News Japan Earthquake, Tsunami, & Nuclear Disaster

Putin and all the other deniers of a real emergency should be sent to work in the Fukushima plant. World Nuclear Association spokesmen should be given a leaky suit.

Latest from Kyodo
http://english.kyodonews.jp/news/japan_quake/

Radiation too high for TEPCO personnel to stay in Fukushima nuke plant control rooms (20:49) - UTC 1149
 
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Putin is absolutely right. Nuclear explosion is possible only with nuclear warhead. Here we have classical examples of nuclear meltdown. The main difference is that quantity of radioactive materials, emitted into the atmosphere during full meltdown, is bigger or in best case equal to the emissions during nuclear tests like "Castle Bravo"(1 march 1954 Bikini) or "Кузькина мать" 30 October 1961.
 
The issue is not with the "nuclear explosion" stuff. The issue is with the head of the Russian nuclear industry Sergey Kirienko weaselling out of the truthful description business. The issue is with Sergey Kirienko having absolutely no nukie/physics background whatsoever.
 
France has recommended to rate the accident as category 6 now and the German Lufthansa airline has stopped flying to Tokio, all flights are now rerouted over Nagoya and Osaka.

also, the president of the German Physical society, Wolfgang Sander, has claimed that the explosion in reactor 2 was caused by incidental action of the operators, in his explanation, they lowered the water level in the reactor vessel for permitting feeding sea water from a fire fighting inlet into it.
 
What's your take on the fact that all personnel have now been evacuated from the Fukushima plant, and there is no nobody there to control it? (Obviously not a criticism of the workers there, who did all they possibly could and may have suffered terribly.)

Also there seems to be an insufficient quantity of iodine tablets for the population. One prefecture representative admitted that they only had enough for emergency workers, not the population.
 
What's your take on the fact that all personnel have now been evacuated from the Fukushima plant, and there is no nobody there to control it? (Obviously not a criticism of the workers there, who did all they possibly could and may have suffered terribly.)

At this point, I doubt that there are a lot of controls still working or useful to something...
 
Latest on winds - have shifted easterly, which is a relief

Japan.wind.12.07b2.jpg



http://www.surf-forecast.com/maps/Japan/wind/12
 
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What's your take on the fact that all personnel have now been evacuated from the Fukushima plant, and there is no nobody there to control it? (Obviously not a criticism of the workers there, who did all they possibly could and may have suffered terribly.)

Not all, only all who are not essential operators. everybody who can't do anything useful in the current situation is evacuated.

---------- Post added at 01:38 PM ---------- Previous post was at 01:33 PM ----------

EDIT: OK, now also the 50 remaining operators are evacuated because the radiation levels in the control room is getting too high (which means it must be very high). AFAIR, remote control is impossible, so this means the reactor is now really completely out of control.
 
Progression to level 7 is possible now?

No, at the current wind situation, this will max out at Level 6 this evening.

if the last two events happened already on Sunday, the southern winds would have dragged more stuff to other countries, but like it is now, it will get to the Pacific and maybe will cause a small increase in radiation in Alaska.

This is not Chernobyl - the material is ejected at much lower temperatures and will not travel as far as back then.

also, now is the time for bombing the plant with sand and concrete... the battle is lost.
 
A a positive note, rescue teams carry on their heroic work and continue to find survivors that were trapped under debris.
 
IAEA News Conference scheduled for 1600 CET/1500 UTC, two hours from now.

I hope there is some objective information and constructive action announced then.

CORRECTION: Put back half an hour to 1530 UTC
 
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More metal sarcophaguses?

I doubt it, given the earthquake risks in the area. The worst thing to do would be building a massive structure that would collapse on the next earthquake, releasing clouds of radioactive dust.
 
NRC update:
NRC SENDS ADDITIONAL EXPERTS TO ASSIST JAPAN
Acting as part of a U.S. Agency for International Development assistance team, the NRC
has dispatched eight additional experts to Tokyo to provide assistance as requested by the Japanese government.
The first members of the team left the United States Monday evening and were due to
arrive in Tokyo Wednesday afternoon. The team includes additional reactor experts,
international affairs professional staffers, and a senior manager from one of the NRC’s four operating regions.
The team members come from the NRC’s headquarters in Rockville, Md., and from
offices in King of Prussia, Pa., and Atlanta. The team has been instructed to: conduct all
activities needed to understand the status of efforts to safely shut down the Japanese reactors; better understand the potential impact on people and the environment of any radioactivity releases; if asked, provide technical advice and support through the U.S. ambassador for the Japanese government’s decision making process; and draw on NRC-headquarters expertise for any other additional technical requirements. The team will be in communication with the Japanese regulator, the U.S. Embassy, NRC headquarters, and other government stakeholders as appropriate.
The team is led by Charles A. Casto, deputy regional administrator of the NRC’s Center
of Construction Inspection, based in NRC’s office in Atlanta. Casto has worked in the commercial nuclear power industry at three different nuclear power plants, including Browns Ferry, which has three boiling water reactors, operated by the Tennessee Valley Authority in Alabama. He has also worked as a licensed reactor operator and operator instructor. Casto will provide a single point of contact for the U.S. Ambassador in Japan on nuclear reactor issues.
The two reactor experts sent Saturday to Japan will participate as members of this assistance team.
 
Panic buying of iodine tablets in the US, as reported from Santa Rosa, Ca.

http://www.pressdemocrat.com/articl.../1350?Title=Rush-on-for-anti-radiation-pills-

"They're all out of stock," said Leila-Anne Brusseau, at Santa Rosa Community Market. The store normally does not stock the product but has been trying to get some because of demand.

"I'm getting a call every five minutes," Brusseau said.

She said her main supplier told her they'd sold out after filling 1,200 orders in the first half hour of business on Monday.

Troy Jones, owner of nukepills.com, a worldwide distributor of potassium iodide said his stock was depleted by 5,000 orders, 6,000 bottles, rolling in between Friday and Monday morning.

"We are so slammed," he said, noting that normally he would have had about 60 orders during that time.

Jones also donated 50,000 potassium iodide tablets -- ones not packaged for retail use -- to Japan, where he said it's more likely to be needed.

Credit to Mr Jones for donating his stock to Japan when he could have sold it for a huge profit.
 
Hmm - I still remember Lugol's iodine given to me after Chernobyl incident.
 
Does anybody have a link to the news about workers evacuating the plant? Can't seem to find any. BBC says TEPCO wants to dump water from helicopters on the spent fuel pool in the next few days. Weren't they storing the fuel in a building? Was it a pool out in the open or maybe did the building suffer damage during the fire?
There was some news that reactors 5 and 6 have begun slightly overheating. Could the radiation spikes from the stricken ones affecting them or is the containment a bit too thick for that?
 
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