It's time for the world community to recognize this is not just a Japanese problem but potentially a world-wide problem. With the entire country of Japan in a crisis with the earthquake and tsunamis, dealing with this nuclear crisis is clearly straining Japans capability to deal with it.
It's time for the President to get off the golf course and tell Japan the U.S. and other members of the word-wide community are moving in to assist in solving the problems at these stricken plants.
Also, these plants were made by GE. Rather than defending the use of
these plants, now is the time for GE's best engineers to work with the
Japanese to find a solution. The plants failing completely and
undergoing a meltdown would be the worst possible advertising for
these GE modeled plants. GE should be doing everything possible to
ensure that doesn't happen, not spending their time sending out press
releases.
But it's not just GE engineers. The President should put out a call
to everyone with expertise in any of the systems involved about how to
come up with solutions to prevent meltdown.
To the mobile diesel generator providers, do you have types that are
compatible with those used by the Japanese plants?
To electrical engineers how do you adapt different generators to work
with incompatible electrical systems already in place?
To high power pump manufacturers, do you have portable types that can pump water at the high rates the plant cooling systems used,
reportedly in the range of hundreds of liters per second? Do you have
turbopumps that can pump such high volumes of water driven by
combustion without needing high power electrical generators?
To robotic engineers, do you have robots that can take over some of
the dangerous functions being done by the skeleton crew remaining at
the Japanese plants under high radiation levels?
ABC News last night with Diane Sawyer presented an effecting story on
the 50 brave men still remaining at the plants under high radiation
exposure trying to bring the reactors under control:
World News (03.15.11).
http://news.yahoo.com/video/politics-15795811/#video=24541160
These men are under danger of contracting fatal radiation poisoning
from the lengths of time they're spending under the high radiation
conditions. But it doesn't have to be just 50. There are dozens of
nuclear power plants in Japan. Japan should put the call out to all
their nuclear plants for workers to assist in dealing with the crisis.
You could easily have over 1,000 emergency trained workers doing the
work relegated to the 50 men now. That would greatly reduce the
radiation exposure these men would have to face.
Bob Clark