Showing posts with label Nuclear clean up. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nuclear clean up. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 29, 2014

MIYAKOJI , Japan : Japanese villagers forced to evacuate after the Fukushima disaster are afraid to return. Feeling helpless after being cheated by Tepco and lied to by their government


 
“The government and the media say the radiation has been cleaned up, but it’s all lies,” said Miyakoji villager Kim Eunja, with her husband, Satoshi Mizuochi. Credit Ko Sasaki for The New York Times
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MIYAKOJI, Japan — Ever since they were forced to evacuate during the accident at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant three years ago, Kim Eunja and her husband have refused to return to their hilltop home amid the majestic mountains of this rural village for fear of radiation.
But now they say they may have no choice. After a nearly $250 million radiation cleanup here, the central government this month declared Miyakoji the first community within a 12-mile evacuation zone around the plant to be reopened to residents. The decision will bring an end to the monthly stipends from the plant’s operator that have allowed Ms. Kim to relocate to an apartment in a city an hour away.
“The government and the media say the radiation has been cleaned up, but it’s all lies,” said Ms. Kim, 55, who is from South Korea, and who with her Japanese husband runs a small Korean restaurant outside Miyakoji. “I want to run away, but I cannot. We have no more money.”
She is not the only one. While the central government and national news media have trumpeted the reopening of Miyakoji as a happy milestone in Japan’s recovery from the devastating March 2011 accident, many residents tell a darker story. They insist their homes remain too dangerous or too damaged to inhabit and that they have not received enough financial compensation to allow them to start anew somewhere else.
Photo


Yoshikuni Munakata works to repair his home, which was abandoned for three years after the accident at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant. Credit Ko Sasaki for The New York Times
They criticize the plant’s operator, Tokyo Electric Power Co., or Tepco, for failing to reimburse them for the value of their homes, usually their family’s largest financial asset. Depending on where they lived, they say they have received amounts from half the preaccident value to just $3,000, a tiny fraction of the original value of their homes.
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Japan’s government deceives evacuees to return before radiation readings disclosed

flag-japanRadiation study on evacuation zones kept undisclosed for 6 monthhttp://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/kyodo-news-international/140416/radiation-study-evacuation-zones-kept-undisclosed-6-mo The  government kept undisclosed for six months a report on an individual radiation dose study in areas around the crisis-hit Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, including a district recently released from an evacuation order.
The study, covering the city of Tamura and the villages of Kawauchi and Iitate, showed that the radiation level in many areas is still beyond 1 millisievert per year — a level the government is seeking to achieve at contaminated lands in the long term.
The government lifted an evacuation order imposed on the Miyakoji district in Tamura on April 1, but the content of the interim report, compiled in October, was not conveyed to the citizens or the local governments before the action was taken.
The government explained the content to local governments later, while the report was posted on the website of the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry on Monday. It also plans to release a final report on Friday. A government team tasked with supporting people affected by the crisis said it did not initially plan to release the interim report but decided to make it public because of the “high attention among residents.”
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The Japan Times

Fukushima radiation report secret for six months

Dose study kept from returnees

Kyodo


The government kept a report about a study of individual radiation doses around the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant — including an area recently released from an evacuation order — under wraps for six months.
The study, which covered the city of Tamura and the villages of Kawauchi and Iitate, showed that the radiation in many areas is still over 1 millisievert per year — a level the government is looking to achieve in the long term.
The government lifted an evacuation order on the Miyakoji district in Tamura on April 1, but the content of the interim report, compiled in October, was not conveyed to its citizens or local governments before the action was taken.
Skepticism about the government’s disclosure habits concerning radiation levels from the Fukushima crisis has been growing, and the latest incident is likely to amplify public health concerns.
The government explained the content to local governments later, and the report was posted on the website of the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry on Monday. It also plans to release a final report on Friday.
A government team tasked with supporting people affected by the crisis said it did not initially plan to release the interim report but decided to make it public because of the “high attention among residents.”

Read More Here
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Abe told an Olympic Committee meet situation was under control. Eight months later Tepco's Akira Ono, “It’s embarrassing to admit, but there are certain parts of the site where we don’t have full control,”


File:Shinzo Abe cropped.JPG

Shinzo Abe
 Author  :  U.S. federal government
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The Japan Times

Fukushima No. 1 boss admits plant doesn’t have complete control over water problems

by Yuka Obayashi
Reuters


The manager of the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power plant has admitted to embarrassment that repeated efforts have failed to bring under control the problem of radioactive water, eight months after Prime Minister Shinzo Abe told the world the matter had been resolved.
Tokyo Electric Power Co., the plant’s operator, has been fighting a daily battle against contaminated water since Fukushima No. 1 was wrecked by the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami.
Abe’s government pledged half a billion dollars last year to tackle the issue, but progress has been limited.
“It’s embarrassing to admit, but there are certain parts of the site where we don’t have full control,” Akira Ono told reporters touring the plant last week.
He was referring to the latest blunder at the plant: channeling contaminated water into the wrong building.
Ono also acknowledged that many difficulties may have been rooted in Tepco’s focus on speed since the 2011 disaster.
“It may sound odd, but this is the bill we have to pay for what we have done in the past three years,” he said.
“But we were pressed to build tanks in a rush and may have not paid enough attention to quality. We need to improve quality from here.”
The Fukushima No. 1 plant, some 220 km northeast of Tokyo, suffered three reactor core meltdowns in the world’s worst nuclear disaster since Chernobyl in 1986.
The issue of contaminated water is at the core of the clean-up. Japan’s nuclear regulator and the International Atomic Energy Agency say a new controlled release into the sea of contaminated water may be needed to ease stretched capacity as the plant runs out of storage space.
But this is predicated on the state-of-the-art ALPS (Advanced Liquid Processing System) project, which removes the most dangerous nuclides, becoming fully operational. The system has functioned only during periodic tests.
As Ono spoke, workers in white protective suits and masks were building new giant tanks to contain the contaminated water — on land that was once covered in trees and grass.
A cluster of cherry trees is in bloom amid the bustle of trucks and tractors at work as the 1,000 tanks already in place approach capacity. Insulation-clad pipes lie on a hill pending installation for funneling water to the sea.
“We need to improve the quality of the tanks and other facilities so that they can survive for the next 30 to 40 years of our decommission period,” Ono said, a stark acknowledgement that the problem is long-term.
Last September, Abe told Olympic dignitaries in Buenos Aires in an address that helped Tokyo win the 2020 Games: “Let me assure you the situation is under control.”
Tepco had pledged to have treated all contaminated water by March 2015, but said this week that was a “tough goal.”

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The Japan Times


ALPS unit hit by toxic water overflow




Around 1.1 tons of highly radioactive water overflowed from a waste container at the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear complex while the experimental ALPS radiation-filtering system was being cleaned, Tokyo Electric Power Co. has reported.
The overflow at the trouble-plagued water treatment system was noticed at about 12:20 p.m. Wednesday, and no one was contaminated, Tepco said. The water was retained by a barrier and inside the building where the Advanced Liquid Processing System is housed, it said.
The water was giving off around 3.8 million becquerels of beta-particle-emitting substances per liter, Tepco said.

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Tuesday, March 11, 2014

Fukushima News 3/6/14: Fukushima "Barely Being Managed"; "It's a Big Lie"-Fuku Worse Than Admitted

missingsky102 missingsky102


   



Published on Mar 6, 2014
Report: "It's a big lie, everybody in Japan knows" — Fukushima "far worse" than authorities admit, they must come clean about what really happened — Forbes Even Getting Suspicious? "Nuclear disaster at Fukushima perhaps the worst of all time"
http://enenews.com/reports-fukushima-...

Japan Newspapers: It appears 'high-level radioactive contaminated water' is flowing into ocean at Fukushima — "Fear nuclear complex might not be scrapped" — Nuclear official admits disaster at plant "is barely being managed"
http://enenews.com/japan-newspapers-i...

Survey: Evacuees unsure about choice of residence
An NHK survey shows that more than half of evacuees affected by the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami in northeastern Japan are feeling unsure about their choice of new residence.
NHK conducted the survey in January among 2,878 evacuees from Iwate, Miyagi and Fukushima prefectures and received 1,201 answers.
Eighty-six percent of the respondents said they had decided on their new residence.
71 percent said they will go back to exactly where they lived before, or to other areas in their former communities. Fifteen percent answered that they will move to other municipalities in their home prefectures or elsewhere in other prefectures.
Forty-five percent of the respondents said they have no doubts about their decision. But 55 percent said they often or sometimes wonder whether their choice of residence was right.
Those who are feeling undecided were asked about what they miss most. Thirty-five percent said land, houses and family graves, while others mentioned bonds with neighbors, friends and acquaintances.
Forty-six percent of the respondents unsure about their choice were those who are planning to return to their hometowns.
Associate Professor Reo Kimura from the University of Hyogo says the survey shows that even 3 years after the disaster the evacuees have to choose from limited options for rebuilding their lives.
He added that both central and local governments should explain once more their reconstruction plans and visions to reassure people.

Japanese NPO aid for Chernobyl affected
Officials from a Japanese civic group that supports people affected by the 1986 nuclear accident at Chernobyl, Ukraine, say the current situation in the country is hampering their humanitarian activities.
The non-profit organization in Nagoya, central Japan, has been sending medical equipment and funds to its counterpart in Ukraine for 24 years. The aid is used to help workers who deal with the crippled power plant and to treat children suffering from radiation exposure.

Japan eyes joint research on Monju with France
Japanese government officials plan to work with their French counterparts in developing next-generation nuclear reactor technologies to reduce radioactive waste.
They are apparently aiming to use the nation's troubled Monju fast-breeder reactor.
Engineers in France are developing the ASTRID prototype reactor, which is expected to begin operation around 2025. Both reactors are designed to reduce nuclear waste.
Sources say Japanese officials are preparing to reach a basic agreement with France in late April. This will be followed by a formal accord.

2,900 MBq/km2 of Cesium-134/137 still fall down in Fukushima plant area monthly
http://fukushima-diary.com/2014/03/29...

Underground wall on the seaside of reactor3 was possibly broken / Groundwater level in sync with ebb and flow
http://fukushima-diary.com/2014/03/un...

THREE YEARS AFTER: Radioactive waste piles up in Tokyo area with no place to go
http://ajw.asahi.com/article/behind_n...

The US Government Has Engaged In a Series of Nuclear Cover-Ups Ever Since Hiroshima
http://www.globalresearch.ca/the-us-g...

Limerick nuclear reactor unit shut down
Read more from WFMZ.com at: http://www.wfmz.com/news/news-regiona...
Connect with us! Facebook/69WFMZ or @69News

What's next at Fukushima? Are U.S. nuclear plants still at risk?
http://www.beyondnuclear.org/storage/...

PLUTONIUM DISPOSITION PROGRAM DOE
Needs to Analyze the Root Causes of Cost Increases and
Develop Better Cost Estimates
http://cryptome.org/2014/02/gao-14-23...


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Thursday, February 27, 2014

Hmmmm Factor : So why has the US government finally given farmers the right to legally grow industrial hemp? Could it be because hemp plants ‘eat’ radiation?

 

Did the Government Give Industrial Hemp a Pass to Clean Up Radiation in the States?

Christina Sarich

NationofChange / News Analysis

Published: Friday 14 February 2014

Hemp has numerous uses and could replace many crops that require heavy irrigation and pesticides, but the most interesting fact about hemp is that it “eats” radiation.

Article image
Activists have been shouting they want an end to GMO foods for more than a decade now, and Cannabis Sattiva L. supporters have been at it for even longer, so why has the US government finally given farmers the right to legally grow industrial hemp, the non-hallucinatory, sister plant of medical marijuana?
It is safe to say that industrialized hemp should have been legalized years ago. With THC levels so low, you would have to smoke more of it than Snoop Dogg to get ‘high’ – and that’s a lot of Cannabis, it is ridiculous that it was classified as a drug at all. It has numerous uses and could replace many crops that require heavy irrigation and pesticides, like cotton, for example. Here’s the most interesting fact though – hemp plants ‘eat’ radiation.
When the Chernobyl Nuclear Plant Reactor 4 accident caused severe radioactive contamination in 1986, families within a 30-kilometer area of the site had to be evacuated. Radioactive contamination was later found at 100 kilometers from the accident site, and Fukushima radiation levels are still to be determined, with the Japanese government planning on dumping their overflowing radiated water tanks into the Pacific as we speak.

Read More Here
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Tuesday, January 28, 2014

Fukushima: "Contaminated Waste-Where is it Going?"

missingsky102 missingsky102


 



Published on Jan 24, 2014
 
In Fukushima, massive amounts of radioactive soil and debris are still piled up in residential areas. The government has asked the head of local authorities to accept intermediate storage facilities. In this episode we look at what is hampering the project.
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Fukushima News 1/24/14:"Learning From Chernobyl"; Nuke News

missingsky102 missingsky102


 



Published on Jan 24, 2014
"Shock & Outrage": Japan TV host reveals being told he cannot discuss nuclear power until pivotal Tokyo election ends — "Somebody needs to bring these issues into the media" — #2 in trending news
http://enenews.com/shock-outrage-japa...
Japan may accept more foreign trainees
Japan's construction minister has called for expanding the scope of the government's program of accepting foreign trainees to cope with an expected labor shortage in the construction industry.
The shortage is likely to become more serious. There's increasing demand for workers to help rebuild communities affected by the 2011 disaster in northeastern Japan. More construction workers will also be needed to build new facilities and improve infrastructure in the lead-up to the 2020 Summer Olympics and Paralympics in Tokyo.
Land, Transport and Infrastructure Minister Akihiro Ota said on Friday in a meeting of cabinet ministers concerned that the government should expand the trainee program.
The program enables foreigners to stay in Japan for up to 3 years and allows them to be hired by Japanese construction and manufacturing firms and acquire relevant skills.
About 50,000 people from countries such as China, Vietnam and the Philippines are accepted every year under the program. Around 150,000 foreign trainees are believed to be in Japan at present.
The construction industry accepts about 5,000 trainees a year.
Ota said the program should be expanded, and that he wants to discuss the idea with other ministries.
The government is expected to consider increasing the number of trainees and allowing them to stay in the country longer.
AFP: Fears that molten fuel went into ground after melting through containment vessels at Fukushima — They still can't find three reactor cores (AUDIO)
http://enenews.com/afp-fears-molten-f...
Highest Yet: Radiation level hits new record in Fukushima groundwater well — Over 3,000,000 Bq/liter of strontium and beta emitters
http://enenews.com/highest-yet-radiat...
Marine Chemist: Latest figures I have say Fukushima released 80 Quadrillion Bq of cesium-137 (Chernobyl estimated at 70 quadrillion) — "The radioactive plume itself has actually arrived... it's already here" on west coast (AUDIO)
http://enenews.com/marine-chemist-lat...
Scientific American: Fukushima will have to be entombed in sarcophagus if melted fuel in 'bad enough' situation — Radiation Expert: I think they're going to put a fence around reactors and just watch site forever (VIDEO)
http://enenews.com/scientific-america...
Professor: "Reports of radiation in kelp just north of California" — Signs of Fukushima contamination expected to start "really arriving strongly" this year
http://enenews.com/professor-reports-...
Radioactive Japanese Seafood for Export
http://www.vitapect.org/blogs/news/11...
Tepco "Don't know where the rest of coolant water is escaping from reactor3″
http://fukushima-diary.com/2014/01/te...
Direct leakage of reactor3 coolant water → Door blasted due to the 311 explosion, no robots can enter
http://fukushima-diary.com/2014/01/di...
220 fuel assemblies removed from reactor4 pool by 1/22/2014
http://fukushima-diary.com/2014/01/22...
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