To contact us Click HERE
Is Fukushima new Chernobyl, whether and where to happen, "China Syndrome" breaking shell of a nuclear reactor by a molten nuclear core?
Larger photo here
After the disaster that occurred 3/11/2011., Made by the earthquake and tsunami, the number one nuclear reactor in Fukushima reactor melted and melted having concealed all cooling systems, then a significant amount of radioactive fuel core penetrated the lining of the reactor container and so leaked into the outer layer and container.
On Wednesday, the Tokyo Electric Company and Tokyo Electric Power Company (Tepca) stated that the fuel melted eroded concrete base reactor container at a depth of 65 inches.
In case of further erosion of 37 inches, melted radioactive fuel will reach the last wall of steel.
But analysts Tepca are trying to reassure the public with the claim that the current prediction of the situation in a reactor based on temperature changes of cooling water which is fed to the reactor.
Analysts Tepca claim that the remaining 37 inches of concrete base of the reactor sufficiently to prevent the radioactive fuel is heated to break out of the reactor shell. Airanga (Korean national television Airang Global TV) experts are not convinced that so few concrete fail to prevent a nuclear catastrophe. They feel that we must prepare for the worst case scenario.
If fuel breaks through the remaining plating reactor, which is only 37 inches thick, then it will melted nuclear fuel to penetrate into the soil. Airang considers Tepca professionals must find a solution to ensure that this does not happen.
They consider it necessary to make a barrier thickness of 5 -10 meters below the nuclear power plant in such a worst-case scenario.
If the radioactive fuel to break ground this will make all sorts of problems, including disabling the safe removal of nuclear fuel, which should happen in the future, specifically for the 30 years ago when the nuclear core has cooled enough that they could be repaired.
Kim Yeon-ji journalist of Airang said Tepca experts have no other option but to hasten the preparations for and to find a way to prevent erosion of the radioactive fuel inside the reactor.
The silence of governments and the world press about the radiation dangers from Fukushima is alarming to say the least. We have an open nuclear sore on the planet, a radioactive boil that continues to burst casting a toxic shadow on the people of Japan and a few other billion people who happen to live in the northern hemisphere.The municipality of Fukushima has created a plan to bring radiation exposure in all inhabited areas of the city to below a microsievert per hour within two years. Wishful thinking is allowed in Japan for it's about the only thing that will stand up to the radiation that continues to pile up in the northern reaches of that country including Tokyo.
Concern is deepening that fallout from the Fukushima plant may have spread over a much wider area than previously thought. No matter how much the press and governments hide the dangers of radiation, fear is rising as the Geiger counters continue to click, demonstrating the levels of fallout that are striking on people's skin and the crops in the fields.
As the crisis drags on, worries are growing, particularly among Fukushima Prefecture residents over futile nuclear decontamination operations. The unease is especially strong in areas in and around mountains that must be repeatedly decontaminated, as every rainfall brings a new batch of radioactive substance-contaminated leaves and soil washing down from the hills. Decontamination in this case is futile -- actually worse than futile if you think of the eventual necessity to decontaminate the entire northern hemisphere.
Kyodo News reported that a citizens' group detected levels as high as 5.82 microsieverts per hour in a park in the town of Funabashi, Chiba prefecture, 130 miles from Fukushima. That is five times higher than the highest levels recorded in the city since the March 11 disaster.
The week of October 12, 2011, officials in Yokohama, just south of Tokyo and 250 km from the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power plant, said they had found abnormally high levels of strontium-90 in sediment on the roof of a block of flats. The radioactive isotope, which has a half-life of 29 years, can accumulate in the bones and cause bone cancer and leukemia. In September officials in Yokohama said they had detected 40,200 Becquerel's of radioactive caesium per kilogram of sediment collected from a roadside ditch.
Japan's Fukushima prefecture began health checkups of 360,000 children amid worries that radiation exposed them to the risk of thyroid abnormalities. The screenings began after a recent unofficial survey reported that 10 out of 130 children evacuated from Fukushima had hormonal and other irregularities in the thyroid glands. Radiation fears are now a daily fact of life, with reported cases of contaminated water, beef, vegetables, tea and seafood due to the Fukushima crisis.
There's reportedly been a lot of testing by the Japanese government of the rice crop in the weeks leading up to this harvest and there have been a few cases where the rice has been found to be contaminated with levels of radioactive caesium. Now we hear from the Fukushima prefectural government that it believes all the rice being harvested is safe and that it will go on the market. Other people are saying if you see "made in Fukushima" on a bag of rice, steer well clear of it.
These are not normal times in Japan or anywhere else around the world and even the nuclear industry has been shaken to its soul. "The accident had a profound effect in Germany, China and several other countries, serving as a fearful reminder of what can go wrong with nuclear power plants. Phase-outs were the order of the day in Germany (where Chancellor Angela Merkel also demanded immediate shutdowns of eight of the country's oldest reactors) and Switzerland. China suspended approvals for new reactors pending a safety review, which is now reportedly completed. This has resulted in a downward revision of China's unofficial pre-Fukushima goal to install 86 gigawatts of nuclear capacity by 2020. It now looks like that will be set around 60 gigawatts (up from around 12 currently) or just a little higher," reported the Times.
The Finnish nuclear consortium Fennovoima announced on October 5 that it will build a reactor, the first nuclear reactor site to be announced since the March nuclear plant disaster in Fukushima. Perhaps they got excited about the recent news that the amount of radiation being emitted from the complex has diminished by one-half from a month ago. This news is not at all encouraging, for the radiation levels were and still are incredibly high.
For years to come there will be sickness and death associated with this disaster. Nuclear problems just do not go away. For instance the operator of the crippled Fukushima nuclear plant is struggling to deal with hundreds of thousands of protective suits used by workers during the crisis. It really is too bad that we have not developed technologically enough to build star ships so we could just unload these suits and millions of tons of contaminated soil into space.
It is important to know that governments' calculations on safe levels of radiation assume only brief exposure. Chronic and persistent exposures need to be calculated in a very different mathematical way and this is just not what they are doing. "The standard does not take into account the effects of accumulative exposure," Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano said. "We are discussing what standards to use for accumulative radiation." You can be sure that the numbers they choose will be presented in a non-alarming way for they cannot risk the citizens rising up with pitchforks in their hands.
The real bottom line in this case is one of human action or inaction in terms of formulating appropriate medical treatments for our families. To save face or to maintain cruel human farming techniques or for whatever reason you can think of -- what the governments want is for their populations to remain calm and to minimize to the greatest extent possible truthful information that would lead citizens to take evasive actions of any type.
The medical industrial complex cannot have the populations
learning of alternative treatments, for they are not
in the business of promoting or selling any of these.
The number of people running around still thinking that everything is going to be just fine and that life is going to continue on the same comfortable course as it has these past decades is declining. Many people, for many different reasons, have lost everything and it is truly staggering to think about how much can be taken away from a person or family in the blink of an eye. Radiation does not usually smash us in the blink of an eye but fetuses and very young infants might tell a different story if they could communicate with us.
Video: Japanese communities record Chernobyl-level radiation
Hiç yorum yok:
Yorum Gönder