asked the government to reassess the quake-resistance of the country's nuclear power plants. At an extraordinary meeting on Thursday, the commission said that the string of aftershocks since the March 11th quake was caused by large tectonic shifts. The commission said that a fault line about 50 kilometers from the troubled Fukushima plant previously believed to be inactive moved during an April 11th aftershock.

The commission decided to ask the industry ministry's Nuclear Safety Agency to reexamine the fault lines and geographical changes where plant operators have so far said the risk of earthquake damage was low.

The commission also wants the government to check for faults near nuclear power plants if aftershocks occur with unusual frequency. The Nuclear Safety Agency is to follow up by instructing power companies across the country to reassess quake-resistance.

The assessment will likely take several years. Attention is focused on whether local municipalities will allow power companies to operate the plants while the reassessment is underway.

The assessment will also likely affect the start of operations at new nuclear power plants and the construction of new ones.
Thursday, April 28, 2011 19:05 +0900 (JST)
I'm wondering if the pumping is showing an effect downstream. This is quite a big drop.
Radioactive level halved at reactor water intake
The operator of the quake-damaged nuclear power plant in northeastern Japan says levels of radioactive iodine in seawater samples taken near one of the plant's crippled reactors are down by more than half from the previous day.

The Tokyo Electric Power Company says the level of radioactive iodine-131 per cubic meter in samples collected near the water intake of the No. 2 reactor was 63 becquerels on Wednesday. The figure is 1,600 times the state limit, but marked the first decline in 3 days.

Highly contaminated water had leaked into the sampling area, where iodine-131 at a level 7.5 million times the limit was detected on April 2nd. On Wednesday, the level of cesium-134 was 430 times the limit, and that of cesium-137 was 300 times the limit. Both figures were nearly the same as on the previous day. Levels of radioactive substances detected in samples taken near the facility had nearly leveled off.
Iodine-131 at a level 2.5 times the standard was found in samples taken some 30 meters north of the plant's No. 5 and 6 reactors. The company says changes in readings are seen as being within a margin of day-to-day volatility. The firm says it will continue monitoring the situation.

Sampling tests farther from the plant were prevented by bad weather.
Thursday, April 28, 2011 20:15 +0900 (JST)
 
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Meanwhile, Areva defends itself from Forbes bloggers

AREVA’s La Hague Facility and Experts Provide Solutions, not Risks

By linking unrelated statements based on inaccurate assessments, a recent blog post on Forbes (‘French Plan to Clean Fukushima’s Radioactive Water Detailed—Including Risks’)incorrectly asserts that AREVA has been responsible for pollution and unregulated releases from its La Hague recycling facility in France.

The claims made by Jeff McMahon draw upon unqualified assessments made by Greenpeace and have little evidence to substantiate them. AREVA employees always strive to operate facilities with safety, security, and transparency as well as limit their impacts. The La Hague facility’s surrounding environment and population are subject to constant monitoring—under the supervision of the French Nuclear Safety Authority (an independent regulator akin to the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission)—with updates and statistics provided to the general public almost daily. Click here for more information.

The facility has an ongoing policy for reducing the impact on health and on the natural environment, and AREVA makes major efforts in environmental monitoring with over a hundred samples and analyses are carried out every day. These include both marine sampling and land surveys. Click here for more information.

However far-fetched the claims made by McMahon, his post overlooks one important item—AREVA will provide a solution to treat most of the contaminated water from the damaged Fukushima nuclear power plant. The contaminated water must be treated rapidly as it is preventing Tepco from repairing the power plant’s power supply and cooling systems. This is not a question of creating risk or hazard for the region, but is instead a solution that draws upon AREVA’s expertise for treating and managing these elements.

If you'd like to read the original post, you will find that we at GS know considerably more about the process than Jeff McMahon does. For one thing, he has not realized that the reason that Areva needs Veolia is for the desalination expertise, and that for the desalination, the "other process" is most likely using ion exchange resins.

http://blogs.forbes.com/jeffmcmahon...s-radioactive-water-detailed-including-risks/

The process a French firm will use to clean Fukushima’s radioactive water has been blamed for a leukemia cluster in France and for polluted beaches and irradiated waters from the English Channel to the Arctic Sea.

For another thing, he has swallowed whole a bunch of Greenpeace and Physicians for Social Responsibility reports. This is a risky business, because Greenpeace is not a particularly truthful organization-it is a great believer in "advocacy science". It is particularly non-trustworthy in its analysis of "clusters" of things, because it does not believe in t-tests or statistical things like that. It basically searches for a cluster of something or other and then blames it on the nearest nuclear plant or other operation it disapproves of. Likewise, PSR, an organization that Helen Caldicott is involved in. Caldicott apparently thinks UNSCEAR deliberately falsifies reports and also is not a fan of t-tests and statistics in general.

In fact, this was part of Monbiot's conversion to an anti-Greenpeace advocate, discovering that Caldicott does not believe in science and statistics.
http://www.monbiot.com/2011/04/04/interrogation-of-helen-caldicotts-responses/


In fact, the key to all energy questions and choices is always a matter of choosing relative risks, something that humans seem not to do well. There is always a feeling that there is a risk free choice somewhere that works. And that's just not generally so.

This is part of the Murphy's Law that every intractable, difficult problem has a simple, easy to describe Wrong Solution--and the corollary is that the Wrong Solution will at once become very popular.

In this case, TEPCO has to get rid of the radioactive water, preferably by not dumping it overboard untreated. Areva has experience treating very contaminated radioactive water at La Hague. Regardless of whatever Greenpeace thinks of La Hague, treating and getting rid of the water at Daiichi is the right thing to do, because leaving things as they are is a lot more risky.

In fact all this sort of thing is an example of "Murphy's Law of Cleaning": To get something clean, you will always have to get something else dirty.
 
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April 29th, 2:00 PM JST
Daini, wind in the south
Six Peripheral points ( 2.1, 1.6, 2.2, 1.8, 1.9, 1.8 ) microSeiverts per hour
Seventh manual point 9:00 AM JST 1.3 microSieverts per hour

Daiichi, wind in the east
Cart near west gate 21.5 microSieverts per hour

Main Building 424 microSieverts per hour
Main Gate 49 microSieverts per hour
West Gate 19 microSieverts per hour
Eight peripheral points ( 7, 28, 22, 20, 29, 55, 150, 145 ) microSieverts per hour

Unit 1
From on April 27th, we have increased the amount of injecting freshwater from approximately 6 m 3/h to approximately 14 m 3/h. At 10:14 am on April 29, we put the amount of injecting freshwater back to approximately 6 m 3/h
.... - From 11:36 am to 2:05 pm on April 29, we have checked the status inside the reactor building of Unit 1 using remotely-controlled robot and confirmed that there was no significant water leakage from the primary containment vessel.

Collected water from Unit 4 spent fuel pool

Analysis
http://www.tepco.co.jp/en/press/corp-com/release/betu11_e/images/110429e13.pdf

Net 321 Becquerels per cubic centimeter as of April 13th, over half in iodine
Net 131 Becquerels per cubic centimeter as of April 29th, mostly cesium

Probably there is some kind of leak going on: this looks less than I would think it should be.

In the inner harbor:
http://www.tepco.co.jp/en/press/corp-com/release/betu11_e/images/110429e12.pdf

Dropping at the water intake area.

Steady at the bar screen

Cesium dropping at the silt fence, but iodine is steady (probably due to the zeolite bags, which getter up cesium) Radioactive water is still leaking into this area, I would say.

At the quay, steady at 1 becquerel per cubic centimeter each of iodine and cesium-

Daini dust - still dropping (almost no particulate cesium in the air any more there)
http://www.tepco.co.jp/en/press/corp-com/release/betu11_e/images/110429e10.pdf

Daiichi dust slight rise yesterday (some of this is related to stirring up dust, and how much wind there is)
http://www.tepco.co.jp/en/press/corp-com/release/betu11_e/images/110429e9.pdf

On shore seawater (dropping nicely, iodine disappearing due to short half life)
http://www.tepco.co.jp/en/press/corp-com/release/betu11_e/images/110429e7.pdf

Iwasawa shore now in limits.
South discharge in limits for Cs 137 and I 131, but not for Cs 134
North discharge channel in limits for I 131, but not for Cs 134 and Cs 137

Five New measurement points added on April 25th off Ibaraki Prefecture
Measurement point 5 is in the north, 1 is in the south.

Depending on isotope, detection limit is 5 to 7 becquerels per liter, testing for I 131, Cs 137, Cs 134.

At measurement point one, 5.8 becquerels per liter were found (.0058 becquerels per cubic centimeter)
Measurement point two, nothing at the surface, but 12.6 becquerels per liter of Cs 134 in the lower depth of the ocean
Measurement point three, nothing found
Measurement point four, 9.1 becquerels of Cs 134 at medium depth and 6.0 becquerels of iodine 131 at lower depth
Measurement point five, nothing found

IAEA report from 6:00 UTC yesterday (April 28th)
1. Current situationOverall, the situation at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant remains very serious, but there are signs of recovery in some functions, such as electrical power and instrumentation.
Changes to Fukushima Daiichi plant status
The IAEA receives information from various official sources in Japan through the Japanese national competent authority, the Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency (NISA). Additional detail is provided in the IAEA Incident and Emergency Centre (IEC) status summary with information received by 17:00 UTC on 27 April 2011.

Management of on-site contaminated water
According to the 25 April evaluation by NISA of the report submitted by the Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO), there is a little less than 70,000 tonnes of stagnant water with high level radioactivity in the basement of the turbine buildings of Units 1, 2 and 3.

Plant status[/B
]On 25 April the power supply for the temporary electrical pumps that supply water to the reactor pressure vessel of Units 1, 2 and 3 was switched from the off-site power supply to temporary diesel generators to allow work to enhance the off-site power supply. The power supply has now been returned to the off-site supply.

White smoke continues to be emitted from Units 2 and 3. No more white smoke was seen coming from Unit 4 as of 21:30 UTC on 25 April.

In Unit 1 fresh water was being continuously injected into the reactor pressure vessel through the feedwater line at an indicated flow rate of 6 m3/h using a temporary electric pump with off-site power. On 27 April at 01:02 UTC an operation was initiated to increase the flow rate for injected water gradually from 6 m3/h to 14 m3/h to determine the amount of water required to flood the reactor core.

In Unit 2 and Unit 3 fresh water is being continuously injected into the reactor pressure vessel through the fire extinguisher line at an indicated rate of 7 m3/h using temporary electric pumps with off-site power.
In Unit 4 water continues to be sprayed on to the spent fuel pool using a concrete pump truck. An amount of 85 tonnes of water was sprayed on 27 April.

Nitrogen gas is still being injected into the containment vessel in Unit 1 to reduce the possibility of hydrogen combustion in the containment vessel. The indicated pressure in the reactor pressure vessel is still increasing.

In Unit 1, the indicated temperature at the feedwater nozzle of the reactor pressure vessel is 132.0 °C and at the bottom of reactor pressure vessel is 110.5 °C.

In Unit 2 the indicated temperature at the feedwater nozzle of the reactor pressure vessel is 120.4 °C. The reactor pressure vessel and the dry well remain at atmospheric pressure. On 26 April an amount of 47.5 tonnes of fresh water was injected into the spent fuel pool using the spent fuel pool clean-up system.

In Unit 3 the indicated temperature at the feed water nozzle of the reactor pressure vessel is 72.0 °C and at the bottom of the reactor pressure vessel is 110.7 °C. The reactor pressure vessel and the dry well remain at atmospheric pressure.

There has been no change in the status in Unit 5 or Unit 6 or in the common spent fuel storage facility.
Spraying of anti-scattering agent at the site is continuing. An area of 7500 m2 to the east of the Unit 3 turbine building was sprayed on 27 April.

2. Radiation monitoring
Deposition of Cs-137 was detected in four prefectures on 26 and 27 April, the values reported ranging from 4 Bq/m2 to 29 Bq/m2. I-131 deposition was reported for one prefecture on 26 April, with a value of 3.3 Bq/m2.

Gamma dose rates are measured daily in all 47 prefectures. A general decreasing trend has been observed in all locations since around 20 March. For the Fukushima prefecture gamma dose rates remain at 1.8 μSv/h. In Ibaraki prefecture gamma dose rates were slightly below 0.12 µSv/h. The other 45 prefectures had gamma dose rates of below 0.1 µSv/h, falling within the range of local natural background radiation levels. Gamma dose rates reported specifically for the eastern part of Fukushima prefecture, for distances beyond 30 km from the Fukushima Daiichi plant, showed a similar general decreasing trend, ranging from 0.1 to 13.6 µSv/h, as reported on 26 April.

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 approx. 1 km). The concentrations in air reported since 31 March show a maximum on 14 April of 11.8 x 10−4 Bq/cm3 for total I-131 and 2.7 x 10-4 Bq/cm3 for total Cs-137. The values reported for 26 April are 9.0 x 10−5 Bq/cm3 for total I-131 and 2.4 x 10−5 Bq/cm3 for total Cs-137.

Since 1 April there has been one remaining restriction on the consumption of drinking water relating to I-131 (with a limit of 100 Bq/L), which applies to one village in the Fukushima prefecture and only for infants.
Enforced plan on environmental monitoring

On 22 April the Japanese Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT) issued a press release on an 'Enforced plan on environmental monitoring' with the objectives of obtaining an overview and providing data necessary to support the decision to establish the planned evacuation zones.
To meet these objectives, the plan included the following
:

− Collection of data on the distribution of radioactive material inside an appropriate area, including the area in the vicinity of the Fukushima Daiichi plant;

− Preparation for future evaluations of changes in dose rates and accumulated amounts of radioactive material in all delineated zones around the Fukushima Daiichi plant;

− Provision of information on environmental dose rates for the purpose of evaluation of personal radiation doses to local residents.

It was announced that maps will be produced on the basis of the results of environmental monitoring, including maps of dose rates and distributions of radioactivity, estimated accumulated doses and levels of soil surface contamination.

This 'enforced plan on environmental monitoring' will be conducted in close cooperation between MEXT, Japan Atomic Energy Agency, universities, the Ministry of Defence, the police, prefectural police, Fukushima prefecture, electrical utilities and others, including the United States Department of Energy.
MEXT will compile all the data collected. MEXT and the Nuclear Safety Commission will cooperate with the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI) and other organizations, and will establish procedures for standardizations on ranges and methods for the emergency environmental monitoring.

Food monitoring
Food monitoring data were reported by the Japanese Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare on 27 April for a total of 129 samples taken on 21 and 24-27 April from 10 prefectures (Chiba, Fukushima, Gunma, Ibaraki, Kanagawa, Miyagi, Niigata, Saitama, Tochigi and Yamagata). Analytical results for 125 of the 129 samples for various vegetables, mushrooms, fruit (strawberry), pork, seafood, fresh milk and raw unprocessed milk indicated that I-131, Cs-134 and Cs-137 were either not detected or were below the regulation values set by the Japanese authorities. In Fukushima prefecture, two samples of spinach from 24 and 25 April and two samples of seafood (sand lance) from 26 April were above the regulation values set by the Japanese authorities for Cs-134/Cs-137.

Food restrictions
On 27 April restrictions were lifted on the distribution of spinach in Tochigi prefecture. In Fukushima prefecture, restrictions were lifted on the distribution and consumption of head type leafy vegetables from 17 locations in the Aizu and Minamiaizu districts (cities of Aizuwakamatsu and Kitakata; towns of Aizubange, Aizumisato, Bandai, Inawashiro, Kaneyama, Minamiaizu, Mishima, Nishiaizu, Shimogo, Tadami and Yanaizu; villages of Hinoemata, Kitashiobara, Showa and Yugawa) and flower head brassicas from nine locations (city of Shirakawa; towns of Hanawa, Tanagura, Yabuki and Yamatsuri; villages of Izumizaki, Nakajima, Nishigo and Samegawa).

3. Marine monitoring
Marine monitoring programme
The marine monitoring programme is carried out both near the discharge areas of the Fukushima nuclear power plant by TEPCO and at off-shore stations by the Japanese Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT). The locations of the sampling positions, including several new additional positions, were provided in the briefings of 26 April and 27 April. Contamination of the marine environment occurred by aerial deposition and by discharges and outflow of water with contamination.

 
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NEI's weekly wrapup

UPDATE AS OF 4 P.M. EDT, FRIDAY, APRIL 29:
Below is a round-up of noteworthy news that happened this week with regard to the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant and the U.S. nuclear industry's response.

Plant Status:

Priorities this week at Fukushima continued to be cooling the reactors and fuel pools, draining water from the turbine buildings and concrete structures that house piping to reduce radiation levels, and containing the spread of radioactive materials. Tokyo Electric Power Co. (TEPCO) is increasing the amount of cooling water injected into reactor 1 at the Fukushima Daiichi plant as part of a plan to cover the fuel.

TEPCO plans to build a storage and processing facility that can hold 70,000 tons of highly radioactive water at the plant.
Overall, site radiation dose rates are stabilizing or decreasing. The most recent radiation readings reported at the plant site gates ranged from 4.8 millirem per hour to 2.2 millirem per hour. TEPCO has released a map showing radiation levels around the site, based on readings taken on different days since the incident began.

TEPCO said this week that it will build a wall of sandbags along the shoreline at the Fukushima Daiichi site as a temporary measure against another possible tsunami. The company also moved emergency power generators to higher ground to prevent the reactors' cooling systems from failing in case a major tsunami hits the plant again. The utility will sandbag the shoreline at the plant to a height of several meters. Priority will be put on the area near the waste processing facility, where highly radioactive water is being moved from around the reactor buildings. TEPCO is also planning to build a breakwater on the shoreline, as the sandbags cannot remain the long-term solution for a possible tsunami.

Japan's Nuclear Safety Commission (NSC) asked the government April 28 to review the ability of the country's nuclear power plants to withstand earthquakes. The commission has requested that the Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency "re-examine the fault lines and geographical changes where plant operators have so far said the risk of earthquake damage was low." The utilities’ reassessment of earthquake resistance "will likely take several years," the NSC said, and will likely affect the start of operations at new nuclear power plants and the construction of new reactors.

TEPCO said April 28 that it does not believe the spent fuel pool at reactor 4 of Fukushima Daiichi is leaking, according to a report by Japan television station NHK. The utility said it initially believed that declining water levels in the pool indicated that it might have been damaged in an explosion soon after March 11, but it "now believes that the water has been evaporating at a rate in line with calculations by experts.” The fuel storage pool "will be reinforced by July," TEPCO said.

I'm not sure I entirely buy this last item, unless the level of the pool was way down when the first water sample was taken and way up when the second water sample was taken.

Also, TEPCO has a theory that the hydrogen explosion in the Unit 4 spent fuel pool ruptured an adjacent water tank, which partially filled the pool, and cooled down the rods there.

You know, it wouldn't be a bad idea to include a water tank in a design where just that would happen.

In additional news:

The US had a huge number of tornadoes yesterday, resulting in nearly 300 deaths. Huge sections of the TVA power grid were destroyed. The 3 reactors at Brown's Ferry shut down properly and are today in cold shutdown. How? well

\They have 8 diesel generators for 3 reactors, 7 of them in use while they wait for the grid to be restored. Additionally, there is no problem getting diesel fuel to them.

By Thursday afternoon, the NRC said the TVA had cooled all three units at Browns Ferry to a safe temperature so that the water around the reactor's core will not boil away -- as happened at Japan's Fukushima. Ken Clark, another spokesman at the NRC, said seven of the eight diesel generators at Browns Ferry were operating to keep the reactors cool and the plant also had some offsite power via the small 161 kilovolt Athens line. He noted that line was not big enough to allow the reactors to restart.
"No point in restarting the reactors until the main offsite power lines are restored because there would be no where to send the power," Clark said. Clark said the plant had batteries to backup the diesel generators but could run on the diesels "indefinitely" since there was nothing blocking the pathways into the plant to replenish the diesel fuel.
(Reporting by Scott DiSavino; Editing by Marguerita Choy)

This is how nuclear plants are supposed to weather a huge natural disaster, as the plants in LA and AL and MS did during Hurricane Katrina.

However, reassessment of the tsunami and earthquake are showing that the Japanese quake was bigger than first thought. Yes, bigger than 9.0 on the Richter scale.

NHK says

Researchers have found that the seabed off northeastern Japan surged by as much as seven meters, and shifted about 50 meters southeastward, in the March 11th earthquake.

The Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology, or JAMSTEC, sent a deep sea research vessel, 'Kairei,' to the focus area after the quake.

The ship probed the seabed using sound waves.

Earlier, the Japan Coast Guard, using GPS data,
concluded that the seabed had surged about three meters while a research team from Tohoku University said it rose by about five meters based on data from a water-pressure gauge installed on the seabed.

JAMSTEC says the seven-meter surge shows the earthquake and subsequent tsunami were more powerful than the earlier estimates.

The agency says it will further analyze the data and expand the research area to find out more about the mechanism behind tsunami.


Meanwhile, there are so many people volunteering to help in the quake stricken area that there isn't enough space to house them all.

Except in Fukushima
But in Minami-Soma, Fukushima Prefecture--close to the nuclear crisis at the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant--volunteers are in very short supply. After a stay-indoors advisory was lifted in parts of the town, requests from residents for help with removing rubble have increased, and there are not enough hands for the job. So far, about 100 volunteers have worked in the town, but a disaster-relief volunteer center official said, "We expect the number to grow to 300 or so during Golden Week."
Of the 29 municipal volunteer centers in the prefecture, nine are actively seeking new volunteers, mainly in coastal areas hit by the tsunami.
Kiyomi Tsujimoto, a government adviser to the prime minister in charge of volunteer activities, said at a press conference Thursday there were 415 groups and organizations contributing to the volunteer effort. She said the government will continue to allow certified volunteers to drive on expressways free of charge. But she asked people to refrain from using their own cars when going to disaster-hit areas to volunteer.

And sports have returned to Sendai!

Sendai recovery proceeds with 1st baseball since quake

Jim Allen / Daily Yomiuri Staff writer
Fujio Watanabe, right, an evacuee in Sendai's Wakabayashi Ward, has lost his home but will not miss the Tohoku Rakuten Eagles' first game in Sendai on Friday.
SENDAI--Seven weeks after the Great East Japan Earthquake, Sendai takes another step toward recovery today, as the city's pro baseball team, the Tohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles, plays their first game here this year.
Although much of Sendai's infrastructure has been restored, thousands of people are still living in evacuation centers, where baseball is not a top priority, but something some evacuees can look forward to.
"The people here don't really have the luxury of going to the ball game, but we want Rakuten to do well," Yoshie Otomo, an evacuee in Sendai's Wakabayashi Ward, said Thursday.
 
How lovely to hear about baseball returning to Sendai. I completely understand the mental boost that something like a baseball game can give in dire times, even if one can't go to the game or even watch it. I think the royal wedding yesterday had a bit of that feeling yesterday for many people. There's just a feeling of local pride if it's your country or community, plus I think a subliminal inference that if stuff like this goes on, maybe more good stuff will happen sometime in the future. Hope, however acquired, is what gets us through trials and tribulations.

Doris, the quake could have been worse than a 9? I didn't know there was a worse. That's chilling.
 
http://earthquake.usgs.gov/learn/facts.phpwas

1.The largest recorded earthquake in the United States was a magnitude 9.2 that struck Prince William Sound, Alaska on Good Friday, March 28, 1964 UTC.
2.The largest recorded earthquake in the world was a magnitude 9.5 (Mw) in Chile on May 22, 1960.

So yes, you can have a bigger earthquake than 9.0.

I've at least caught up watching the SD & FD, and have a little time to see what's happening in Japan (besides celebrating Miki's victory ;) )

May 1st 9:00 AM JST
Daini
Six peripheral measurements (2.1, 1.6, 2.2, 1.8, 1.8, 1.8) microSieverts per hour
Manual measurement of point 7, at 9:00 AM JST ( 1.3 ) microSieverts per hour

Daiichi May 1st 9:00 AM JST Wind in the East
Cart near West Gate 20.8 microSieverts per hour
Main Building 430 microSieverts per hour
Main Gate 49 microSieverts per hour
West Gate 19 microSieverts per hour
Eight peripheral points ( 7, 28, 22, 20, 28, 53, 148, 144 ) microSieverts per hour

TEPCO had to report on the dose received by all workers:

1.Number of workers subject to the measurement 21 (workers with more than 100 mSv of external exposure dose during the emergency work at the end of March) 2.Result of measurement (total exposure dose from external and internal exposure and number of workers)
200-250 mSv: 2 (these are the guys that stepped in the highly radioactive water without boots)
150-200 mSv: 8
100-150 mSv: 11
3.Maximum exposure dose
External exposure dose: 201.80 mSv
Internal exposure dose: 39 mSv
Effective exposure dose: 240.80 mSv (total dose from external and internal exposure)
TEPCO says workers are transferred out of the Fukushima plant once their external exposure reaches 150 millisieverts, and that 8 workers in total have been relocated.

There is a certain amount of chit/chat about this in the press, but we have known about these 2 guys since they first were exposed; it's not like it's something unexpected. I am glad to hear that their total dose was as low as it was!!



From April 22nd, we installed the thermocouple-type thermometer and the radiation dose meter to the concrete pumping vehicle and we investigated the water level of pool, water temperature, radiation dose, water analysis etc at the spent fuel pool of Unit 4. As part of the investigation, we sampled 150 ml of water from the pool on April 28 and conducted nuclide analysis on April 29. As a result of the analysis, cesium 134, 137 and iodine 131 were detected
-Regarding the transfer of high level radioactive wastewater in Unit 2 to the Centralized Radiation Waste Treatment Facility, while we temporarily suspended transfer due to the inspection of transferring facilities at 9:16 am on April 29, transfer was restarted at 2:05pm on April 30.

Also, they have been spraying more resin around.

And NISA has been asking for yet more reports and data.

NHK reports that TEPCO is planning on moving in more workers; a good thing, for whatever reason.




I hope they don't bury a tank. Underground tanks are always a problem. If they do, I hope they line the bottom of the pit with a lot of clay/zeolite.


TEPCO to accelerate transfer of radioactive water
The operator of the stricken Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant says it plans to speed up the removal of highly radioactive water from an underground tunnel connected to the No. 2 reactor building by doubling the number of pumps.

Huge amounts of highly radioactive water are hampering efforts to restore cooling functions to the plant's reactors.

Tokyo Electric Power Company is using a single pump to transfer radioactive water from the No. 2 reactor building to a waste processing facility. It plans to start using 2 pumps on Saturday. It stopped the transfer for a while on Friday to check the facility and hoses for leaks.

TEPCO has pumped 2,400 tons of radioactive water out of the tunnel since April 19th. It hopes to double the flow to 20 tons per hour so as to transfer a total of 10,000 tons by mid-May.

TEPCO is also preparing to pump radioactive water out of an underground tunnel connected to the No. 3 reactor building. It's connecting hoses between the tunnel and the waste processing facility.

The company is also considering burying a tank in the ground to store radioactive water in case the pumping does not go smoothly.
Saturday, April 30, 2011 09:03 +0900 (JST)

I had heard this was true-that all plants located on the seacoast were told to beef up their tsunami defenses. TEPCO finished reactor 6, but not the rest. However, I do think that trying to say this earthquake and tsunami were not extraordinary is a bit much.

Edano: No compensation exemption for TEPCO
Japan's Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano emphasized that Tokyo Electric Power Company cannot be exempt from paying compensation for the accident at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant. The country's Act on Compensation for Nuclear Damages would allow the responsibility for compensation to be dismissed if the accident is regarded as an exceptionally massive natural disaster. TEPCO has implied this act should be applied to what happened at Fukushima Daiichi.

But Chief Cabinet Secretary Edano says while the earthquake and tsunami were very powerful, Japan's Diet had warned the nuclear plant would face problems if hit by an enormous tsunami. Edano points out TEPCO cannot be exempt from its responsibility because the company was not prepared for what had been flagged by the Diet, and therefore the damage is not unexpected.
Saturday, April 30, 2011 09:03 +0900 (JST)

Labor unions vow to help rebuild quake-hit region

Japan's largest labor organization says it is committed to efforts to rebuild the regions hit by the March 11th disaster. RENGO says it will urge the government and businesses to take action to create jobs.

It held a May Day rally on Friday in central Tokyo.

There are growing employment concerns in Japan because many people lost their jobs in the wake of the earthquake and tsunami.

The rally organizer says around 9,000 people attended the event.

Rengo President Nobuaki Koga said it will take a long time for people in the northeast to rebuild their lives.

He stressed his organization should do everything it can to support them.

RENGO adopted a declaration at the rally asking the Japanese government to provide support for people who have lost their jobs and for affected companies. It also calls for continued assistance for the disaster areas and action to prevent unfounded rumors from undermining the reputation of products from the Tohoku region.

Rengo collected donations at the May Day rally and set up a corner to sell vegetables from Ibaraki. Farmers from that Prefecture have been affected by the problems at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant, north of them.

A truck driver at the rally says he is worried about the impact on his industry because production is shrinking in Japan's manufacturing sector. He says he wants workers to join hands and do their best to help with rebuilding efforts.
Saturday, April 30, 2011 09:03 +0900 (JST)

By the sound of this, Professor Kosako is a believe in the Linear No Threshold theory of radiation effects on health. Indeed, this is a topic on which there is disagreement. His comment about workers at nuclear plants is funny though, since they typically have less exposure than most people, when there is no nuclear disaster going on. Now airplane pilots :) ...


Kan comments on nuclear advisor's resignation

One of the nuclear advisors to Prime Minister Naoto Kan has resigned to protest what he called the government's impromptu handling of the nuclear crisis.

University of Tokyo Professor Toshiso Kosako, who tendered his resignation on Friday, also said that the government has belittled the law.

Speaking at a Lower House committee meeting on Saturday, Kan said Professor Kosako resigned because of disagreements with other scientists.

Kan said the government responded to the nuclear accident based on advice from the Nuclear Safety Commission and has never taken ad hoc measures.

Kosako also criticized the education ministry for allowing students at primary schools in Fukushima Prefecture to perform outdoor activities if the level of radiation of the school ground does not exceed 20 millisieverts per year.

The nuclear scientist said it's very unlikely that even workers at nuclear reactors could be exposed to such a high level of radiation, and therefore he cannot agree on that figure as an upper limit for children.

Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano told reporters that the ministry's decision seeks to reduce exposure to radiation and that it does not mean the government will allow the limit of 20 millisieverts per year for children.
Saturday, April 30, 2011 15:10 +0900 (JST)

And you've got to see this one:

http://www3.nhk.or.jp/daily/english/01_08.html

Large tour boat is about to be removed from the roof of a second story building.
 
May 2nd, 10:30 AM TEPCO Status

Daini May 2nd
Six Peripheral Measurements ( 2.0, 1.6, 2.1, 1.8, 1.8, 1.8 ) microSieverts per hour
Daiichi May 2nd
First four peripheral measurement points ( 7, 22, 21, 19 ) microSieverts per hour at 11:10 AM JST (later data is missing as they are doing electrical work, switching power sources).
Second four peripheral measurement points ( 27, 52, 146, 143 ) microSieverts per hour at 2:00 PM JST
Main Office Building 415 microSieverts per hour
Main Gate 47 microSieverts per hour
West Gate 18 microSieverts per hour
Monitoring cart near West Gate 20.1 microSieverts per hour. Wind is in the northwest.

TEPCO is attempting to lower the radiation in Unit 1 so that it is low enough for workers to enter. If you've noticed from the air charts around Daiichi, some of the radioactive material is in particulate form. That can be filtered out of the air, so that's what they are trying to do. The volatile components are essentially not filterable, though, so there are limits to what can be achieved.

Improvement of the working environment inside the reactor building of Unit 1, Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station

At Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station, we are working on the stabilization of the reactor of Unit 1 by continuing the nitrogen gas injection to the reactor containment vessel and adjusting the water injection rate to the reactor monitoring several parameters. In order to solidify these efforts, we need to install and calibrate a new reactor water level gauge. Also, we need to install a circulating cooling system to improve the status of the reactor to a more stable cooled condition. To do so, we have to improve the working environment inside the reactor building.

At this moment, in preparation for the improvement, we are conducting the visual inspection and measuring the radiation dose and the density of radioactive substances by a remote controlled robot inside the reactor building. From now on, we will install an ambient air filtration system*, circulate air inside the reactor building for a while, filter the radioactive substances and lower the density. After that, in order for
workers to enter the reactor building and conduct necessary works, we will open the airlock. Before opening the airlock, we will monitor the density of the radioactive substances within the reactor building and confirm that the influence to the outside is low enough.

We will announce beforehand in opening the airlock of the reactor building. At the same time, we will closely monitor figures at monitoring posts and announce these.

* Ambient air filtration system
This system vacuums up the ambient air at the work area by a fan, filters
impurities and cleans the air.


Operation for cooling the spent fuel pools -From 10:05 am, May 2, water injection to Unit 2 by a temporary motor driven pump was started.
2:00 pm on May 1st: the transfer of accumulated water in Unit 6 turbine building to a temporary tank was started. At 5:00 pm, transfer pump was stopped (approximately 120m3) -
May 1st: we sprayed the dust inhibitor to the area on the south side of the turbine building of Unit 4 using the unmanned crawler dump truck, approx. 1,000 m2. - May 1st: we sprayed the dust inhibitor to the slope surrounding the former Administration Office Building using the conventional method (approximately 4,400 m2).
 
JAIF has posted installments 4 through 6 in Kitamura's Diary of being an evacuee.

http://www.jaif.or.jp/english/news_images/pdf/ENGNEWS01_1304315285P.pdf

Certainly, anyone who might ever have to evacuate, for any reason, and anyone who might be involved with planning evacuations, should read it. Some quotes:

A lot of people in the “indoor sheltering” zones decided to evacuate, not because of radiation fears, but because of insufficient material supply for living.happened because the drivers from other areas were hesitated to approach the zones for
delivery, being concerned about the radiation contamination.

Big lessons should be learned from the experience: the evacuation plan and its pre-arrangement; prior dissemination of evacuation logistics to the people; practical training, etc. The people were not well prepared, either. Irresponsibility existed everywhere and everybody. Is the Nuclear Safety Commission right when it says “we need some simplicity for practical evacuation”? Nobody wants to be simplified, but it may be the reality in a war.

Most particularly, his take on the "voluntary evacuation zone" is particularly important. His conclusion is:

“Voluntary evacuation is a real hardship which keeps the people in agony for indefinite duration. Personally, I am strongly against this concept of the government.
 
And from NHK

Work underway to filter air in reactor bldg
Workers have begun a plan to enter a building at the damaged Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant to install equipment that will help to cool down the reactor.

Tokyo Electric Power Company, the operator of the plant, said on Monday that workers are preparing to install devices that will reduce the amount of radioactive materials inside the No.1 reactor building.

The equipment is designed to filter out 95 percent of the radioactive substances in the air coming through the ducts, when operated for 24 hours.

Four of the devices will be installed outside the reactor building door.

Workers will need a safe environment to install equipment to steadily cool the reactor. A water gauge will help TEPCO to determine the feasibility of its plan to cool the reactor's fuel rods by covering them with water.

Eight workers are set to enter the No.1 reactor building as early as Thursday. They will be the first to do so since a hydrogen explosion occurred one day after the March 11th earthquake and tsunami.
Monday, May 02, 2011 12:56 +0900 (JST)

Every journey begins with a single step:

Miyagi fishermen paid to remove debris in ports

Fishermen in one of the areas hardest hit by the March 11th disaster have begun clearing debris in seaports in the first step toward restoring their battered industry.

About 50 people gathered at the fishing port of Hajikami, Kesennuma City, in Miyagi Prefecture on Monday. Many of them had lost their fishing boats to tsunami while the aquafarms of others were destroyed.

They spent the day removing rubble from wharves as strong winds prevented them from lifting wreckage from the harbor.

The fishermen are being paid about 12,000 yen or about 150 dollars per day. One of them said, even if the amount is small, he appreciates it as he doubts fishing will resume for several years.

The man's oyster and seaweed farm was washed away by tsunami.

The powerful waves destroyed port and fishing industry facilities in the 3 northeastern prefectures of Iwate, Miyagi and Fukushima, with 90 percent of about 29,000 fishing vessels washed away or damaged.

Fishing cooperatives in Miyagi began the debris clearing work after the central government guaranteed that the fishermen would be paid for joining in the clearance.

Monday, May 02, 2011 17:26 +0900 (JST)
There are more environmental problems in the world than nuclear disasters. Apparently China produces a Dustbowl effect that engulfs Japan from time to time.

Yellow sand spreading over Japan

Japan's Meteorological Agency says seasonal yellow sand is being observed from western to eastern Japan on Monday.

Fine sand from China's desert regions is being carried by westerly winds, and reached Osaka, Nagoya and Tokyo on Monday.

Visibility was reduced to about 5 kilometers at one point in the cities of Fukuoka and Tottori in western Japan.

Yellow sand is also expected on Tuesday, with visibility below 10 kilometers over a wide area and 5 kilometers in some places. The agency is advising caution for drivers and says laundry should not be dried outdoors.

Monday, May 02, 2011 12:02 +0900 (JST)
 
golly, Doris...

If it ever becomes possible just to lift and move land, Japan should sign up first. What an infelicitous location she has ended up with. Quake zone, dust bowl zone, right near Siberia. Crikey, what a hand of cards.

I'm glad to hear about the fishing industry. Every step forward for one group is a step for the whole region.
 
Meanwhile, there are so many people volunteering to help in the quake stricken area that there isn't enough space to house them all.

Except in Fukushima

But in Minami-Soma, Fukushima Prefecture--close to the nuclear crisis at the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant--volunteers are in very short supply. After a stay-indoors advisory was lifted in parts of the town, requests from residents for help with removing rubble have increased, and there are not enough hands for the job. So far, about 100 volunteers have worked in the town, but a disaster-relief volunteer center official said, "We expect the number to grow to 300 or so during Golden Week."
Of the 29 municipal volunteer centers in the prefecture, nine are actively seeking new volunteers, mainly in coastal areas hit by the tsunami.
Kiyomi Tsujimoto, a government adviser to the prime minister in charge of volunteer activities, said at a press conference Thursday there were 415 groups and organizations contributing to the volunteer effort. She said the government will continue to allow certified volunteers to drive on expressways free of charge. But she asked people to refrain from using their own cars when going to disaster-hit areas to volunteer.

I just want to clarify that the government is asking people to refrain from using their own cars to get there during the Golden Week, i.e. up to May 8. Ms. Tsujimoto was on TV yesterday with the leaders of two volunteer groups in the studio for a news program.
I uploaded just a 10 min segment of the program upon request by one of the leaders, unfortunately I couldn't record the preceding or the following segments due to lack of HDD space:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FhZMn_5hZuY

Tsujimoto is the lady with short hair you see @ 7:32.
The Caucasian lady you see @7:10 in this video is the head of the volunteer group Team Nadia (she's Canadian whose names sound French but I don't know how to spell her name, only transcribed in Japanese) and you can read their English reports here:

http://team-nadia.org/news/
 
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Radioactive material in seawater
http://www.tepco.co.jp/en/press/corp-com/release/betu11_e/images/110502e11.pdf
Today everything is back descending again. It looks like the spike in cesium at the north discharge channel of Daini yesterday was a fluke reading (this can happen if a particle with cesium in it is in the water).

Ocean Soils are monitored
3 kilometers off Iwasawa Beach
Iodine 131 98 Becquerels per kilogram
Cesium 134 1200 Becquerels per kilogram
Cesium 137 1200 Becquerels per kilogram
3 kilometers off Odaka Ward
Iodine 131 190 Becquerels per kilogram
Cesium 134 1300 Becquerels per kilogram
Cesium 137 1400 Becquerels per kilogram


TEPCO reports up to 3:00 PM JST May 3rd

- Installation work of exhauster was initiated in order to improve the work environment in the reactor building of Unit 1 -

At 10:05 am on May 2nd, water injection to spent fuel pool of Unit 2 by motor driven pump was initiated. Injection was finished at 11:40 am.
- At 2:00 pm on May 1st, transfer of accumulated water in Unit 6 turbine building to a temporary tank was initiated. At 5:00 pm, transfer pump was stopped (approximately 120 m3).
The transfer of accumulated water in Unit 6 turbine building to a temporary tank was conducted from 10:00 am to 4:00 pm on May 2. The transfer of accumulated water in Unit 6 turbine building to a temporary tank was started from 2:00 pm on May 3.


- On May 2nd, unmanned crawler dump truck has sprayed dust inhibitor in the south and west side of the reactor building of Unit 4. We have also sprayed dust inhibitor to the slope surrounding the former Administration Office building by conventional method.
NHK:
Govt to screen contaminated debris
The Environment Ministry has ordered municipalities near the troubled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant to wait before removing radiation-tainted debris from the March 11th quake and tsunami.

The ministry will start monitoring radiation levels in debris next week to determine proper disposal methods for contaminated materials.

Vice Minister Hideki Minamikawa told reporters that his ministry wants to quickly carry out the checks to allow local authorities who clear radiation screenings to remove the debris as soon as possible.

Municipalities subject to the order are those in the no-entry zone within 20 kilometers of the plant and some designated areas beyond the 20-kilometer radius.

Other municipalities in the eastern and central parts of the Fukushima Prefecture were asked to keep the debris in temporary storage facilities.

Municipalities located far from the plant are allowed to remove debris as usual.
Monday, May 02, 2011 22:06 +0900 (JST)

Diet enacts 1st extra budget for disaster relief

Japan's Diet has passed a 4 trillion yen, or about 49 billion dollar, extra budget to finance the reconstruction of areas devastated by the March 11th earthquake and tsunami.

The Upper House unanimously approved on Monday the first supplementary budget for fiscal 2011. The Lower House passed the spending package on Saturday.

The budget includes about 14.7 billion dollars for public works projects to rebuild roads, ports and farming infrastructure.

About 4.3 billion dollars is allocated for the removal and disposal of debris, and 4.4 billion dollars will be used to build temporary houses.

The scale of the emergency budget is far bigger than the roughly 12-billion dollar package passed immediately after the Great Hanshin Earthquake in 1995.

The government will now draw up basic relief measures to be implemented by August, such as speeding up of housing construction.

It will then start working on a 2nd extra budget for full-fledged reconstruction spending.
Monday, May 02, 2011 16:51 +0900 (JST
This is interesting. The US is in the forefront here.


Japan mulls new robot help with nuclear disaster By Elise Potaka (AFP) – 10 hours ago
http://www.google.com/hostednews/af...ocId=CNG.a06b8d6954f5a1831260ef488b80a425.431
TOKYO — Japan may be at the forefront of robotics and its children raised on cartoons of robot heroes and villains, but the country has so far had to rely on US-made machines for help tackling its nuclear crisis.
...
Although Japan is reliant on atomic power and leads the world in developing humanoid machines and industrial robots it has not developed any robots to tackle nuclear accidents.
Plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO) has sent in a pair of US-made crawler PackBot robots to examine areas where radiation from the rubble left by explosions is too high for humans to enter.
Experts say the government has not provided enough funding to develop its own specialised disaster robots, which have no commercial market. In the case of housekeeping robots, the market is there and so the companies can continue the development," said Hajime Asama, professor of engineering at Tokyo University and a member of a robot taskforce set up after the disaster.
"In the case of the United States, the military invests a lot of money for this kind of robot. But in Japan it is prohibited to make military robots," he said. A mistaken belief that such a nuclear disaster would never happen in Japan is also to blame, he said.
The rest of the article is interesting.
And on the returning life to normal front:

Carp streamers flown at shelter in Kesennuma

More than 220 carp streamers bearing messages of encouragement are on display at an evacuation center in one of the areas worst-hit by the March 11th disaster.

The streamers were designed by Masae Hatakeyama, who used to live in the coastal city of Kesennuma in Miyagi Prefecture.

They were flown on Tuesday over a junior high school in the city where more than 270 people are taking shelter.

Carp streamers are traditionally displayed in Japan around Children's Day on May 5th to pray for the healthy growth of children -- just like carp in the rivers.

A teenage girl in the shelter said she was greatly encouraged by the messages from people across Japan, and that she hopes to serve as a volunteer to help Kesennuma rebuild itself.

Hatakeyama said she was moved by the compassion expressed by everyone who sent well-wishes over the Internet.

She said that although her parents' house was affected by the disaster, she hopes to do whatever she can to help her hometown get back on its feet.
Tuesday, May 03, 2011 14:13 +0900 (JST)
 
I'm so glad that the U.S. has been able to assist with robots. Since some of them are probably built with our tax dollars, I feel not so helpless in the face of this overwhelming disaster. At least indirectly, we ordinary folk have played a part in the efforts.

That's lovely about the carp streamers. I can imagine how heartening it must be, especially because they come from other parts of the country. Incidents like this show that even the tiniest cultural elements can aid in maintaining a healthy society. That's why it's important to preserve meaningful rituals, I think--both family ones and community ones.

Glad to hear the seawater count has gone down a bit.
 
Radiation measurements:
Daini 9:00 PM May 3rd
Six Peripheral points (2.0, 1.5, 2.1, 1.7, 1.8, 1.7 ) microSieverts per hour

Daiichi 9:00 PM May 3rd. Wind East Southeast, and raining

Eight peripheral points (6, 27, 21, 19, 26, 50, 141, 139 ) microSieverts per hour

Main Building 414 microSieverts per hour
Main Gate 45 microSieverts per hour
West Gate 18 microSieverts per hour
Cart near West Gate 19.3 microSieverts per hour



IAEA Briefing
IAEA Briefing on Fukushima Nuclear Accident (3 May 2011, 19:50 UTC)
On Tuesday, 3 May 2011, the IAEA provided the following information on the current status of nuclear safety in Japan:

Presentation:
→ Summary of Reactor Status

1. Current situation

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

Changes to Fukushima Daiichi plant status

The IAEA receives information from various official sources in Japan through the Japanese national competent authority, the Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency (NISA). The Update Brief is based on information received by the IAEA Incident and Emergency Centre by 17:00 UTC on 2 May 2011.

Management of on-site contaminated water

According to the 25 April evaluation by NISA of the report submitted by the Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO), there is a little less than 70,000 tonnes of stagnant water with high level radioactivity in the basement of the turbine buildings of Units 1, 2 and 3.

The stagnant water (around 120 m3) in the basement of the turbine building of Unit 6 was transferred to a temporary tank on 1 May. The transfer of stagnant water from the basement of the turbine building of Unit 6 was resumed on 2 May.

Work to block the Unit 2 trench pit was started on 1 May.

Plant status

On 27 April TEPCO provided an update of the estimated percentage of core damage for Units 1, 2 and 3 following an assessment (the values assessed previously which TEPCO had provided on 15 March are given in parentheses): Unit 1: 55% core damage (70%); Unit 2: 35% core damage (30%); Unit 3: 30% core damage (25%). This reflects a revised assessment rather than any recent changes in conditions in the reactor cores.

White smoke continues to be emitted from Unit 2 and Unit 3. There was no more white smoke seen emanating from Unit 4 as of 21:30 UTC on 25 April or from Unit 1 as of 21:30 UTC on 30 April.

In Unit 1 fresh water is being continuously injected into the reactor pressure vessel through the feedwater line at an indicated flow rate of 6 m3/h using a temporary electric pump with off-site power.

In Unit 2 and Unit 3 fresh water is being continuously injected into the reactor pressure vessel through the fire extinguisher line at an indicated rate of 7 m3/h using temporary electric pumps with off-site power.

On 29 April TEPCO checked the status inside the reactor building of Unit 1 using a remotely controlled robot and confirmed that there was no significant leakage of water from the primary containment vessel. Nitrogen gas is still being injected into the containment vessel in Unit 1 to reduce the possibility of hydrogen combustion inside the containment vessel. The indicated pressure in the reactor pressure vessel is still increasing.

In Unit 1, the indicated temperature at the feedwater nozzle of the reactor pressure vessel is 142 ° C and at the bottom of reactor pressure vessel is 106 ° C.

In Unit 2 the indicated temperature at the feedwater nozzle of the reactor pressure vessel is 118 ° C. The reactor pressure vessel and the dry well remain at atmospheric pressure. On 28 April an amount of 43 tonnes of fresh water was injected into the spent fuel pool using the spent fuel pool clean-up system.

In Unit 3 the indicated temperature at the feed water nozzle of the reactor pressure vessel is 99 °C and at the bottom of the reactor pressure vessel is 124 °C. The reactor pressure vessel and the dry well remain at atmospheric pressure.

On 2 May an amount of 55 tonnes of fresh water was injected into the Unit 2 spent fuel pool using the fuel pool clean-up system.

There has been no change in the status in Unit 5 or in the common spent fuel storage facility.

Spraying of anti-scattering agent at the site is continuing. An area of about 1000 m2 on the south side of the turbine building of Unit 4, and an area of about 4400 m2 of the surface on the slope around the former main office building, near the on-site gymnasium and on the west side of the shallow draft quay, were sprayed on 1 May.

2. Radiation monitoring

The daily monitoring of deposition of caesium and iodine radionuclides for the 47 prefectures continues. Deposition of Cs-137 and Cs-134 was detected in six prefectures on 2 May. The values reported ranged from 2.6 Bq/m2 to 19 Bq/m2. Compared with recent data, deposition of these radionuclides has been detected in fewer prefectures and in lower amounts than for previous days.

Gamma dose rates are measured daily in all 47 prefectures. A general decreasing trend has been observed in all locations since around 20 March. Gamma dose rates reported on 2 May remain at 1.7 µSv/h for Fukushima prefecture and 0.11 µSv/h for Ibaraki prefecture. The other 45 prefectures had gamma dose rates of below 0.1 µSv/h, falling within the range of local natural background radiation levels.

Gamma dose rates reported specifically for the eastern part of Fukushima prefecture, for distances of more than 30 km from the Fukushima Daiichi plant, ranged from 0.1 µSv/h to 19.7 µSv/h, as reported on 2 May.

Since 1 April there has been one remaining restriction on the consumption of drinking water relating to I-131 (with a limit of 100 Bq/L), which is applicable only for one village in the Fukushima prefecture and only for infants. According to the Japanese Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT), I-131 was detected in one prefecture on 29 April, with a reported value of 0.22 Bq/L; in two prefectures on 30 April, with reported levels of 0.04 Bq/L and 0.10 Bq/L respectively; and in one prefecture on 1 May, with a reported level of 0.38 Bq/L. Cs-137 was reported on 30 April in only one prefecture, with a measured level of 0.05 Bq/L. All these levels are below the limits set by the Japanese authorities for the restriction of water consumption due to the presence of radionuclides. The other samples did not show levels of radionuclides above the detection limit for I-131, Cs-134 and Cs-137.

Food restrictions

On 1 May restrictions were lifted on the distribution of raw unprocessed milk in Fukushima prefecture from the city of Minamisouma (limited to Kashima-ku and excluding Karasuzaki, Ouchi, Kawago and Shionosaki areas) and Kawamata town (excluding Yamakiya area).

3. Marine monitoring

The marine monitoring programme is carried out both near the discharge areas of the Fukushima Daiichi plant by TEPCO and at off-shore stations by MEXT. (The locations of the sampling positions have been provided in previous briefings.) Increased radioactivity in the marine environment occurred by aerial deposition and by discharges and outflow of contaminated water with a high radioactivity level.

Marine discharges

In a news release issued on 25 April, NISA communicated its evaluation of a report submitted by TEPCO on 21 April in relation to contaminated water with a high radioactivity level that flowed out from Unit 2 of the Fukushima Daiichi plant. The outflow rate is estimated to have been approximately 4.3 m3/h. The concentrations of the relevant radionuclides, estimated from measurements, were 5400 MBq/L of I-131, 1800 MBq/L of Cs-134 and 1800 MBq/L of Cs-137.

Sea water monitoring

The activity concentrations of I-131, Cs-134 and Cs-137 in sea water at the screen of Unit 2 were measured every day from 2 April to 30 April. The concentrations fell by several orders of magnitude from initial values of more than 100 MBq/L at the beginning of April to less than 10 kBq/L for Cs-134 and Cs-137 on 30 April, with a continuing decreasing trend. However, levels of I-131 remained at around 100 kBq/L from 26 April to 30 April at this sampling position. The sandbags containing Zeolite� absorbers that were placed at several locations between Unit 2 and Unit 4 to reduce the concentrations of Cs-134 and Cs-137 seem to be effective.

The concentrations of the relevant radionuclides at the other TEPCO sampling positions show a general decreasing trend up to 30 April.

Monitoring performed by MEXT at off-shore sampling positions consists of:

Measurement of ambient dose rate in air above the sea;
Analysis of ambient dust above the sea;
Analysis of surface samples of sea water;
Analysis of samples of sea water collected at 10 m above the sea bottom.
The analysis for almost all sampling positions has shown a general decreasing trend in concentrations of the relevant radionuclides over time. Samples were taken at stations 1�10 every four days after 2 April. Activity concentrations at MEXT sampling points 30 km off-shore are significantly lower than those at TEPCO sampling points 15 km off-shore. None of the activity concentrations of I-131 and Cs-137 in surface samples taken from points 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 and S-3 on 27 April and from points 2, 6 and S-4 on 25 April were above the detection limits. Samples taken from points 4, 8 and 10 showed concentrations of Cs-137 between of 10.5 Bq/L and 40 Bq/L. Only the sample from point 10 had an I-131 activity concentration, at 21.5 Bq/L, that was above the detection limit.

Samples were taken at the recently added off-shore stations at the Ibaraki prefecture on 25 April. There were no activity concentrations of I-131 and Cs-137 in the surface layer of sea water that were above the detection limits.

Radiation monitoring in ports

On 22 April the Japanese Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism (MLIT) issued guidelines (http://www.mlit.go.jp/kowan/kowan_fr1_000048.html) for radiation measurements in ports in Japan in order to provide foreign port authorities with accurate data. The guidelines cover gamma dose rate measurements for export shipping containers and shipping as well as radiation monitoring of the atmosphere and of sea water in ports.

Measurements relating to export shipping containers for export and to shipping can be conducted by the port authorities, by ship operators or by other parties. The guidelines specify the measuring locations and methodology, as well as criteria for decontamination and for reporting. If measurements have been conducted in accordance with the guidelines, attestations of the measured dose rates will be issued jointly by MLIT and the port authorities.

With regard to export shipping containers, the guidelines state that decontamination is necessary if the measured dose rate exceeds three times the dose rate due to natural background radiation. Decontamination is to be carried out in an area to be specified by the port authorities. In accordance with the International Maritime Dangerous Goods code of the International Maritime Organization, a reporting level of 5 µSv/h is set. If the dose rate exceeds this reporting level, all relevant organizations are to be informed.

With regard to shipping, the guidelines recommend that decontamination should be carried out if the measured dose rate exceeds three times the dose rate due to natural background radiation, and decontamination must be carried out if the dose rate exceeds 5 µSv/h.

Radiation measurements in the atmosphere and in sea water in ports will be carried out by the port authorities or by MLIT.
 
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I received the booklet on "Radiological Emergency Information for Connecticut's Agricultural Community" today. I wish that Japan had mailed this sort of booklet to the fisherman and farmers within 50 miles of any of their nuclear plants long ago.

It has plenty of practical information, including reminding farmers to up the calcium intake of animals (which keeps their systems from storing strontium and plutonium, if any they are exposed to any, discussing watering and feeding regiments, getting permission to return to feed animals when evacuated, and telling the procedure for getting up and running again after a nuclear emergency.

"Following the emergency, state and local government officials will identify the types and levels of contamination. They may need to take samples of air, water, soil , crops and animal products from your farm or business. They will provide you with instructions and assist you in decontaminating your animals, food and property, if such actions are necessary."

I don't think Japan had anything like this program, probably for the same reason that they have no robots that can operate in highly radioactive environments. They didn't think it could happen in Japan.
 
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