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US Alarmed Over Japan's Nuclear Crisis

Hugh Pickens writes "The Washington Post reports that the US is urging Americans who live within 50 miles of Japan's earthquake-damaged Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant to evacuate as Gregory Jaczko, chairman of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, said that no water remains in a deep pool used to cool spent fuel at the plant and that radiation levels there are thought to be 'extremely high.' Jaczko's testimony before the House Energy and Commerce Committee suggests that damage to the plant is worse than the Japanese government and the plant's operator, Tokyo Electric Power Co., has acknowledged. On Tuesday, the company said water levels in three of the site's seven fuel pools were dropping, but did not say that the fuel rods themselves had been exposed. Left exposed to the air, the fuel rods will start to decay and release radioactivity into the air and lack of water in at least one spent-fuel pool sparked fears of a worst-case scenario: the fuel could combust. 'If there's no water in there, the spent fuel can start a fire,' says Eric Moore, a consultant to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission on nuclear plant design and safety issues. 'Once you have that fire, there's a high risk of radiation getting out, spewed by the fire.' The power company says a reduced crew of 50 to 70 employees — far fewer than the 1,400 or more at the plant during normal operations — had been working in shifts to keep seawater flowing to the three reactors now in trouble. Their withdrawal on Wednesday temporarily left the plant with nobody to continue cooling operations."

580 comments

  1. Connection with Nippon Telecomm is out by suso · · Score: 1

    Not to take aware from the obvious serious problem of nuclear fallout, but the connection with NTT is out too: http://www.internetpulse.net/

  2. Headline win by Noughmad · · Score: 2, Informative

    Anyone born before 1945 must find a great amount of irony in the headline.

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    1. Re:Headline win by poetmatt · · Score: 2

      I'm sure it was intentional. Meanwhile, the US is being idiotic on this. If you look at non-politically spewed bullshit, you'll see that Things are being managed pretty damn well . Japan has prepared for this far better than the states. Jaczko is just unhappy that Japan is rightfully keeping him the hell away from the situation.

    2. Re:Headline win by randomsearch · · Score: 1

      I don't think that the page supports your argument, and the MIT page is only going with the "official" facts, so it's a little incomplete and behind.

      The situation looks completely out of control - whilst focusing on one reactor, a fire hits a storage facility. Hydrogen explosions injure (kill? some workers are missing) employees - that doesn't sound like an organisation on top of things.

      However, I don't blame the guys working there, as the situation seems impossible to manage. All you can do is cool things down. That requires water / boric acid and pumps and preferably electricity. There are very few other things to be done at the reactors as far as I can see, other than make decisions on how much water to put in and where to target at a given time.

    3. Re:Headline win by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I greatly enjoy the irony in watching the Americans - the only country to have used nuclear weapons - squirm in fear of a possible radioactive cloud bearing down on them.

  3. "face" prevents asking for real help by speedlaw · · Score: 0

    I'm afraid that the cultural concept of losing face is active here. It is basically being left alone save some poke&hope attempts to drop water on it. Meanwhile, the US and others probably know how it truly is by all that remote sensing/spysat tech in orbit, but can't really say, other than "all americans in 50 miles evacuate". Ask for help....it's beyond face, it's a truly worldwide disaster.

    1. Re:"face" prevents asking for real help by nettdata · · Score: 5, Informative

      That's not the case at all. They're fighting like hell to run power to the cooling systems to bring them back online. The brief withdrawal of workers was due to a temporary spike in radiation.

      And the US and other nations have sent people there, on site, to report on what is going on. No sats required. Hell, the US Military has helped put out some of the fires, so they are RIGHT THERE.

      The Emperor went on TV to ask the world for help and patience while they work on the problem. China has been asked for help in supplying boron to help cool things down.

      Go follow the BBC News coverage for some real information on what's going on, they seem to be doing quite well at providing it.

      --



      $0.02 (CDN)
    2. Re:"face" prevents asking for real help by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 1

      There is a little more nuance than that: Obviously, the onsite engineers are not "saving face"(if anything, they are running the nontrivial risk of having face slough off most unpleasantly) and the Japanese government also seems to have come round to the severity of the situation(if not quite to the degree that experts from other countries with lots of reactors would like). Every statement from plant management, though, seems to be a variation on "Golly shucks, there are definitely some issues; but it is hard to say exactly how severe they are. We are working on it, check back later." It doesn't give you the warm and fuzzies about how forthright they are being...

    3. Re:"face" prevents asking for real help by uzd4ce · · Score: 1

      In addition to that, it's having extreme courtesy and regard for other people. They don't want to ask to put other nations' people in harm's way, that would be impolite and disrespectful.

    4. Re:"face" prevents asking for real help by NotAGoodNickname · · Score: 0

      OK lets not go overboard on the Japanese worship. Take a read about the rape of Nanking and tell me if the Japanese wouldn't want to put other nations people in harms way (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nanking_Massacre) They aren't angels. However they are much more capable than any other country to handle this situation. If this happened in the US it would be a much worse problem.

  4. Scare tactic by Stenchwarrior · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I don't know how much if this is true. I assume there is a modicum of truth in all of these reports, but these guys seem to offer a more rational and less sensationalist explanation.

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    1. Re:Scare tactic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Both sides are likely exaggerating.

      Mandatory Simpsons Reference:

      Kent: On the line with us now is plant owner C. Montgomery Burns. Mr. Burns?
      Burns: Oh, hello, Kent. [as loud rhythmic buzzing continues in the background]
                          Right now, skilled nuclear energy technicians are calmly correcting
                          a minor, piffling malfunction. [rapid-fire shots of havoc in the plant]
                          But I can assure you and the public that there is absolutely no danger
                          whatsoever. [air raid siren wails] Things couldn't be more ship-shape.
                          [cut to Burns' office, where he is busy donning a radiation suit]
      Smithers: Sir, where is radiation suit?
      Burns: How the hell should I know? [covers the name `Smithers' on the suit
                          he is wearing]
      Kent: Uh, Mr. Burns, people are calling this a meltdown.
      Burns: [laughs] Oh, meltdown. It's one of those annoying buzzwords. We prefer
                          to call it an unrequested fission surplus.

    2. Re:Scare tactic by drinkypoo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I don't know how much if this is true. I assume there is a modicum of truth in all of these reports, but these guys seem to offer a more rational and less sensationalist explanation.

      Those guys are also tied directly to the DoD.

      They gain credibility from their name on one hand, and lose it from their obligations on the other.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    3. Re:Scare tactic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

      I don't know how much if this is true. I assume there is a modicum of truth in all of these reports, but these guys seem to offer a more rational and less sensationalist explanation.

      Do you really want to believe the power company, the ones that have proven to have lied about this case and others in the past? I still remember BP seriously low balling the oil that was being released. I saw reports where Japanese government reps were interviewed where they dodged every direct question. The latest report is 20 people are ill from radiation poisoning. Odds are the numbers are higher since milder radiation poisoning can take days to present symptoms. There's no way to spin this case. It's bad. They may have lost all six reactors as in none may ever produce power again where as Chernobyl still continues to operate. It seems likely four are dead with only 5 and 6 in question and those only because they were shut down at the time of the quake. No one has yet mentioned what's happening to the millions of gallons of sea water being sprayed and dumped on the site. Lately the water is being dumped and sprayed from the outside so much of the water is in no way contained. The chances of the ground water being affected are a 100%. The site is also likely to be so badly contaminated that the whole plant will have to be abandoned as a power site no matter the condition of the final two reactors. There's no way to sugar coat this it's a black day for nuclear power. Chernobyl may have affected a bigger area but the scope of the damage already dwarfs Chernobyl. Chernobyl was mostly the one reactor where as this involves a minimum of 4 and last I heard reactor 5 was looking bad and the spent fuel was heating up. On some levels it's already the worst disaster and it's an ongoing mess. All we can hope is that the contamination isn't as bad as it seems to be and that they can get the upper hand on cooling the storage ponds since the reactors themselves seem to have done what they are going to do. Storing spent rods in virtually open swimming pools on the roofs of the reactors is akin to storing gasoline next to a furnace. So long as nothing leaks everything is fine but is it really worth the risk?

    4. Re:Scare tactic by Orgasmatron · · Score: 2

      Yeah, better to listen to "experts" only from the anti-nuclear activist groups, like on TV.

      --
      See that "Preview" button?
    5. Re:Scare tactic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's about not letting a good crisis go to waste. By scaring the pants off people, Fox News can make some buck$ and the rest of the mainstream news media can set back nuclear power in this country for a generation. See, then everyone in the news business ends up getting what they most want, and as usual all we get are lies.

    6. Re:Scare tactic by RooftopActivity · · Score: 0

      [The cartoon character Smilin' Joe Fission informs Bart's class about nuclear energy.]
      Smilin' Joe Fission: Uh-oh. Whoops. Looks there's a little leftover nuclear waste. No problem.
      [Smilin' Joe tucks the waste under a rug.]
      Smilin' Joe Fission: I'll just put it where nobody'll find it for a million years.

    7. Re:Scare tactic by drooling-dog · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I understand fully that people within and around the industry are concerned about how these events will affect the public acceptance of nuclear power around the world. It's also undeniable that the public's ability to understand what's going on is limited, and the media isn't always helpful in that regard.

      But you've got to be careful about jumping the gun with all of the "I'm a nuclear engineering student and there's nothing to worry about, you idiot" posts we've been seeing since this crisis (yes, I'll call it that) started. As the crisis deepens, all they do is convince the public that people who are representing themselves as experts either don't know what they're talking about or are deliberately lying. A few days ago the radiation hazard from this plant was being compared to that from the K-40 in a bunch of bananas (and who would be afraid of bananas?), and the next thing people hear is that it's too dangerous to fly helicopters overhead.

      The problem the nuclear industry and its PR vendors will face after this won't be about the details of nuclear reactor engineering or radiation health; it will be about credibility. Better to look back on this afterwards as "less serious than we thought" than to show the public that the industry can't be trusted to anticipate, prevent, contain, or even be truthful about its accidents.
       

    8. Re:Scare tactic by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      My point wasn't that you should listen to any one person or group in particular, but in fact the opposite. They have reasons other than altruism to share a particular view of events with you and you'd have to be a schmuck to willfully ignore that fact.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    9. Re:Scare tactic by tomhudson · · Score: 2

      They may have lost all six reactors as in none may ever produce power again where as Chernobyl still continues to operate

      You really need to get with the times - your information dates from the end of the last millennium.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chernobyl_disaster#Chernobyl_after_the_disaster

      Despite the accident, Ukraine continued to operate the remaining reactors at Chernobyl until 2000, when the last reactor at the site was closed down

    10. Re:Scare tactic by randomsearch · · Score: 1

      > you've got to be careful about jumping the gun with all of the "I'm a nuclear engineering student and there's nothing to worry about, you idiot" posts

      Mod parent up.

      This whole pro-nuclear stance on Slashdot is really daft. Just because you know that nuclear power can in principal be a clean and safe source of energy does not mean the situation in Japan is being exaggerated. The physics of nuclear power are one thing, but the implementation, safety engineering and management of them are another.

      It's almost like astroturfing, but I'm guessing the real issue is that some posters see this as "science under attack". Defending a nuclear power that is throwing high levels radiation into the air and seems to be an inherently unsafe design (not failsafe, dangerous storage of spent fuel IMO) is not improving people's perception of science.

      RS

    11. Re:Scare tactic by Arccot · · Score: 1

      Yeah, better to listen to "experts" only from the anti-nuclear activist groups, like on TV.

      Its not one or the other, of course. They all have agendas. You can listen to everyone, do some research, and make up your own mind.

    12. Re:Scare tactic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The experts changed their opinion between monday night and tuesday night when they learned that the confinement chambers of some reactors had been breached. Till Monday, the situation was seen as manageable. Once they learned of the breach of the containment vault, the experts became very pessimistic. And IIRC, this was even before we learned of the pools.

      Discosure, I'm french and I'm talking about our nuclear experts talking on French TV.

    13. Re:Scare tactic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The info at mitnse.com is accurate but incomplete and outdated. They don't even mention different type of fuel at reactor #3.

    14. Re:Scare tactic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I object to the implicit premise of your argument. Why is listening to "experts" from pro-nuclear activists groups considered more accurate and "less sensationalist" than listening to "experts" from anti-nuclear activist groups? Downplaying real risks is just as sensationalist as overplaying them.

    15. Re:Scare tactic by LordLimecat · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I would say the same about the media (though im not sure that their name alone is sufficient to give them credibility)-- their obligations are to make sensationalist stories.

      Hence why you will see a whopping 2 minute segment on how thousands have died and tens of thousands have no power or water, and then a 3 hour segment on how there is low level radiation that might conceivably kill some of the plant workers if the radiation levels spike significantly and the plant blows up.

      Thats real responsible reporting guys, really makes me trust everything you have to say.

    16. Re:Scare tactic by gad_zuki! · · Score: 4, Insightful

      >their obligations are to make sensationalist stories.

      I can't believe the reporting on this. Words like "NUCLEAR NIGHTMARE" are on the TV and in print, while thousands are without power, water, and are looking for their lost loved ones.

      I'm so sick of the sensationalist media. It just creates reactionary and sensationalist people. Sadly, the coal and oil industries are probably laughing at all this as building more reactors in the US will now be impossible or more difficult than usual. We're going to keep burning more fossil fuels. Oh well, here comes more pollution and guaranteed risk of lung cancer increases instead of a slim chance of radiation leakages.

    17. Re:Scare tactic by snowmenr4ever · · Score: 1

      Naturally they are err-ing on the safe side. The restrictions placed on exposure are no where near the fatality rate. Light radiation sickness begins at about 50â"100 rad (0.5â"1 gray (Gy), 0.5â"1 Sv, 50â"100 rem, 50,000â"100,000 mrem). High fatality rates occur at ~400 rems.* The EPA sets a 25 to 75 rad restriction on workers involved in emergencies (such as these). They do not want to go past light radiation sickness. The plants did spike to a rather high amount on the initial day (~700 mrem). However, that has come down extremely quickly. This morning it was measured at 75mrems just outside the front gate. Used fuel storage typically emits 2mrems per hour. While the lack of water is a concern, it is not nearly as bad as the claims make. The average dose on workers has been high enough to push them into the EPA restrictions, the public dose has been significantly smaller. While it is cause for concern, it really isn't that bad. http://www.nei.org/resourcesandstats/documentlibrary/newplants/factsheet/faq---japanese-nuclear-energy-situation/ * http://www.ornl.gov/sci/env_rpt/aser95/tb-a-2.pdf

    18. Re:Scare tactic by radtea · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Better to look back on this afterwards as "less serious than we thought" than to show the public that the industry can't be trusted to anticipate, prevent, contain, or even be truthful about its accidents.

      On the one hand there is an understandable desire on the part of those of us who know something of nuclear physics and nuclear engineering to put a damper on the more ridiculous speculations and lies that mass media are using to pump up fear and sell eyeballs.

      On the other hand, there should be a desire to educate the public about the genuine risks associated with nuclear power, which means breaking out of the ridiculous "OMG we are all going to die!" vs "power too cheap to meter".

      For the longest time the anti-nuclear movement was undebatable. There is simply no point in talking to anyone who thinks that Hellen Caldicot, for example, has anything useful or interesting to say about energy policy, enginerring safety or social policy. She and other like her are are simply noise-machines, drowning out all possibility of rational discourse.

      So ignoring people like that, what can we say about this accident so far?

      1) Core containment appears to be intact. Core containment is a bit like a building falling down. If you are doubtful about it having happened, it probably hasn't.

      2) Spent fuel storage adjacent to the reactor, outside the containment structure, is at risk of going critical. This would effectively place an uncontrolled nuclear reactor outside of any containment structure. Given the high tempratures and highly reactive envrironment this would entail, the possibility of the metalic components of such a reactor catching fire is non-zero. At this point the otherwise inflecitous comparisons to Chernobyl become unfortunately apt: the fire-driven radioactive plume from such a reactor would result in wide-spread atmospheric dispersal of actindes and fission products. With any luck, most of this would be washed out into the ocean fairly quickly, but on the islands of Japan itself the degree of surface contamination would almost certainly be quite significant.

      3) Errors only become apparent after they occur. Applogists for the nuclear industry will say "we can make sure that this won't happen again", and it may not. But something else will. This is a certainty. The energy density involved in nuclear reactors and nuclear fuel has been demonstrated time and again to be so high that relatively small errors have dreadful consequences, at least economically. We have seen this in carbon-moderated reactors, PWRs, BWRs and CANDUs. e cannot engineer out susceptiblity to the kind of small and apparently inocuous errors that have produced this disaster. I do not agree that with the accessment that "this is a crime": it is just that the sensitivity of nuclear reactors to relatively routine levels of error has been shown multiple times to be high.

      Coal-fired plants kill far more people than nuclear plants do, but they don't write themselves off when they do so. Nuclear plants don't kill as many people, but they become extremely expensive when people make the kind of mistakes that coal-fired plants forgive. This is not advocacy for coal, by the way, which is a filthy fuel. It is a reflection that fission power will always result in economic risks that are extremely high.

      4) Reprocessing is not risk free, even when spent fuel never leaves the site. It has long been argued by reprocessing advocates that it can be made safe, and one of the means of doing so is keeping everything on site. One can't help but ask, "How's that working out for you?"

      Once upon a time I expected to have a career in the nuclear industry. I trained as a nuclear engineer and went on, post-Chernobyl, to become a nuclear physicist. While I still have a fondness for the concept of nuclear power, it has become increasingly clear in the past several decades that even well-run, well-regulated nuclear industries have significant economic issues associated with them, and we should be at last cautious about building new nuclear plants without finding some means of providing genuine public evaluation of risk and oversight of constrution.

      --
      Blasphemy is a human right. Blasphemophobia kills.
    19. Re:Scare tactic by hellop2 · · Score: 1

      Can you blame them? How many earthquake/tsunami reports have we had lately? Indonesia, India, New Orleans, Pakistan, Haiti, Chile, etc..

      How many nuclear meltdowns have we had lately? Nuclear mutants and roving bands of cannibalistic are much more interesting than yet another collapsed structure or missing person report.

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    20. Re:Scare tactic by hellop2 · · Score: 1

      Or maybe they were just being optimistic.

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    21. Re:Scare tactic by slyborg · · Score: 1

      It's kind of hard to do warm and fuzzy stories about four malfunctioning nuclear reactors.

      The media is a business, so of course they are going to make their 'product' stand out to sell advertising. The fact is that 'reactionary and sensationalist people' want to watch the dramatic exposition because BBC is boring to them - calm, rational, thoughtful people are not instantly converted into 'reactionaries' because they flip on the tv and suddenly see a Fox News story one day.

    22. Re:Scare tactic by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      A few days ago the radiation hazard from this plant was being compared to that from the K-40 in a bunch of bananas (and who would be afraid of bananas?), and the next thing people hear is that it's too dangerous to fly helicopters overhead.

      You do know several days passed between the 'banana comparison' and the 'overflight restrictions'? You do know that in that period the conditions changed? (Explosions, fire, changing water levels, etc...)
       
      This accident isn't like Chernobyl, where the accident was essentially over in a few hundred milliseconds and everything else was recovery and stability. Nor is it like Three Mile Island where it was essentially over in three days. And neither took place in the full glare of the 24 hour news cycle, let alone the propensity of the 'net to spread panic and bad information.
       

      The problem the nuclear industry and its PR vendors will face after this won't be about the details of nuclear reactor engineering or radiation health; it will be about credibility. Better to look back on this afterwards as "less serious than we thought" than to show the public that the industry can't be trusted to anticipate, prevent, contain, or even be truthful about its accidents.

      You make the mistaken assumption that this is a static situation and the players have perfect information - only they aren't sharing it with us. Neither is true.

    23. Re:Scare tactic by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1

      nice.

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      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    24. Re:Scare tactic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I totally agree with this. What did I see over the past week of coverage here? Every time a story would get posted, it would be swamped with a bunch of "Oh, the media is so sensationalistic!" "It's totally safe!" "They've got it under control!"

      Invariably, 8 hours later, it would get worse.

      Now, the US is asking people up to 50 miles (80KM) away to evacuate the area, as opposed to the 20KM/30KM indoors that the Japanese government is requesting.

      This is not a great example of a safe or controlled situation...
      http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2011/03/16/world/asia/20110316-japan-quake-radiation.html?ref=asia

      And for all the "oh, but the earthquake and tsunami is so much worse!" crowd, yeah, it was, and the last thing the Japanese people need is for the area to be made radioactive too.

    25. Re:Scare tactic by A+beautiful+mind · · Score: 1
      I ended up so annoyed by the scare coverage that I actually started a site that provides a very simple message: http://isthereanucleardisasterinjapan.com/.

      The point is, noone has died from the nuclear accident and so far the effects have been entirely localized to the power plant, with no health effects to the outside world. What's more, it is extremely unlikely that anything like that could ever happen. The media hysteria is entirely overblown with so many wrong statements flying around that it's impossible to find a mainstream coverage without errors in every second paragraph.

      What the situation at the nuclear powerplant is: an accident, a critical event, nuclear meltdown, a serious situation, something to pay attention to, a testament to the security of nuclear design.

      What it isn't: a nuclear disaster, a nuclear nightmare, an apocalypse, Chernobyl, a radiation leak requiring people to leave the area outside the exclusion zone.

      Someone writing to BBC and complaining about the coverage of events put this in much better words than I could have:

      Kevin Dunn, in Tokyo, writes: "Why is the western media so focused on the non-event that Fukushima is? An expert on the Chernobyl aftermath on BBC tonight said, "nothing has been learnt from Chernobyl by the media", it's the same sensationalist, stress and anxiety inducing scaremongering. The lessons that have been learnt are in action now by Tepco power company. She says that they have done everything "by the book", and she "very much doubts" anyone will be seriously effected by the damage of the plants. The Fukushima nuclear power plant situation is not the disaster, the real disaster is further north where tens of thousands of men, women and children have died, millions are homeless, hundreds of kids are now orphans. We have made donations and hope to volunteer. The Japanese people need our help, not for us to run away and abandon them to their fate."

      In any event, there is an RSS/Atom feed on the site I created. If let's say enough radiation escapes from the nuclear plant to cause more than a dozen deaths over the next 30 years, I will switch the site to say "YES". I don't expect that to happen though.

      --
      It takes a man to suffer ignorance and smile
      Be yourself no matter what they say
    26. Re:Scare tactic by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      I'm so sick of the sensationalist media. It just creates reactionary and sensationalist people

      Or, more accurately, it caters to reactionary and sensationalist people. Think of who their audience is.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    27. Re:Scare tactic by LanMan04 · · Score: 1

      Sadly, the coal and oil industries are probably providing the funding for all this as building more reactors in the US will now be impossible or more difficult than usual.

      FTFY

      --
      With the first link, the chain is forged.
    28. Re:Scare tactic by catmistake · · Score: 1

      Best comment I've seen. Thank you for posting. Mod this freak of level headed rationality up plz!

    29. Re:Scare tactic by 0WaitState · · Score: 1

      Actually, it was astroturfing. Or at least the extremely rapid promotion of an article written by a non-nuclear scientist who happened to be working on a liason project with MIT in no nuclear engineering capacity, was coordinated by a siemens astroturf group.

      Described here: bad-oehmen-confirmation-bias-sources-astroturfing/

      --

      Remain calm! All is well!
    30. Re:Scare tactic by Johnny+Mnemonic · · Score: 1


      it will be about credibility.
      That's exactly the problem the nuclear industry has always suffered from. The contamination is very dangerous and invisible, and the only one that can tell us how bad it is are folks with a strong vested interest in downplaying the issue. As a consequence, no one knows what to think--and so have chosen to believe the worst case scenario. And as a further consequence, the US hasn't built a new reactor in 30 years. These guys have done themselves a disservice by dissembling and being caught at it. The industry would be in much better shape as a whole if nuclear power plant operators would be more straightforward about the dangers when they happen.

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      $tar -xvf .sig.tar
    31. Re:Scare tactic by jez9999 · · Score: 1

      Level-headed. Unfortunately, what's actually going to happen in most countries is the green movement dominating the discussion and the *NO NUCLEAR, ALL RENEWABLE!!!* crowd will win out in the mainstream public opinion. Germany is already headed for a nuclear-free situation, even though that means 75% of their power coming from fossil fuels. The US is headed in that direction and has been for a long time. The UK's new nuclear plants may well be under threat thanks to this disaster. In France, "Sortir du nucléaire" campaigns for the replacement of nuclear power with something else in a country which gets 70-80% of its power from nuclear plants which have an impeccable safety record. The list goes on. I can't really see nuclear having much of a future given the public perception now. I wouldn't even be surprised in research for nuclear fusion gets dropped because it has the word 'nuclear' in it. :-(

    32. Re:Scare tactic by Stenchwarrior · · Score: 1

      LOL (really). Hey, you're not by chance the same guy that started this website, are you?

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    33. Re:Scare tactic by A+beautiful+mind · · Score: 1

      No, but the idea came from sites like these.

      --
      It takes a man to suffer ignorance and smile
      Be yourself no matter what they say
    34. Re:Scare tactic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Errors only become apparent after they occur." "I do not agree that with the accessment that "this is a crime""

      I'm not so sure. Tsunami inundation maps for historical events exist. This area has had tsunami run-ups of 7 metres previously, and the effects extended inland for kilometres. It was a long time ago, but these are not hypothetical scenarios. It's a historical fact. The present event is practically a replay of some of the historical ones.

      Yet here we have a nuclear power plant (several of them in the region, really) with apparently no significant tsunami protection for its backups and built within the area of *known* historical inundation. While the error might become obvious after the fact, it has existed from the beginning. Not addressing historical tsunami effects in the engineering of the site was a big, big error. It lay dormant until the expected event actually happened. Only the timing of it was a surprise, not the magnitude of what could happen here. It borders on negligence because it was a known risk and nothing was done about it.

    35. Re:Scare tactic by stumblingblock · · Score: 1

      I absolutely agree that incredible HUBRIS is being exhibited by those wishing to minimize the significance of this event. It is easy to accept that "engineering can accomplish anything", maybe not so easy to accept "human ignorance, error and cowardice can destroy anything".

    36. Re:Scare tactic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It hat a big seawall for tsunami protection. This particular tsunami was unprecedentedly large. Hindsight is 20/20.

    37. Re:Scare tactic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Spent fuel storage adjacent to the reactor, outside the containment structure, is at risk of going critical."
      The risk is in additional fuel melting due to the Zr+H2O reaction, followed by a fire or steam that would carry particles of fuel to the atmosphere.
      Again I repeat, the risk is not in going re-critical.

      I'm a reactor physicist who does spent fuel criticality assessments.

    38. Re:Scare tactic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That *can* mean: have a pre-existing bias, scan all the media, and choose the reports/columns that fit your biases.
      Of course, if the pieces that fit your bias the best sound like they were written by someone foaming at the mouth, your bias is probably wrong.

    39. Re:Scare tactic by Francofille · · Score: 1

      It's an interesting contrast to the message we attempted to send the world about our spewing millions of barrels of oil into the ocean for months on end.

      Not to worry, it's hardly anything, a few barrels here and there, we'll have it fixed in a jiffy, move along nothing to see here ... ah look we poured more chemicals in for a couple of days and now it's good as new .. Good. As. New. Yep!

    40. Re:Scare tactic by Solandri · · Score: 2

      it will be about credibility.
      That's exactly the problem the nuclear industry has always suffered from. The contamination is very dangerous and invisible, and the only one that can tell us how bad it is are folks with a strong vested interest in downplaying the issue.

      Credibility? The nuclear industry has never had a credibility problem. The problem has always been a huge anti-nuclear double standard. People give the same weight to what some actor in Hollywood has to say about nuclear power as what someone who spent 10+ years earning a Ph.D. in nuclear engineering says. I'm pro-nuclear but if you search my recent post history here, I think you'll see I'm not downplaying the seriousness of the current situation. Your error is in assuming that anyone who is pro-nuclear has a "strong vested interest in downplaying the issue". The reality is that most people who are anti-nuclear have a strong vested interest in over-hyping the issue.

      As a consequence, no one knows what to think--and so have chosen to believe the worst case scenario.

      You think what's going on is the worst-case scenario? Let me tell you about worst-case scenarios. Have you ever heard of Banqiao? It was a Chinese nuclear plant which in 1975 suffered a severe accident. The Chinese covered it up for 30 years and quietly admitted it to the world in 2005. So quietly that most people still haven't heard of it. The toll compared to Chernobyl is just staggering:

      26,000 immediate deaths (57 for Chernobyl)
      145,000 long-term deaths (4000 cancer deaths for Chernobyl)
      11 million people relocated (336,000 people relocated for Chernobyl)
      Nearly 6 million homes and buildings made uninhabitable
      768 km^2 rendered uninhabitable (489 km^2 exclusion zone for Chernobyl)

      Horrific, isn't it? Worse than the atomic bombing of Hiroshima. Clearly proof that nuclear power is too dangerous to use, right?

      I'm sorry. I lied. Banqiao wasn't a nuclear plant. It was a hydroelectric dam . Everything else I said is true though. In 1975, during a typhoon and torrential rainfall, it filled to over capacity. After several attempts to lower its water level by opening sluice gates, the dam above it burst. The swell of water overwhelmed the Banqiao dam, and it too burst. 700 million tons of water were released, and it precipitated a cascade failure of dams beneath it. In all, 62 dams burst or were deliberately destroyed in attempts to divert water into flood plains, with a total of 15.7 billion tons of water released.

      26,000 people lost their lives in the flooding. Over 1 million people were left stranded by the waters, cut off from disaster relief, and had to have food and water airlifted to them for weeks. An estimated 145,000 of them (Chinese govt figures) died of the famine and disease caused by the disaster. Nearly 6 million buildings were destroyed, and 11 million people had to be relocated. When the dam was rebuilt, 768 km^2 was flooded to form the flood catchbasin.

      Horrific, isn't it? Worse than the atomic bombing of Hiroshima. Clearly proof that hydroelectric power is too dangerous to use, right?

      So the worst power-generator accident in history was a hydro plant. The worst-case scenario for hydro is much, much worse than for nuclear. But I'm willing to bet your gut is still telling you that hydro is safe and nuclear is dangerous. See? You have an anti-nuclear bias. Your mind easily accepts something critical of nuclear power, but rejects the exact same evidence when it's critical of hydroelectric power. You are using a double standard.

      But Banqiao was a clay dam. Western dams are typically concrete.
      Chernobyl was a dangerous and unstable reactor design never used in the West.

      It was Chinese. They had shoddy building and operating standar

    41. Re:Scare tactic by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

      Sure it's serious. But how many people has nuclear power killed in its history? Maybe 10k (Chernobyl, non retarded death estimate + some fluff). Coal power kills possibly up to that number every year. There are much higher numbers floating around, but I don't buy them any more than I buy the 1M Chernobyl bullshit numbers. Coal power has been responsible, worldwide, for far more deaths than nuclear power. Where's the outrage? Where's the panic?

      People are afraid of this because radiation seems like magic, and because in the worst case it can be a pretty shitty way to die. Plus it feeds into the fears about cancer. But if you look at it rationally, it's just not that big a deal. I know even one death is too many, but I'd be shocked if the death toll from the reactors in Japan reached even 100, much less 1000. How many people died in the Tsunami itself, 10k+? And people are fucking panicking over this? It's bullshit. Just like more people die from drunk drivers than terrorism yet terrorism has drastically changed many aspects of American life.

      If something totally unlikely and crazy happens and this ends up killing 20k people, I'll come back on and admit I was wrong but I don't see it happening.

    42. Re:Scare tactic by cartman · · Score: 1

      Parent post was not only informative, but unusually well-written for slashdot.

      I think it's extremely inadvisable for armchair engineers etc to make sweeping, unqualified claims while an uncertain situation progresses. Any such claims may be true when uttered but could become false very rapidly. For example, the armchair enginners claimed that the amount of radioactivity released from the reactor was no more than you would get from a banana, which was true at the time, but it appears that conditions are progressing rapidly.

    43. Re:Scare tactic by ShooterNeo · · Score: 1

      Solar and Wind could work, correct? If we covered a 100x100 square mile area of Arizona with photovoltaic panels, and lined the coasts with wind generators. We would have vast fields of underground caverns filled with compressed air.

      A nuclear plant has to be guarded, it has to be repaired, it has to be maintained, it has to be worried about, and every now and then it has to be cleaned up after some kind of incident. Major incidents like the one in Japan are rare, but minor ones are common. All of the employees have to have educated backgrounds and clean backgrounds with respect to law enforcement. Every component used in a nuclear plant has to be inspected and approved for quality, and every waste component disposed of in special and expensive disposal areas.

      While solar photovoltaic cells are a little bit expensive today, every cell on every panel is identical - a perfect case for automation. It isn't unreasonable to think that by the time we are covering 100x100 mile areas we would have the economic case to make completely automated factories for making the panels. Once the panels are in place, they keep making power for at least 25 years. Very close to zero maintenance needed. No chance of catastrophe for the finished panels.

      I like photovoltaic for this reason : big mirror arrays are more efficient, but the mirrors have to move, and they have to be washed, and the plant can fail completely. Solar arrays fail more gracefully. I think in the long term that photovoltaic will dominate the economic side of the equation for this reason.

      I think as an engineer, the future is as clear as it could possibly be now. Regardless of actual risk, nuclear power for civilian electricity production is over. It does not matter whether or not it could be made safe - it is not worth the money spent given that catastrophic failures are in fact probable even in fairly well engineered reactors maintained by people known to be reliable. The current reactors we have right now will be kept running for a few more decades, and the ones approved for new construction might be built, but other than that the western world is through with nuclear.

      We might as well focus all the funds on a technology the public does accept, and does have the potential to power everything. We'll need to spend a lot of money on the storage, and to charge much more money for stored electricity at night, and no longer will electricity be guaranteed at any point in the day or night, because demand spikes will always be possible at the exact moment the wind and sun are not out. The logical solution would be to wire new construction and old with two levels of wiring : a lower priority circuit for HVACs and high draw machinery. And a higher priority circuit for lights, computers, food storage, etc. The power company would routinely cut the power to everyone's lower priority circuit throughout the day, and would meter each one separately so that those of us who cheated and connected the AC to the other circuit would pay expensive fees.

    44. Re:Scare tactic by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      The truth is probably in the center somewhere. The whole issue is just very muddled with clearly some bad decisions seen in hindsight, but the confusion and misinformation also causes extra levels of panic as well. Overall this will be used as an example by both pro and anti nuclear power advocates.

      The biggest snafu I'm seeing is with the cooling pools. This was info we didn't have early on. It's convenient to store the rods where they are (the same place where they're inserted or removed) but it's not that safe a location. As well it seems that they've been storing too many rods this way (though the stories here are vague). Before the issue with the cooling pools though things seemed somewhat similar to Three Mile Island, which did not seem to have any external effects on public health. A massive disaster for the plant itself, but confined to the plant and investors. With the cooling pools the danger increases though, these don't have containment chambers.

      What's going wrong as I understand it:
      - six reactors at the same site - not very smart at all. External problems such as floods, fire, power loss, etc will affect all 6. Now engineers are stuck dealing with multiple reactor emergencies simultaneously.
      - Cooling ponds kept inside the reactor building. Again, putting all the eggs in one basket. Maybe they don't need to be off-site, but at least physically distant from the main reactors.
      - Venting problems for the hydrogen gas build up, or having it vented into an enclosed space. The explosions compounded the problems. The gas was vented to the same space as the cooling ponds as I understand it.
      - Safety of the exterior of the plant; ie, this is what the tsunami messed up. The reactors and containment survived the earthquake itself (possibly with internal damage requiring decommissioning). Yes it's true they didn''t predict this sort of tsunami, but they should have predicted equivalent sorts of external disasters (such as an airplane crash that takes out power and generators).
      - Fog of war. The information just is getting jumbled and filtered too much. This has caused panic in outside of Japan.
      - Possible corner cutting. TEPCO seems to have had a checkered history, though it's unclear how accurate this. Nuclear power plants are just like investment banks, they both need high degrees of regulation for the public's safety.

    45. Re:Scare tactic by ShooterNeo · · Score: 1

      No, but the pro nuclear people have said for decades that the chance of a meltdown is so low that it won't happen for millenia in a properly run plant. They trot out "statistics" based upon calculations performed by the engineers who design nuclear plants. The problem with said calculations is that they are usually wrong.

      For example, if you applied the math to the Fukishima plant, you would say "what is the chance that an earthquake breaks all the piping for coolant?" You'd get some low number, as that plant has a lot of backup piping and it's all very well made.

      You'd then say "what is the chance that all 3 backup generators, and the battery bank, and the power from other stations failed at the same time, and we can't get more power to the site within a few hours?" Again, these risks are small : each generator is made very well, and it's a series probability. Say one generator has a 1% chance of failure : then the chance of all 3 failing in a row is 0.01 * 0.01 * 0.01. A tiny number. And there's lots of backup generators elsewhere.

      But these numbers are wrong. Empirically we now know that the real risk is far, far greater. ONLY a sustained loss of power has been enough to cause a disaster that could potentially rival Chernobyl in terms of radionucleotides released to the surrounding areas. There are a great many things that could cause the plant to lose power : an explosion in the room containing the main switchboards is all it would take. And we also now know that once a disaster starts it creates lots of hydrogen gas, causing more explosions that destroy more equipment. A chain reaction almost like the nuclear reactions we are worried about. And finally once this accident gets bad enough, the workers can't even get near the equipment to fix it, putting the whole situation beyond recovery.

      A lot of these things were unknowns. No one has actually had this kind of accident before quite this way. The risks published by the utility companies can't consider unknown failure modes, especially cascading failures like this one.

    46. Re:Scare tactic by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      On the other hand, nuclear power is not necessarily clean energy. It takes an enormous amount of energy and fuel and pollution to create the nuclear fuel and plants in the first place. There's really no such thing as "clean energy", we should really talk about "cleaner energy". I don't know exactly how much fossil fuel gets used to build and operate a nuclear power plant, but I think it's a lot higher than many people think.

      In the past most of the impetus for nuclear energy was not so much about having cleaner energy but to reduce dependence on foreign suppliers of energy or to have cheaper power long-term (high initial costs though) or as a solution of what to do when fossil fuels do eventually run out. It is only recently that people seemed to start thinking of nuclear power as "clean".

    47. Re:Scare tactic by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      But these numbers are wrong.

      Something you have failed to show.
       

      Empirically we now know that the real risk is far, far greater.

      Wrong again. You believe you know numbers, but in fact, you're nearly innumerate. Just because the chance of rolling snake eyes is low doesn't mean it can't come up on the first throw.
       

      here are a great many things that could cause the plant to lose power : an explosion in the room containing the main switchboards is all it would take.

      In a universe where engineers were a stupid as you and they put all the switchboards in a single room, true.
       

      And we also now know that once a disaster starts it creates lots of hydrogen gas, causing more explosions that destroy more equipment.

      Wrong again. Hydrogen gas is produced when the core is exposed or loses cooling - but even so it doesn't always explode. (Read up on Three Mile Island, where hydrogen was generated - but didn't explode.)
       
      I gotta ask however, does it hurt to be as stupid and ignorant as you are?

    48. Re:Scare tactic by ShooterNeo · · Score: 1

      Indeed it must. You cannot calculate the probability of a cascading failure if it involves an unknown mechanism. As far as I know, merely losing power is not supposed to cause this kind of disaster - hence it's reasonable to assume that this event is completely un-accounted for in the statistics.

      However, now that we know about it, you can go back and look at all of the other reactors in the world today, and I suspect many of them would have the same catastrophic failures if they lost power for a sustained period.

      How could a reactor lose power? A couple of hand grenades in the right spot would do the trick. It appears that it would be pretty damn easy for terrorists to cause a nuclear catastrophe if they got in. I know there's been efforts to harden up the facilities, but are commercial power companies going to pay for a full team of heavily armed commandos at every nuclear plant in the U.S.? Or just a couple guards at the gate? What do you think.

    49. Re:Scare tactic by nospam007 · · Score: 1

      "It appears that it would be pretty damn easy for terrorists to cause a nuclear catastrophe if they got in"

      Robin Wood, a Greenpeace spin-off, got access to the french Cattenom nuclear reactor and another one I don't remember and planted signs and flags on the cooling towers. (I'm located only a few miles from it)

      They called themselves 'Robert Wald' group, a German translation of 'Robin Wood' and asked for a tour via snail-mail.
      They got an authorization and they had just to ring the bell at the entry point and were let in.
      Then they took out their banners and flags, but it could also have been armed men with grenade launchers and Semtex.

    50. Re:Scare tactic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah. Total sensationalism. Except that now babies can't drink the water in Tokyo. And the prime minister's office is talking about importing drinking water into their country.

      I think you and all the other basement dwelling nuclear apologists should go clean that shit up. Amazing how now that the really bad news is coming in, you and your worthless opinions are no where to be heard.

  5. Nothing to worry about by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, no - it's safe as milk.

    Clean, safe , cheap power source my ass.

    1. Re:Nothing to worry about by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Clean, safe , cheap power source my ass.

      Your ass is a clean, safe power source? Are we talking natural gas here? Doesn't that require fuel for you to turn into natural gas? I thought it had been proven the input energy requirements far outweigh the output energy recovered in this method?

    2. Re:Nothing to worry about by Nidi62 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      No, no - it's safe as milk.

      Clean, safe , cheap power source my ass.

      When you are using 50 year old designs, then yes, you're right, it isn't all that safe. Now, if the anti-nuclear energy lobby had actually allowed us to build more, modern reactors over that time period, then we would have plenty of new, modern, safe nuclear reactors. So, the anti-nuclear power people really have to blame themselves as much as anyone else for the current state of nuclear power in the world.

      --
      The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for it to be pitted against a slightly greater evil
    3. Re:Nothing to worry about by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's nice to blame others right?

      If it weren't for those pesky hippies the good energy companies would have constructed those highly expensive new reactors and shut down the old ones. They would have willingly forfeit the MASSIVE profits they are making with old reactors. The pro-nuke energy lobby is only lobbying for the extension of old reactors because ... uh ... something ... eco friendly ... certainly not because they are pumping out pure profit since they've been paid off long ago.

    4. Re:Nothing to worry about by kju · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Now, if the anti-nuclear energy lobby had actually allowed us to build more, modern reactors over that time period, then we would have plenty of new, modern, safe nuclear reactors.

      Oh really? I have not much insight but i keep reading that there was never much resistance against nuclear power in the Japanese population because they a.) believed in the technology and b.) saw the necessity.

      So what has barred the Japanese from buying those hypothetical "plenty of new, modern, safe nuclear reactors." Yes, I know that the plant in question was about to be shut down. Still it was in operation for 40 years in which time span the safety of nuclear was allegedly so much increased. So why wasn't it replaced 20 years ago?

      The truth is that these power plants are operated by companies who want to earn money. They will never replace a plant before they are forced too. And that they weren't forced is not the fault of the opponents of nuclear power.

    5. Re:Nothing to worry about by NoobixCube · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Without an earthquake (one of the biggest in recorded history, I might add) to disrupt the reactors, the Fukushima Daiichi plant could have continued happily along with no major problems. Good time to be somewhere else, granted, but this is hardly a disaster yet. As long as non-essential personnel get the hell out of there, and as long as they either get the reaction under control or start taking steps now to contain a meltdown, there should be no major issues. A bit of contamination, but Hiroshima AND Chernobyl are both relatively safe, compared to what nuclear doomsayers would have us believe about the lasting effects. Yes, I know the halflife of Plutonium is somewhere up around forty thousand years (give or take), but Plutonium won't comprise the majority of the contamination. Most of the decayed elements will be smaller radioactive isotopes with far far shorter halflives (years, decades maybe, not millennia), like Iodine, or Caesium. In fact, there's been more negative impact from coal and oil based power, even since the advent of nuclear power; hell, even if we include nuclear WEAPONS, there's been far more negative environmental impact made by fossil fuels than radiation. If I had a choice of living next door to a nuclear power plant, or a coal power plant, I'd pick nuclear any day of the week.

      Nuclear power is only bad when something goes horribly wrong. Consider how many nuclear reactors there are in the world. How many reactive cores are currently operating. Now exactly how many times have we had a Chernobyl-scale disaster? One of the reasons Chernobyl got so far out of hand, I hear, was because the information output, such as it was in that era, just couldn't keep up with changing conditions inside the reactor. You'd have people working on information ten, fifteen minutes old, patching up lost causes the whole time. Chernobyl was of cheap, shoddy construction, even for then, and we learned so much from it - mostly in the "what NOT to do" category. Every year, there's a good dozen stories crop up on Slashdot about some new miracle bacteria or algae that just LOVES eating what we'd call radioactive waste, so storage and disposal of radioactive materials will eventually cease to be a problem. It would be cool if we could find a use for these radiation-eating bacteria, but hey, you can't have your pony and eat it too.

      Conversely, no news is good news. How many times do you pick up the news paper and read the headline "All is well at the nuclear power plant"? How many success stories do you read about? Every time something involving nuclear power makes it into the news, even if it's (no, ESPECIALLY if it's) plans for a new reactor, the media is full of worst case scenarios and fears of another Chernobyl.

      --
      Admit it. You post strawman arguments as AC so you get modded Insightful for refuting them, rather than Troll
    6. Re:Nothing to worry about by NoobixCube · · Score: 1

      Of course, I'll probably be alone in this opinion since this is apparently the same planet where people think wifi gives them rashes... Imagine telling one of those people to live next door to a nuclear plant!

      --
      Admit it. You post strawman arguments as AC so you get modded Insightful for refuting them, rather than Troll
    7. Re:Nothing to worry about by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      If I had a choice of living next door to a nuclear power plant, or a coal power plant, I'd pick nuclear any day of the week.

      I have read that often the last days on /. and I simply don't get it. It what country do you live and what is wrong with your coal plants?
      In germany nearly every majour city has a coal plant. There are no problems whatsoever with them. Except for CO2 the "hot air" they exhaust is cleaner than the air they take in ...
      angel'o'sphere

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    8. Re:Nothing to worry about by should_be_linear · · Score: 2

      I new these stupid "greens" are to blame here, I just couldn't find any way to connect emerging nuclear catastrophe with them. Thanks!

      --
      839*929
    9. Re:Nothing to worry about by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      It would be cool if we could find a use for these radiation-eating bacteria, but hey, you can't have your pony and eat it too.

      A little bit of common sense would tell you that those magical bacterias don't exist.
      Bacterias live from chemical processes ... perhaps they are robust to live with "radioactive caesium" or can build up sugar with tritium, BUT by that the tritium, caesium, uranium or plutonium does not go away.
      The only thing for which those bacterias are useful is to let them combine the "waste" into their metabolism and use some kind of pumping technology to get the bacterias out of the ground to store them elsewhere.
      angel'o'sphere

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    10. Re:Nothing to worry about by rotide · · Score: 5, Informative

      Source: http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=coal-ash-is-more-radioactive-than-nuclear-waste

      "Among the surprising conclusions: the waste produced by coal plants is actually more radioactive than that generated by their nuclear counterparts. In fact, the fly ash emitted by a power plant—a by-product from burning coal for electricity—carries into the surrounding environment 100 times more radiation than a nuclear power plant producing the same amount of energy.

      At issue is coal's content of uranium and thorium, both radioactive elements. They occur in such trace amounts in natural, or "whole," coal that they aren't a problem. But when coal is burned into fly ash, uranium and thorium are concentrated at up to 10 times their original levels."

    11. Re:Nothing to worry about by bjourne · · Score: 1

      That's the reason why nuclear energy is cheap. Because the plants are old and their construction costs have been fully amortized. Alternative energy wouldn't be so alternative anymore if only recently constructed nuclear plants were allowed to operate.

    12. Re:Nothing to worry about by miffo.swe · · Score: 1

      This comparison is only as long as there arent any accident happening.

      --
      HTTP/1.1 400
    13. Re:Nothing to worry about by bjourne · · Score: 1

      There was nothing wrong with the Chernobyl reactor nor with the people that ran the reactor. What happened was that the higher ups in the Soviet system, those with no clue whatsoever, had ordered a very dangerous experiment to be conducted at the plant. This experiment was running late which triggered a lot of human errors and together with some unfortunate events caused the catastrophe. The nuclear engineers working at the plant knew how dangerous the experiment was and what the risks were but proceeded with it. If they had refused, it would have been a good way to end their careers and possibly been transferred to Siberia.

      The exact same thing can happen again, like it did with BP:s oil spill and their infallible blow out preventor. It's not about technology but about human factors. Mistakes do happen because time schedules are still stressed, idiots with no contact with the people on the ground are still the ones doing the decisions and it's still much safer to do what your boss says than to be adamant about following safety regulations.

    14. Re:Nothing to worry about by RKThoadan · · Score: 1

      Coal plants have accidents too:

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kingston_Fossil_Plant_coal_fly_ash_slurry_spill

      I'm of the opinion that the biggest danger in Japan right now is the pools with spent fuel rods. I think this shows that we don't handle waste from either coal or nuclear plants very well.

    15. Re:Nothing to worry about by rotide · · Score: 1

      And the odds of that happening are extremely small. If it does happen, or looks like it might, you get evacuated from the area. By comparison, coal plants _continuously_ emit radiation among many other unsavory products. It's cleaner and safer to live near a nuclear plant than a coal plant. Not to mention it won't smell nearly as bad. You won't get soot spread on your property. etc. etc.

      Sure, when the shit hits the fan, it's probably safer to have a coal plant burning up, but if you're that worried about safety and the statistics thereof, you're more likely to die in a car accident any day of the week.

    16. Re:Nothing to worry about by miffo.swe · · Score: 1

      "..you're more likely to die in a car accident any day of the week."

      And yet the US spends more than ever on terrorism than anything else, how many US citzens has died because of terrorism again?

      --
      HTTP/1.1 400
    17. Re:Nothing to worry about by rotide · · Score: 1

      Interesting tangent (not really). How about we keep talking about the topic at hand? I was merely pointing out that if you're that afraid of a small statistical chance there are more obvious things to be afraid of.

      Unless you're just trolling of course. But that would never happen on /., right?

    18. Re:Nothing to worry about by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      You seriously think Japan hasn't been building nuclear reactors over that entire time period?

      They're expensive, no one is going to decommission a working plant to entirely replace it with new technology - let alone do that every decade or so when new designs highlight flaws in the older designs.

      The anti-nuclear power people have nothing to do with that. They certainly haven't prevented Japan and France and China from building modern reactors. And it isn't the anti-nuclear power people who decided that th French would go with active safety instead of passive safety on their most modern reactors.

    19. Re:Nothing to worry about by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 0

      Uhh...Japanese population not being resistant to ideas about nuclear anything? Are you on crack, man? Most Japanese HATE the idea of nuclear...Japan has a lot of nuclear power plants due to the yakuza/construction/government triangle that makes Japan build all sorts of crazy shit everywhere, paving over their whole island. But wait, it's EEEEVUL capitalism's fault - AGAIN. Is there any ill in this world that cannot be connected in some way? It's like how people see the Devil's hand in everything, only a bit different.

      --
      Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
    20. Re:Nothing to worry about by marcosdumay · · Score: 1

      "Every year, there's a good dozen stories crop up on Slashdot about some new miracle bacteria or algae that just LOVES eating what we'd call radioactive waste"

      Bacteria eating it won't make the radiation go away. That is not oil.

    21. Re:Nothing to worry about by dbIII · · Score: 1

      That was very much a low point for that magazine - a poorly researched article citing a social newsletter at the Oak Ridge nuclear facility written by an engineer that quit to pursue a career as a writer of "Southern Humour".
      Read the comments on the article to get an idea of how bad it is and how lazy the writer was. The idiot just read the Oak Ridge article and recycled some of it.

    22. Re:Nothing to worry about by Muad'Dave · · Score: 1

      So what has barred the Japanese from buying those hypothetical "plenty of new, modern, safe nuclear reactors."

      Nothing except economics. The irony (if I dare to use that word on slashdot) of the situation is that the Dai-ichi site was slated for decommissioning in February, but its license was extended by 10 years. Had they been in the middle of decommissioning when the quake/tsunami hit there could have been 6 reactor's worth of screaming hot rods in the upper containment pools.

      --
      Tiller's Rule: Never use a word in written form that you've only heard and never read. You will end up looking foolish.
    23. Re:Nothing to worry about by OutSourcingIsTreason · · Score: 1

      Modern designs are safer, perhaps, but building them on an earthquake-and-tsunami-prone planet is still a game of Russian roulette.

      --
      "Fascism should more properly be called corporatism because it is the merger of state and corporate power." -- Mussolini
    24. Re:Nothing to worry about by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, except for CO2, SO2, NOx, CO, particulate matter, uranium and thorium, there's really nothing to be concerned about.

      Germans are pretty well educated and usually know a lot about engineering/science, but they seem to completely shut their brains off while talking about "AKW"'s.

    25. Re:Nothing to worry about by mcvos · · Score: 1

      Without an earthquake (one of the biggest in recorded history, I might add) to disrupt the reactors, the Fukushima Daiichi plant could have continued happily along with no major problems.

      You mean: as long as nothing goes wrong, nothing's wrong? The point is that you need to make sure nothing goes wrong. Blind faith doesn't get you very far.

      Good time to be somewhere else, granted, but this is hardly a disaster yet.

      If you don't think this is a disaster, then I really wonder what you would consider a disaster. It's not as big a disaster as the earthquake+tsunami itself, but it's a disaster nonetheless.

      As long as non-essential personnel get the hell out of there, and as long as they either get the reaction under control or start taking steps now to contain a meltdown, there should be no major issues.

      Ah, I get it now. You've missed about a week's worth of news. Non-essential personnel is already out of there, the reaction is already under control (for now at least), and they have been working all week to contain the partial metldown and prevent worse. And yet there are major issues.

      A bit of contamination, but Hiroshima AND Chernobyl are both relatively safe, compared to what nuclear doomsayers would have us believe about the lasting effects.

      Relatively safe compared to what exactly? Are you aware of the number of birth defects after Chernobyl? The number of people who died there? Did you know that Chernobyl is still highly radioactive?

      But what's a few thousand ruined lives? That's not really anything to get upset about, is it?

      In fact, there's been more negative impact from coal and oil based power, even since the advent of nuclear power; hell, even if we include nuclear WEAPONS, there's been far more negative environmental impact made by fossil fuels than radiation. If I had a choice of living next door to a nuclear power plant, or a coal power plant, I'd pick nuclear any day of the week.

      Sure, coal is a lot worse. But that doesn't make nuclear a good option. Certainly not nuclear plants that aren't safe enough.

      Nuclear power is only bad when something goes horribly wrong. Consider how many nuclear reactors there are in the world. How many reactive cores are currently operating. Now exactly how many times have we had a Chernobyl-scale disaster?

      How many Chernobyl-scale disasters do you want? Is one not already one too many? Nuclear power is currently only a small percentage of the world's energy production, and yet we're seeing meltdowns and near-meltdowns almost every 10 years. And stories of radioactive leakage are a lot more common than that.

    26. Re:Nothing to worry about by sperxios10 · · Score: 1

      Had they been in the middle of decommissioning when the quake/tsunami hit there could have been 6 reactor's worth of screaming hot rods in the upper containment pools.

      But then they wouldn't need electricity to operate those high-pressure pumps,
      a simple hose on each one of the 6 reactors would do the job, or even simpler, they could have done it with buckets of sea-water!

      OTOH, a Nuclear Core tightly sealed inside a Containenment Vessel is different beast to cool.

    27. Re:Nothing to worry about by slashdottedjoe · · Score: 1

      The devil's hand is government. Though I do not dismiss nuclear power as a useful source of energy, it is hard to imagine many companies would choose to build them without indemnification, incentives, fuel processing and more benefits from government.

    28. Re:Nothing to worry about by radtea · · Score: 1

      Without an earthquake (one of the biggest in recorded history, I might add) to disrupt the reactors, the Fukushima Daiichi plant could have continued happily along with no major problems.

      Sure, if you are allowed to dismiss the cause of every accident as an irrelevant anomaly then nuclear power looks like a good investment. What the plant could have done in your imaginary future is irrelevant: if the idiots at Chernobyl hadn't operated the plant miles out of spec, or if the bozos who built it had included a containment structure, or...

      The problem is, we don't live in the world of your imagination. Scientists and engineers have been trying to teach philosophers for 300 years that what you can or cannot imagine has zero ontological significance, but it's apparently a difficult lesson to learn.

      In the world we actually live in, relatively small, common, stupid things that people inevitably do result in the total economic loss of billion-dollar nuclear reactors every couple of decades. Even well-designed, well-operated plants like Ontario Hydro's CANDUs have been vastly more expensive than anticipated due to an almost trivial design and construction error. This is the commonplace reality of nuclear power: errors so small as to be inevitable have economic consequences that are wildly out of proportion with their causes, even when we ignore the public health effects and inconvenience involved in evacuations and whatnot.

      Conversely, how often do you hear, "Earthquake 10 km from coal-fired plant, thousands evacuated from homes, emergency crews at risk while trying to bring boilers under control"? While a great deal can be said against coal, oil, gas and hydro power, we don't have to imagine a world in which they are forgiving of relatively minor erors, becuase in the real world we actually live in they are forgiving of relatively minor errors. For some reason we even seem to be able to mostly avoid earthquake damage to hydroelectric dams.

      Fision power is eoncomically problematic because relatively minor--to the point of being inevitable--human errors will result in a significant risk of total loss of the plant. This is a consequence of the hgih energy density in nuclear fuel, not a consequence of plant design, as even pebble bed reactors have suffered from signficant risk of plastic deformation due to overheating, and once that happens to the highly radioactive components of the plant, it is pretty much a dead loss.

      --
      Blasphemy is a human right. Blasphemophobia kills.
    29. Re:Nothing to worry about by Mashiki · · Score: 1

      I hope you're joking. It took nearly 20 years to get the permits for reactors number 5/6 which were still under construction. Reactors 1-3 were ~2 weeks from being mothballed because of their age.

      The truth is anti-nuke nuts the world round are really good at fucking people over, because of the very smallest things.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    30. Re:Nothing to worry about by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So... "no containment at all" = "There was nothing wrong"?

      Sorry, but engineers must take those human factors into account, and provide ways to mitigate the results of stupid people doing stupid things. You can't cover everything, but you've got to do a lot better than the early RMBK designs before "There was nothing wrong" becomes anything but a sick joke.

    31. Re:Nothing to worry about by dunkelfalke · · Score: 1

      In what universe is there nothing wrong with a reactor which explodes on emergency shutdown procedure (SCRAM)?

      Here are a few facts for you:
      Fact 1: RBMK back then was not safe even for Soviet standards.

      Fact 2: The problem with the control rod design was known, but ignored - the Leningrad nuclear power plant had a partial meltdown for a similar reason a decade before.

      --
      "It's such a fine line between stupid and clever" -- David St. Hubbins, Spinal Tap
    32. Re:Nothing to worry about by bugs2squash · · Score: 1

      Before we all rail against 50 year old designs...
      1) This plant is at the end of its service life
      2) The service life of any major power generation facility is measured in decades and often gets extended from the original plan
      3) It takes years to plan the plant in the first place and who would go with an unproven design
      My point is, that in 30 years time the same argument will be leveled against whatever technology we are contemplating installing now.

      --
      Nullius in verba
    33. Re:Nothing to worry about by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      Bullshit. Ever been out to one? Ever seen the fly ash pond?
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ash_pond
      German coal plants are not that clean, no coal plants are that clean. Sure nuclear waste might be dangerous for a while, but that ash is dangerous forever.

    34. Re:Nothing to worry about by demonbug · · Score: 1

      Conversely, no news is good news. How many times do you pick up the news paper and read the headline "All is well at the nuclear power plant"? How many success stories do you read about? Every time something involving nuclear power makes it into the news, even if it's (no, ESPECIALLY if it's) plans for a new reactor, the media is full of worst case scenarios and fears of another Chernobyl.

      I actually think that is largely a good, normal thing - to some extent. When something happens, or when a new plant is being designed, we SHOULD be looking at the worst case scenario. Sometimes that is exactly what happens, as we are seeing now. The problem is that this reporting seems to scare some people into ignorant, knee-jerk reactions instead of leading them to investigate the issue and consider it rationally. For example, Chernobyl resulted in something like ~25-50 workers killed directly, and on the order of 6,000 cases of thyroid cancer attributed to it. A quick search indicates that, in the U.S. at least, thyroid cancer apparently has something like a 90-95% survival rate, and even higher if it is caught early - which presumably it would be after a nuclear accident, as you would be able to concentrate screening on those known to have been exposed. 650 deaths is terrible, but it is not the world-ending disaster that some portray it to be.

      I lost a lot of respect for the German government with their knee-jerk reaction to the events in Japan (although it sounds like this may be as much about electioneering as real concern about safety). At this point, I feel like you can't really look at what has happened in Japan as anything but a success, although that can change at any moment. Yes, there is still danger of a nuclear catastrophe at Fukushima Daiichi, but look at the three other major nuclear installations along the east coast of Japan between Sendai and Tokyo - basically, they survived the largest Japanese earthquake and tsunami in the last 300 years with minimal issues. It is doubtful that the plants in Germany are built to the same standards (no real danger of earthquakes there, and very little likelihood of any kind of tsunami - especially since only a couple of their plants are built along the coast), and yet they are using this massive disaster as a reason to completely abandon nuclear power. It just doesn't make any sense. If anything, the Japanese are showing that reactors can be designed to standards that protect public safety in even the worst disasters.

    35. Re:Nothing to worry about by treeves · · Score: 1

      I think he's (she's?) agreeing with you, not trolling. You're both saying that it's human nature to be bad a risk assessment and to overreact to sensational low-risk things like nuclear power and terrorism, while being complacent about commonplace high-risk things like driving and food poisoning.

      --
      ...the future crusty old bastards are already drinking the Kool-Aid.
    36. Re:Nothing to worry about by treeves · · Score: 1

      There was nothing wrong with the Chernobyl reactor...

      Yes, there was: it had a positive temperature coefficient of reactivity. Water-moderated reactors have negative temperature coefficients of reactivity. It is a significant difference.

      --
      ...the future crusty old bastards are already drinking the Kool-Aid.
    37. Re:Nothing to worry about by cartman · · Score: 1

      So what has barred the Japanese from buying those hypothetical "plenty of new, modern, safe nuclear reactors." So why wasn't it replaced 20 years ago?

      Economics. Older nuclear reactors are incredibly cheap sources of electricity. Although the older reactors were expensive to begin with, their loans have been paid off entirely by now, leaving only the operating costs of the plant which are very low. As a result, there is an incredible economic incentive to keep older plants operating. If they wanted to replace the older plants with newer ones then they would spend more than $30 billion (!!!) just for Fukushima Daiichi, just to get the same level of power output they have now.

  6. Robots are the Answer by Buzz+Lomaz · · Score: 1

    Trying to drop water from helicopters is not going to work, and apparently fire crews can't get close enough to the reactor with a water cannon. Surely Japan, of all places would have the expertise to rig up some remote-controlled fire trucks?

    1. Re:Robots are the Answer by MrQuacker · · Score: 4, Insightful

      But they are, in a way. Predator drones from Guam are now patrolling around the plant 24/7 sending live data to the Japanese techs on the ground.

    2. Re:Robots are the Answer by hesaigo999ca · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but that would cost money, easier to let the thing burn, and not spend money.....

    3. Re:Robots are the Answer by Compaqt · · Score: 2

      Did you see the video of them dropping water on the reactor? What a joke.

      They said it was 7 tons. 1 ton == 1000 L. That's like 50 or so of those office water things. Multiply by 7.

      Did they seriously expect some serious cooling with that? Anybody with any smarts is going to go far away before the authorities fess up to the extent of the problem.

      --
      I'm not a lawyer, but I play one on the Internet. Blog
    4. Re:Robots are the Answer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Trying to drop water from helicopters is not going to work, and apparently fire crews can't get close enough to the reactor with a water cannon.

      Surely Japan, of all places would have the expertise to rig up some remote-controlled fire trucks?

      The radiation is too high for robots. They tried the same at Chernobyl. Robots wouldn't work at all.

    5. Re:Robots are the Answer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are workers on site trying to restore power to the cooling system. Completion is expected within a day. Spraying water is just a deterrent of keeping the temperature down on the external walls and therefore preventing fires. Fires could destroy and stop the work being done on site.

      If you believe in God, please, pray for those working on site right now.

    6. Re:Robots are the Answer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, but intelligent people are already far away.

    7. Re:Robots are the Answer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Global Hawks, not predators. But yeah, it's good to have the UAVs

    8. Re:Robots are the Answer by davros74 · · Score: 1

      I believe I read somewhere that it would take at least 200 air drops of water to control the situation in just one storage pool. Sounds like they did just a few drops, then abandoned the idea because the radiation was too high to be flying helicopters directly over the reactor site.

      So yes, a handful of airdrops was completely useless - it needed a fire brigade of continuous drops. 400-600 air drops, depending on how many storage pools needed to be filled that way.

      I would think with Japan's robotic technology, they could get the water cannons closer without adding more risk to the workers. But if it wasn't already thought of, too late now.

      One still has to respect and honor the workers onsite trying to control this situation. I do fear that many of them will end up with serious health issues or even death from the exposure, especially if the storage pond situation continues out of control (which now seems to be the much more serious problem).

    9. Re:Robots are the Answer by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      Hah, and then instead of using them to bomb Taliban, they can just park a few around known hideouts... why bother with decontamination?

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    10. Re:Robots are the Answer by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      They laughed at the ants too. And boats are so damned slow, who would have thought you can cross an ocean in a few days if you're only going 30 kts. There is more than one helicopter, and they are making more than one "bomb" run.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    11. Re:Robots are the Answer by skids · · Score: 1

      IIRC the reason the "robot" failed at Chernobyl was not radiation but rather that it got caught on some rubble... but I was dozing through that TV show so my recollection may not be entirely accurate.

    12. Re:Robots are the Answer by ShooterNeo · · Score: 1

      No, many of the robots died from electronics failures, and the soviets were not willing to wait weeks for replacements to be built or jury-rigged. In Japan it sounds like they would rather contaminate a large area of land than to sacrifice workers, hence the reason the situation is not yet under control. I would assume that if a few people sacrificed their lives, they could go into the buildings, find the actual radiation leaks, and drag water hoses to the storage pools that need them.

      I'm not suggesting this, and I would not volunteer - just that it is a possible solution, and one that the soviets would probably see as a fine way to solve the problem. They would get a few people ignorant of the true danger, reassure them that it was less dangerous than it really is, and get them to do it. The Soviets were nice enough by the time of Chernobyl to at least try to minimize the exposure of their 'liquidators' to radiation, but many of them still became seriously ill.

  7. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Worse than Chernobyl?? Do you have any idea of what happened there? It's not the same situation. Even in the worst case scenario it won't be as bad as Chernobyl. Do you know how many thousands of people were sent to their death to try to control the russian plant? It won't happen in Japan.

  8. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Don't believe everything you read, these news outlets need sensational headlines. There are some major differences between this and Tjernobyl, namely that this plant will be contained easily.

  9. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by brunes69 · · Score: 2, Informative

    People may not be able to live there yes, but Tjernobyl has shown proven the saying "life finds a way" true again. The area around Tjernobyl has become one of the most biologically diverse in the area... probably in large part due to the lack of humans around.

  10. Rethinking my pro-nuclear stance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I have always been pretty pro-nuclear power. It doesn't suffer from almost all of the drawbacks that classic power generation suffers from, nor many of the drawbacks of 'green' power generation (works only with wind/sun or you need such a LOT of it to generate anything significant). I've never had anyone be able to present an argument against it that couldn't be picked apart easily - apart from "well, *I* wouldnt want to live next to one". But I must admit I am having to rethink my position. Maybe small, self contained reactors are the answer, but I doubt it.

    The Japanese are number 1 when it comes to earthquake proofing. So if they are unable to build plants that can take a big natural disaster (very big sure, but certainly not unheard of) without turning into a catastrophy, I'm really wondering if the idea simply is not inherently flawed. I mean even if it turns out this was caused by sloppy building and bribed inspectors or what have you, even if this was just a small proportion of the nuclear plants in the affected zone - then it still proves that one cannot guarantee there won't be a giant radioactive 'event' in case of a large natural disaster. I really shudder to think what would happen if there was a big earthquake in Russia right now. Or anywhere near the North Korean nuclear facilities. Does anyone believe that they are better prepared for something like that than the Japanese would be?

    1. Re:Rethinking my pro-nuclear stance by Stenchwarrior · · Score: 2, Informative

      I would have to think that catastrophe on any scale affecting the classic generation would result in different types of harm to outside living in some way or another. If a coal plant goes up in flames then we have to deal with the massive air pollution and damage to anything that happens to be down-wind. If a natural gas plant goes up, same thing, except then we're dealing with toxic levels of gas on top of all the smoke. They all have their good points and bad points. I sill believe that nuclear power offers more pros than cons.

      --
      Loading...
    2. Re:Rethinking my pro-nuclear stance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      When coal plants are operating we have to deal with the massive air pollution.

    3. Re:Rethinking my pro-nuclear stance by AJH16 · · Score: 1

      Keep in mind it was also the fact that it was doubly hit that caused the problem. If it hadn't been for the tsunami taking out the diesel generators, they wouldn't be having this problem. Hind sight is 20/20 but having the generators in the lowest point so it could flood was not a good idea and without that over site much if not all of this problem could have been averted.

      --
      AJ Henderson
    4. Re:Rethinking my pro-nuclear stance by skids · · Score: 2

      My stance has always been: we can have more nuclear plants just as soon as we evolve a corporate/public culture that can guarantee their mature, responsible administration for the entire life cycle of the plant and its waste products.

      This doesn't help me persuade myself that that will ever happen -- Japan has much less "plunder and profit" mentality and yet still they allowed corners to be cut in this installation, and aren't exactly handling information flow in a spotless fashion.

    5. Re:Rethinking my pro-nuclear stance by Lazareth · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The reactors were built to withstand a mighty 8-8.2 earthquake without issue. It was hit with a magnitude 9.0 earthquake and subsequently hit by a tsunami that flooded the plant. Stand back and think about just exactly how much the reactors has withstood at this point. Try to fathom it. Then realize that much of what is being spewed by the media currently is anti-nuclear propaganda and that the reactors at this point has survived for a number of days without catastrophic incident after the earthquake and that a powerline is currently being drawn to the powerplant to bring back online all the safety systems, at which point the whole thing will deescalate rapidly.

      What is basically going on now is manual coolant and damage control until the systems are back online. Meanwhile the media is getting days worth of "OH GOD IT AINT FIXED YET WE'RE GONNA DIEEEEEEE!". Imagine how happy they are at that, I mean can you ask for more profit? Sensationalism at its best. Meanwhile the actual emergency, the effect of the tsunami on the civilians, is getting less and less air time. The world is more interested in the action flick currently being played then they are of the relief efforts and tragedies.

      Return to the point about just how much the reactors has withstood. The seventh strongest earthquake in our memory, a 9.0 earthquake on a logarithmic scale when it was built to withstand a (mighty) 8.2 earthquake and subsequently being hit and flooded by a tsunami. If you can fathom that, I think you should be agreeing that it is pretty damn well built for 50 year old obsolete tech.

    6. Re:Rethinking my pro-nuclear stance by LanMan04 · · Score: 1

      This crisis has nothing to do with the earthquake and everything to do with the tsunami. And the tsunami didn't even affect the core plant; the 33-foot-deep flood of water "simply" knocked out the diesel backup generators that ran the cooling pumps.

      So a 50-foot standpipe around the generators would have avoided the entire issue. Or having generators with tall-ass snorkels, or whatever. This was a "weakest link" issue.

      --
      With the first link, the chain is forged.
    7. Re:Rethinking my pro-nuclear stance by grumbel · · Score: 2

      The most shocking part in all of this for me is that they didn't seem to have any kind of backup plan for the worst case. They seemed to have worked under the assumption that power will be restored in time and cooling will work, but it didn't and as a result the buildings filled up with hydrogen and blew up, something that was known, but even with a day of warning not prevented. From there on things got worse and worse. Dumping water with helicopters onto the plant seems a kind of helpless act, not something that was well planed right from the start. There also seemed to be a lack of surveillance, I mean they should have something in place to get a proper answer on if they have enough water or not (cameras, robots, whatever), but instead they never really seemed to be to sure about what the current situation is.

    8. Re:Rethinking my pro-nuclear stance by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      Yeah because nothing will be learned from this disaster.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    9. Re:Rethinking my pro-nuclear stance by maxume · · Score: 1

      It is good that the reactors didn't crack open or wash away into the sea, but those aren't particularly conservative design constraints for a reactor that you choose to build near active fault lines.

      So what is a good design criterion for a nuclear reactor? I think the loosest constraint would have to be no releases of radioactive material directly into the environment, a test these reactors failed on Friday or Saturday.

      Those releases were not a catastrophe, but it shouldn't be controversial that they represent a failure of the planning and design of the reactors.

      And when I talk about release or radioactive material as a design constraint, that doesn't mean that each release or radioactive material is cause for a shutdown of plants of that type, I mean that each release of radioactive material at least triggers a review of the design.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    10. Re:Rethinking my pro-nuclear stance by DrBoumBoum · · Score: 1

      having the generators in the lowest point so it could flood was not a good idea

      Storing 1600 tons of hot radioactive waste high up in open air was even worse.

    11. Re:Rethinking my pro-nuclear stance by LordLimecat · · Score: 1

      he Japanese are number 1 when it comes to earthquake proofing. So if they are unable to build plants that can take a big natural disaster (very big sure, but certainly not unheard of) without turning into a catastrophy

      Deaths from the quake / wave: Thousands.
      Deaths from the "nuclear issue": 0

      Lets also note this wikipedia quote:

      Unit 1 was designed for a peak ground acceleration of 0.18 g (1.74 m/s2) and a response spectrum based on the 1952 Kern County earthquake. All units were inspected after the 1978 Miyagi earthquake when the ground acceleration was 0.125 g (1.22 m/s2) for 30 seconds, but no damage to the critical parts of the reactor was discovered. However the 2011 Sendai earthquake recorded a ground acceleration of 0.35 g (3.43 m/s2) near the epicenter.

      And this one...

      Estimates of the Thoku earthquake's magnitude make it the most powerful known earthquake to hit Japan

      So basically, they DID design for an earthquake. Possibly the fact that this was the most intense earthquake in ever recorded in Japan could explain why theyre having so many issues? Lets also note that they apparently have several other reactors which responded as they should have...

      Lets keep in mind here that aside from the excuse "the plants are 50 years old", pretty much everything in the area was taken out, and the nuclear reactors STILL shut down automatically as they were designed to do. The issue now is cooling, because all of the redundant generators were taken out.

      The media has an incentive to make this as big as it possibly can, because aside from just generally not liking nuclear, "Japan the new Chernobyl" generates views, and they can keep the story going all day long.

    12. Re:Rethinking my pro-nuclear stance by Lazareth · · Score: 1

      I agree that this is cause for designing even more safe reactors. But I also think that everything is being handled rather stellar considering that they're in the middle of the aftermath of the seventh strongest earthquake in memory and a tsunami. The reactors WERE built with the active fault-line in mind, but this is a very extraordinary circumstance. The situation is also very much unlike Chernobyl despite what some media outlets and anti-nuclear activists want us to believe - that was a direct consequence of bad design added with circumvention of procedures.

      Regardless, I'm just hoping for quicker development in fusion reactors. Less to worry about then.

    13. Re:Rethinking my pro-nuclear stance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The best way to make decisions here is just to follow the money. That is, do the cost savings from nuclear electric power generation outweigh the costs of meltdowns. Someone else estimated that there are about 5 partial or full meltdowns per 100 reactor years assuming most of the Fukushima reactors ultimately melt . I'm willing to say better designs might reduce the failures by a factor of say 2. (Its unrealistic to expect better numbers since while technology certainly improves human greed and stupidity will always be with us).

    14. Re:Rethinking my pro-nuclear stance by davros74 · · Score: 1

      Unless they intentionally put the storage pools high up so they couldn't be flooded out by a tsunami. I thought most reactors had their storage pools in the ground or underground? (IANANP)

      Hindsight is 20/20, but a lot of buildings have their backup generators on the roofs for a reason. It also makes it easier to airlift in more diesel fuel. Any place that can flood doesn't make sense to have the backup generators in the basement.

      But even so, backup contingencies? There was a guy on the news the other night talking about Southern California's reactors and stated what I think is obvious to most /. readers (and most people in general). Why can't you airlift in backup generators? The guy representing the california reactor stated they had contingency plans to bring in generators that are stored off site if the local generators failed. If you can get the generators there and installed before the batteries run out, then there should be no incidents.

      Of course, the best long term solution (if you are still a proponent for Nuclear, which I am), is to require cooling systems that do not require electricity to function (passive safety systems) or reactors that do not have major failure scenarios if you remove an active safety system (can't get hot enough, self-shutting down, etc).

    15. Re:Rethinking my pro-nuclear stance by evildarkdeathclicheo · · Score: 1

      Stand back and imagine a moment. . . a nuclear power plant designed to withstand a mighty 8.2 earthquake built right next to the ocean. . . um, oh no tsunami? How is the tsunami supposed to be something the plant was not designed for? Sure, there is some good engineering here, but piss poor planing and 0 forsight. -W

    16. Re:Rethinking my pro-nuclear stance by shilly · · Score: 2

      As the man says: "The Navy has no place for good losers! The Navy needs tough sons of bitches who can go out there and WIN!"

      The true measure of safety is not "see how much it withstood" but "it is still safe?" and the answer is....not so much

      I don't know what magnitude they should have prepared for, but it's clear that it was more than 8.2 and more than 9.0. That's the yardstick.

    17. Re:Rethinking my pro-nuclear stance by NoSig · · Score: 1

      The earthquake might have damaged whatever Tsunami protection the backup generators had. I don't believe there is information available about exactly how the backup generators were damaged - probably because that's not so important right now.

    18. Re:Rethinking my pro-nuclear stance by demonbug · · Score: 1

      The Japanese are number 1 when it comes to earthquake proofing. So if they are unable to build plants that can take a big natural disaster (very big sure, but certainly not unheard of) without turning into a catastrophy, I'm really wondering if the idea simply is not inherently flawed.

      But they are able to.

    19. Re:Rethinking my pro-nuclear stance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not a bug - it's a feature!

    20. Re:Rethinking my pro-nuclear stance by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      Maybe "is it safe" is the wrong question. What about "how safe is it?" It is still containing the nuclear fuel, it is containing almost all dangerous radiation from the public. Some venting of radioactive steam is a short term event which isn't going to affect anyone not in the plant. This will likely have less health effects on the general public than the oil refinery fire that the earthquake caused.

      It DID survive a 9.0. What screwed things up was the tsunami. And I will agree that there are many things they should have done better so that a tsunami did not cause the problems that it did. But even then the reactor containment systems are doing their job. There are many systems that failed that should not have failed, most of them all outside of the reactor. The next big snafu isn't something to do with the reactors at all but with the cooling ponds storing fuel rods. That's a far far bigger concern than the reactors, and they don't have the same safety systems and containment that the reactors have.

      So in a sense it prepared for a large earthquake, and survived that and did what needed to be done to survive a massively larger earthquake than they planned for. However they did not plan for a tsunami of that size which was the downfall. And it's not just a tsunami that could do this, there are other external factors that could have caused similar loss of power and backup power. It's sort of like having automobile with all the safety features and then not using your seat belt (because slashdot needs more automobile analogies).

    21. Re:Rethinking my pro-nuclear stance by shilly · · Score: 1

      I agree that in reality, there's a spectrum of safety, not an on-off switch. But I think we've a way to go yet before we can claim such a significant victory as you describe. Containment at two of the reactors appears to be damaged, and as you say the spent fuel turns out to be deserving of much more significant containment than it gets.

    22. Re:Rethinking my pro-nuclear stance by ShooterNeo · · Score: 1

      You're absolutely correct.

      Let's face it - no matter how much armor you wrap around it, at the core of a nuclear plant is a fissioning mass producing gigawatts of heat and a stupendous amount of all 4 types of radiation. A SMALL piece of this core emits so much radiation that it will kill a human being with a few minutes of direct exposure. If any of these thousands of pounds of fissioning fuel do somehow escape, no matter how many layers of defense you have installed to prevent this, it can and will poison land for many miles in all directions. The radioactive iodine can give kids cancer dozens and hundreds of miles away. We know all of this, and have known this for a long time.

      In order to prevent the core from escaping, it MUST be connected to a heat sink. The heat sink must be huge (a whole cooling tower), the pipes to it must be intact, the right valves have to be open or shut, and some kind of powered pump has to work.

      Once you get a serious breach where the fuel escapes it's zirconium cladding, attempts to cool a mass of melted reactor core will just create clouds of highly radioactive steam that will carry the core fragments away and poison anyone fighting the fire.

      On top of that, you also have less hot - but still very dangerous - spent fuel that comprise many reactor core's full of the stuff. Usually this stuff is sitting around, and it is so hot that it does still need active cooling.

      These are real dangers. Pro-nuclear folks would have you believe that nothing ever can happen because there is so much safety equipment to prevent a final breach. However, all of the equipment is designed to work in theory - no one has ever melted down a reactor to see how well the containment really holds up. In Japan, just the weak little explosions from the hydrogen detonating may have fractured the containment to at least one of the reactors.

      And let's not forget the specter of terrorism. How hard would it be to take over a nuclear plant with a team of armed commandos and to set charges on all that piping and wiring at the base of the reactor? Maybe blow a hole or two in the cooling ponds after moving some of the fuel assemblies closer together with the crane conveniently there? It would be a suicide mission for the terrorists, but they could cause a many billion dollar mess. And a live nuclear reactor is the best possible dirty bomb there could ever be in terms of the damage a full breach would cause.

    23. Re:Rethinking my pro-nuclear stance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The reactors were built to withstand a mighty 8-8.2 earthquake without issue. It was hit with a magnitude 9.0 earthquake and subsequently hit by a tsunami that flooded the plant.

      Return to the point about just how much the reactors has withstood. The seventh strongest earthquake in our memory, a 9.0 earthquake on a logarithmic scale when it was built to withstand a (mighty) 8.2 earthquake and subsequently being hit and flooded by a tsunami. If you can fathom that, I think you should be agreeing that it is pretty damn well built for 50 year old obsolete tech.

      Typically installations like this (oil platforms, nuclear installations) are designed with "one occurence per 1 000 years" in mind.
      So saying that this plant was already designed for a strong earthquake and unlucky to be hit by an extremely strong earthquake is not sufficient. The same goes for pointing out that this happened to be a "top 7 earthquake in memory."
      The proper approach in safety design would be: What limits was this plant built for to withstand, and were these conservative enough, knowing that there had already been 6 earthquakes from memory that were stronger?

  11. We should all be concerned by Tigger's+Pet · · Score: 0, Troll

    Given Japan's position as the third biggest economy in the world and the amount that they produce which is exported to the rest of the world, as well as their technological knowledge, I think we should all be massively concerned about the impact that will be had on the rest of the world, not just from what has already occurred with the tsunami, but also if there is a nuclear meltdown and possible explosion at the plant. Chernobyl still has a 20 mile exclusion zone to this day and the are directly affected by the disaster was far, far wider. If something similar happens in Japan then Tokyo could quite easily become a ghost town for years to come, along with huge areas of Japan. Hell, wind factors could quite easily carry any fallout across Korea and China at the very least.
    I seriously think that the time has come for them to do to the Fukushima Daiichi plant what was eventually done to Chernobyl and encase the whole thing in a concrete-mix shroud now before it is too late to stop something worse happening in the days to come.

    1. Re:We should all be concerned by N1AK · · Score: 1

      I think we should all be massively concerned about the impact that will be had on the rest of the world, not just from what has already occurred with the tsunami, but also if there is a nuclear meltdown and possible explosion at the plant.

      Your a fucking idiot. You're not thinking, you're letting your complete ignorance in this field and fear concoct impossible risks, and sharing idiotic solutions to those imaginary issues.

      There are more extreme steps Japan could take to have near complete control. Unfortunately all of them include operating near the reactors and exposed fuel rods (the real threat). If they could do this easily (without workers being exposed to higher levels of radiation near these areas) I'm sure they would.

    2. Re:We should all be concerned by cpu6502 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I feel like that last post was written by a cheerleader.

      >>>If something similar happens in Japan then Tokyo could quite easily become a ghost town

      Tokyo's around 200 miles away! Jeez. And encasing everything in concrete would be dumb, as the nuclear material would simply keep heating-up until a worse disaster happened. You have to DEAL with the problem, not dump a bunch of concrete and hope it goes away.

      --
      My AC stalker: " I personally agree with your posts most of the time, but that won't keep me from modding you troll"
    3. Re:We should all be concerned by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      And encasing everything in concrete would be dumb, as the nuclear material would simply keep heating-up until a worse disaster happened. You have to DEAL with the problem, not dump a bunch of concrete and hope it goes away.

      Actually, that's not true. Encasing it is a viable (though probably last ditch effort) solution. Yes it will generate a lot of heat, but that doesn't really matter. The important thing is that, once encased, it cannot start a fire (no oxygen). Radioactive soot from a fire is probably the most dangerous part of the whole situation (outside of direct radiation exposure to people actually at the plant)

    4. Re:We should all be concerned by Stenchwarrior · · Score: 1

      While I agree that there will probably not be a "nuclear meltdown" I think you're being a little harsh. Tigger's Pet has a good point about the impact on the rest of the world, economically speaking. If China had a similar catastrophe how do you think that would affect the prices of the many goods that come out of the country? Hell, computer prices in general are probably going to go up now and that's just one of Japan's contributions.

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    5. Re:We should all be concerned by KermodeBear · · Score: 1

      You can make your point without calling someone a "fucking idiot". Just sayin'.

      --
      Love sees no species.
    6. Re:We should all be concerned by Tigger's+Pet · · Score: 1

      Actually, the heart of Tokyo is 140 miles away from the reactor site. If you want to see how wide-spread the fallout area can be and the levels at different distances then have a look here;-
      http://users.owt.com/smsrpm/Chernobyl/glbrad.html

      I certainly wouldn't be planning on staying in Tokyo or returning there for a long time if the reactor does go.

    7. Re:We should all be concerned by pclminion · · Score: 1

      If the cores melt, there really will be no way to deal with it. You'll have hundreds of tons of incredibly radioactive material congealed together in a huge mass. If that happens, we're fucked. The only thing to do is seal it in.

  12. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by Narcocide · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yes, because we don't have *any* nuclear power plants in earthquake prone territory in America. We're way smarter than that.

  13. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by dargaud · · Score: 5, Informative

    We now have four rectors that needs to be cooled down, built in and kept under close watch for a couple of hundred thousands of years.

    Even if those reactors melt down, which they haven't yet, they'll probably stay contained (3m of concrete underneath), and from there it would be about 10 years before access for scraping them would be possible, similar to TMI. The reactors themselves are a problem, but not the BIG problem. The pool with the spent rods is, like the summary says.

    --
    Non-Linux Penguins ?
  14. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by germ!nation · · Score: 5, Informative

    This is the least informed comment I have ever read on /.

    "We now have four rectors that needs to be cooled down, built in and kept under close watch for a couple of hundred thousands of years"

    That doesnt even bear any resemblance to anything that is actually happening or going to happen at that plant.

  15. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by suso · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Obviously nobody knows anything if CNN is putting sentences like this in their articles: "buildup of hydrogen gas, which is the highly flammable, lighter-than-air gas used in the Hindenburg."

    Oh jeez. While true, it really shows the expectations of science education in the US. I mean who is a sentence like that aimed at? Kids? They don't know what the Hindenburg is? Seniors? They invented the hydrogen bomb. People should know what hydrogen is.

  16. Where's the water? by jasenj1 · · Score: 1

    I would be concerned with where all that water went and what its state is?

    One would assume the containment ponds are leaking into the ground. How radioactive is the water? How long lived is its radioactivity?

    1. Re:Where's the water? by Orgasmatron · · Score: 1

      It didn't leak out, it evaporated. The spent fuel is a heat source worth around a million watts or so.

      --
      See that "Preview" button?
    2. Re:Where's the water? by MrQuacker · · Score: 1

      They aren't leaking, they are being boiled away as steam. Normally they are kept chilled so that doesnt happen, but without power the temperature rose and boiled it off.

    3. Re:Where's the water? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A 1MW heat source is going to boil away 1MW/2257kJ = 0.443kg/s of the water. The spent fuel pools appear to be 12m x 29m x 11m in dimensions, so contain 3.8 million litres of water. This would take about 100 days to boil away. So where has all the water gone, so quickly?

    4. Re:Where's the water? by maxume · · Score: 1

      Much of the volume of the pools is occupied by the rods, and the whole pool doesn't have to evaporate to expose some of the rods.

      So there could be exposed fuel much earlier than the point where all the water has boiled away.

      I did see some expert state that he was surprised that the pools had heated up so quickly, so the pools were not behaving in the way he expected, which is cause for concern.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    5. Re:Where's the water? by CnlPepper · · Score: 2

      I suspect it is more likely a leak or partial leak. These plants have been through hell, a serious earthquake, multiple smaller aftershocks, a tsunami, 2 huge hydrogen explosions, 2 smaller hydrogen explosions and fires. It is possible that some of the water circulation pipes or the pool structure was damaged.

    6. Re:Where's the water? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It didn't leak out, it evaporated. The spent fuel is a heat source worth around a million watts or so.

      A million watts? Why can't this "spent" fuel be used as an energy source?

    7. Re:Where's the water? by FictionPimp · · Score: 1

      If these things are so efficient at producing heat, why are they 'spent'? Can't we use them to run steam turbines?

    8. Re:Where's the water? by Doctor+Memory · · Score: 1

      I think he meant a million gigawatts. Hyperbole is the best thing EVER!

      --
      Just junk food for thought...
    9. Re:Where's the water? by maxume · · Score: 1

      Reactor 1 at Fukushima 1 has a rated output of about 480 megawatts (it is smaller than the other reactors at the site). That's the electrical output of the steam turbines, the actual core is putting out even more heat than that (something like a factor of 3). The cooling pools have spent fuel from several complete changes of the reactor core.

      So in a relative sense, they aren't very efficient at producing heat.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    10. Re:Where's the water? by MrQuacker · · Score: 1

      Because they don't put out enough heat to generate either the volume of steam needed to run a large turbine, or the temperature needed.

    11. Re:Where's the water? by gmaslov · · Score: 1

      A million watts? Why can't this "spent" fuel be used as an energy source?

      Given that the Fukushima nuclear power plant produced somewhere around 4500MW total, and that you would be able to recover at best maybe 50% of that 1MW heat energy as electricity, and still have to deal with the radiation (meaniing dedicate an expensive reactor and containment system to house it), it just isn't worth it.

    12. Re:Where's the water? by mmzplanet · · Score: 1

      It didn't leak out, it evaporated. The spent fuel is a heat source worth around a million watts or so.

      A million watts? Why can't this "spent" fuel be used as an energy source?

      Not efficiently enough to produce power. Not only do you need to make steam, it needs to done quickly for a turbine to run off of it. Theres a difference in boiling water at sea level pressure 212 degrees vs 700+.

      Compared to what most of us consider in everyday life hot... yeah they are hot as can be. In nuclear power generating terms, not hot enough. Using spent fuel in a reactor would be like using a SmartCar engine to power a tractor trailer. It'll move, just not with any sort of useful speed or power.

      Spent rods can be recycled to enrich the available remaining fuel into a new fuel rod. That is what Reactor 3 is using and is why it has plutonium in it too.

    13. Re:Where's the water? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The water is also leaking though the cracks in the cement.

    14. Re:Where's the water? by Muad'Dave · · Score: 1

      In addition to the volume taken up by the rods, a commentator on the news said that some may have been lost to sloshing during the quake, which is understandable.

      --
      Tiller's Rule: Never use a word in written form that you've only heard and never read. You will end up looking foolish.
    15. Re:Where's the water? by fbjon · · Score: 1

      The pool depth is apparently about 3x the length of the rods, so if GP's calculation is reasonable, that's still 66 days. Some might have spilled out in the quake, but maybe there's a slow leak somewhere... Seems strange it wouldn't have been detected by now though, especially before the problems escalated.

      --
      True confidence comes not from realising you are as good as your peers, but that your peers are as bad as you are.
    16. Re:Where's the water? by ShooterNeo · · Score: 1

      A hole in the bottom of the pool, obviously. Only explanation that makes any sense. Those explosions must have cracked the bottom of the pools, or broken a pipe or a valve that is below the pool.

    17. Re:Where's the water? by ShooterNeo · · Score: 1

      Actually, some nuclear plants do have emergency cooling pumps that run off of this steam.

  17. Is Japan is melting down? by Kenneth+Stephen · · Score: 1

    As reported in the NY Times - it looks like this is Japan's Katrina. From reading the article, I get a sense that this is worse than what happened with Katrina in the US. Any readers from Japan care to comment? It seems like, even if there are very dedicated and smart people working the problem, this wouldn't be something that can be handled simply by nuclear experts. Effective management of this as a crisis is needed, and the people in charge need to work together as a team to solve a national crisis. Neither of which seem to be happening.

    --

    There is no such thing as luck. Luck is nothing but an absence of bad luck.

    1. Re:Is Japan is melting down? by musikit · · Score: 5, Informative

      i live in tokyo. since friday there have been daily earthquakes sometimes multiple with a magnitude of at least 3. i live in the akihabara area and businesses are doing their best to reduce all power consumption. people too are doing a good job of reducing power consumption. sections of the greater tokyo area are in scheduled black outs. trains are running at a 50%-75% schedule. as far what is happening up north.... i know what you know. where all my foreign friends have left i am still here. i went to shinagawa 2 times this week to get a reentry permit and the line the first time was 15hrs long. so i showed up the next day 1 hour before opening and the line was 2km or longer. as far as my japanese friends they are concerned however tokyo is still running, people still have jobs to goto and such.

    2. Re:Is Japan is melting down? by Hazel+Bergeron · · Score: 1

      And, for those not in Japan, a frequently updated plot of earthquakes around the island and their magnitudes.

    3. Re:Is Japan is melting down? by Colonel+Korn · · Score: 5, Insightful

      As reported in the NY Times - it looks like this is Japan's Katrina. From reading the article, I get a sense that this is worse than what happened with Katrina in the US. Any readers from Japan care to comment? It seems like, even if there are very dedicated and smart people working the problem, this wouldn't be something that can be handled simply by nuclear experts. Effective management of this as a crisis is needed, and the people in charge need to work together as a team to solve a national crisis. Neither of which seem to be happening.

      The nuclear bit hasn't produced much in the way of damage, at this point, but the tsunami did far, far more damage to Japan than Katrina did to the United States. Katrina isn't even on the same order of magnitude. I've been shocked to see tv news sources suggesting that Japan wants to avoid a Katrina-scale disaster as if this weren't already ~hundreds of times worse.

      --
      "I zero-index my hamsters" - Willtor (147206)
    4. Re:Is Japan is melting down? by Kenneth+Stephen · · Score: 1

      When I used "Katrina" as a comparison point, my intention wasn't to compare the physical damage (and you're probably right - the physical damage is probably more than Katrina) but the complete mismanagement of the problem.

      --

      There is no such thing as luck. Luck is nothing but an absence of bad luck.

    5. Re:Is Japan is melting down? by jasenj1 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Neither of which seem to be happening.

      Neither of which is being reported by US media.

      Tens of thousands of people have disappeared. Entire towns have been scrubbed off the earth. Japan has WAY more things to warrant its attention besides one nuclear power plant. The power plant is important, but there's only so many hours in a day. And 23 1/2 of them may be better spent focusing on immediate humanitarian relief and rebuilding. TEPCO is mostly on their own to work through this issue.

    6. Re:Is Japan is melting down? by Yuuki+Dasu · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The nuclear bit hasn't produced much in the way of damage, at this point, but the tsunami did far, far more damage to Japan than Katrina did to the United States.

      This. Speaking from on-the-ground here in Japan, the west is throwing a bit fit over nuclear scaremongering, but national news coverage is far more focused on the earthquake and tsunami. People within 30km of the station have evacuated, and that has its own problems, but the biggest difficulty right now is the mass destruction of homes and shelters, given the cold weather - it's currently -1C in Sendai.

      Nuclear winter makes for much sexier headlines, but it's the plain old regular kind that's of biggest concern right now.

    7. Re:Is Japan is melting down? by maxume · · Score: 2

      Reports about tens of thousands of people simply not being accounted for at all have been on the news since Friday, along with reports of official numbers of dead and missing.

      The focus has certainly been on the nuclear situation.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    8. Re:Is Japan is melting down? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They need to unplug all the vending machines. (I lived in Japan for 16 years.) They consume too much energy. (oh, I also worked for a utility company there.)

    9. Re:Is Japan is melting down? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hmm, let's see... an evacuation radius of 50 miles (Pi * r says: 3.14 * 50 = 7,850) so about 7,850 square miles (including the surrounding ocean).

      Without environmental clean-up, if the area is left to rot, Cesium 137 has a half life of about 30.17 years (pardon my psuedo wiki-lectual shit-talk)... what are the statistics for the contamination volume, if containment is a total failure?

      BTW, with more explosions and bad weather, this could continue to worsen.

    10. Re:Is Japan is melting down? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are reasons for the "bit fit over nuclear scaremongering."

      The first is that what is done is done. While there are aftershocks, the damage the quake has done has mostly happened. The tsunami has washed away and destroyed what it has. There is little to do right now except to rescue (and after a week, maybe not so much with the rescue), shelter folk, feed them, clean up, and rebuild. On the other hand, the nuclear situation is still developing. Maybe there will be another breach in containment. Maybe the spent rods are uncovered. The situation has the potential to get worse.

      Also, while there are serious global economic effects from Japan's industries being damaged, otherwise, people in the rest of the world won't feel much damage aside from that. The nuclear situation has the potential to bring the fun to the west coast of the United States and other parts of the world. As such, the nuclear situation is more relevant to people in the United States than the current relief efforts in Japan.

    11. Re:Is Japan is melting down? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The death toll and missing persons count has been well-covered by media worldwide. However, the dead won't rise up to poison the land and slay the living; a reactor meltdown will very much poison the land and slay the living.

  18. No, it couldn't. by Fallingwater · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Stop spreading this sensationalistic bullshit. Even in a worst-case scenario, that being meltdown of all cores, cracking of all containment buildings and fires in all spent fuel pools, the consequences would be tiny compared to those of Chernobyl. Yes, the whole area would be evacuated (some of it already is), and there would be large amounts of radioactive pollution, but there would be no "liquidators" giving their lives up to contain the situation, and people wouldn't be sacrificed in an attempt to save face. Japan isn't the Soviet Union.

    Note: after writing the above writeup I considered deleting the whole thing because the parent post is obviously trolling, but then I decided to leave it in place anyway as there's already too much misinformation about this situation.

    1. Re:No, it couldn't. by rubycodez · · Score: 1

      Your views are nonsense, there is far more contamination in any one of those pools than was released in Chernobyl. That's the nuke industry's dirty little secret, an uncontrolled spent fuel pool fire would release three or more times the contamination of a Chernobyl. Well known and warned about for DECADES. Meltdown with containment breach is even less dangerous.

    2. Re:No, it couldn't. by spun · · Score: 1

      Too many nerds have defined themselves as 'pro nuclear.' Maybe because too many idiots have defined themselves as anti. But these nerds have spent years arguing with idiots about the safety of nuclear energy. They are now contemplating the idiots having one up on them. They are contemplating the fact that something they fought for, possible for decades, might be killing people. They are scared they might be very, very wrong. And so, as most people do in situations like this, they are doubling down on their arguments. There is simply no hope for correct information or sane conversations around this issue until things resolve one way or the other.

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    3. Re:No, it couldn't. by ShooterNeo · · Score: 1

      Yep. Like a broken clock, even an idiot can be wrong sometimes. Those eco-weenie idiots who are afraid of ALL heavy industry may just be right about this nuclear thing. Nuclear power is just one expensive mess after another - does anyone ever compute the average cost of cleanups and accidents into the "cheap" cost of nuclear generated electricity?

    4. Re:No, it couldn't. by khallow · · Score: 1

      I hate to bust up your "nerds in the mist" moment, but real politicians have already used this accident as a pretext to hasten the phase out of nuclear power in Germany and delayed its reintroduction in Italy. A healthy rebuttal to the usual anti-nuke hysteria is necessary.

    5. Re:No, it couldn't. by spun · · Score: 1

      Nope, in this case, the hysteria is healthy and the rebuttal is damaging to our cause. It makes us seem like insensitive asses at best, company flacks at worst. That is why I say, wait. Say nothing. Let the other side make all the predictions of doom and gloom. If they are later shown to be wrong, bully for us. If they are shown to be right, at least we did no extra harm by appearing tone-deaf.

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    6. Re:No, it couldn't. by khallow · · Score: 1

      Nope, in this case, the hysteria is healthy and the rebuttal is damaging to our cause.

      Sure. Name a situation where hysteria helps. Maybe running faster than the guy who thinks "A saber tooth tiger? Aren't those extinct?"

      Politically, it leads to decisions like almost 30 years without new nuclear plants in the US.

    7. Re:No, it couldn't. by spun · · Score: 1

      The hysteria, in this case, is mere venting of fears, while the rebuttal is saying "your fears are stupid. Stop having them." I'm not sure if you are married to a woman, but if you are, you should understand why that is a very dumb thing to say, especially when it is true.

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    8. Re:No, it couldn't. by cartman · · Score: 1

      Your views are nonsense, there is far more contamination in any one of those pools than was released in Chernobyl.

      rubycodez, there is a big difference between Chernobyl and the spent fuel pools. The pools contain cores which are already depleted, and have control rods permanently inserted. As a result, they cannot fission, cannot vaporize, and cannot spread themselves over a wide geographic area by those means. Also, the cores in the pools no longer contain any short-lived and extremely dangerous isotopes (like iodine-131). They contain only Cesium-137 and Strontium-90 and transuranics etc which are less than 1/10,000th as radioactive.

      That said, I suspect that a meltdown and/or fire in the spent fuel pools might necessitate an "exclusion zone" similar to what they have around Chernobyl today. The spent cores still contain Cesium-137 and Strontium-90, etc, in larger quantities than Chernobyl, and those isotopes will be around for hundreds of years. Of course, an exclusion zone would be a permanent reminder of this accident, to the Japanese and others.

    9. Re:No, it couldn't. by khallow · · Score: 1

      The hysteria, in this case, is mere venting of fears

      Which as I noted is already beyond a mere venting of fears. You can't wait on such things or the other side, which operates on emotion will build up too much momentum.

      while the rebuttal is saying "your fears are stupid. Stop having them."

      Really? I was thinking it would be far more effective to actually correct some of the errors I see, such as I'm doing here. It's also worth noting that rubycodez, the guy you first replied to, was doing that as well.

      I'm not sure if you are married to a woman, but if you are, you should understand why that is a very dumb thing to say, especially when it is true.

      I'm not married, so I don't have to pretend to agree with you. I doubt you're married to everyone suffering from this sort of problem either, which really limits just how many people you have to pretend to agree with either.

      Ultimately, there are a lot more pro-nuke supporters around for this accident than for previous bouts of post-accident hysteria. It makes no sense to discard that support just because some people act like "wives".

  19. Re:So by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Evacuating 50 miles from a DAMAGED NUCLEAR POWER PLANT is a bit different than having your countrymen evacuated from the entire country.

    Le Danger! Le Danger! We must protecta ze cheese!

  20. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    This disaster could well be worse than the one in Tjernobyl.

    No, it could not.

    - Chernobyl did not have a containment vessel to catch and contain a melted core.... it melted out the bottom of the reactor and through the floor.

    - Chernobyl used graphite control rods -- and graphite burns, carrying with it radioactive isotopes right from the melted core.

    All radiation is not created equal. A micro-SV is a measure quantity. A micro-SV per hour is a rate, and you have to know how long the person is exposed to get the total quantity. Eating a banana will give you about 0.1 micro-SV due to radioactive potassium-40 in bananas. An average person gets over 400 micro-SV a year just from eating food. A reporter in Japan yesterday, took a picture of a radiation meter while standing outside, and it read 0.6 micro-SV/hour. Well bellow even the most conservative safety thresholds.

    Particularly in the vented steam, the isotopes found in quantity have very short half-lives. The quantity of what has been released is diluted quickly to levels barely above background in the atmosphere.

    Note that most of the cooling infrastructure at the plant is completely intact... but they lack electricity to run it. A new electrical line is being run, and should be completed in a day or so. At that point, the pumps will be back on line, and the situation will rapidly de-escalate.

  21. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by localman57 · · Score: 2

    Yeah. Yesterday they said American jets bombed Hiroshima and Nagasaki. With news today, accuracy doesn't matter as much as time to market. The NYT tends to be a couple of hours behind CNN, but tend to do a better job, I think.

  22. 20/20 by the masters of 20/20 by equex · · Score: 0

    Because the US has handled all their disasters with flying colors....just shut up already USA.

    --
    Can I light a sig ?
    1. Re:20/20 by the masters of 20/20 by Compaqt · · Score: 1

      >Because the US has handled all their disasters with flying colors....just shut up already USA.

      How about, instead of making this about a jingoistic Japan vs. US thing, making it about people vs. politicians generally?

      --
      I'm not a lawyer, but I play one on the Internet. Blog
  23. Re:THIS IS NOT HAPPENING. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The first two incidents at reactors #1 and #3 released some radioactive material. The majority of people saying it wasn't a big deal were talking about those releases, very few of them were claiming that the situation was stable.

  24. Fukushima Accidend NOT an error, It is a CRIME by FriendlyLurker · · Score: 2, Informative

    I tried very hard, but I just could not find the following _full_ interview in English, only Spanish. Reuters quote part of the interview but leave out the juiciest and most damning accusations by nuclear accident cleanup hero/expert Yuri Andreyev. Luckily google translate does a decent translation so you can read it...

    A couple of (corrected) quotes:

    Andreyev: "In the nuclear industry there are no independent bodies"

    [What has happened in Japan's Nuclear facility] "was not an error, it is a crime"

    1. Re:Fukushima Accidend NOT an error, It is a CRIME by cpu6502 · · Score: 1

      P.S.

      Also I question the sanity of this man Andreyev. He says if the fuel melts, it can achieve critical mass, and explode. Nuclear plants are designed to prevent such a thing.

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    2. Re:Fukushima Accidend NOT an error, It is a CRIME by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 0

      Also I question the sanity of this man Andreyev. He says if the fuel melts, it can achieve critical mass, and explode. Nuclear plants are designed to prevent such a thing.

      That is what is told to us. In fact we meanwhile know that this is not true. You very "likely" wont get critical mass as long as the molten fuel is still in the containment chamber (because that is designed for that. But after it has burned its way out it is completely unpredictable, the situation gets even worse if yo consider we are talking about the burned out fuel rods in the roof here. They can add to the rods inside of the reactor.

      angel'o'sphere

      --
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    3. Re:Fukushima Accidend NOT an error, It is a CRIME by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's extremely disingenuous. Profit drives _all_ businesses. Expenses, like maintenance and backup systems cut into those profits. History shows that we (humans) are extremely short sighted and unimaginative when it comes to considering risk. The result is as predictable as, well, earthquakes in Japan. It does not require genius to see the flaws in the design and operation of this nuclear facility when those things are set against the recent geological events.

    4. Re:Fukushima Accidend NOT an error, It is a CRIME by rsilvergun · · Score: 2

      I think the trouble is these plants were built in the early 70s, before all that. They require active cooling to be safe, and nobody thought they'd see a magnitude 9 earthquake in their lifetime...

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    5. Re:Fukushima Accidend NOT an error, It is a CRIME by MS · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The magnitude 9 was 150 km from Fukushima 1. The epicenter was NOT underneath the nuclear power plant! How strong was the earthquake at the power plant?!?

    6. Re:Fukushima Accidend NOT an error, It is a CRIME by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      You still can't get a critical mass in the sense of an atomic bomb using fuel rods. Hence why a huge amount of effort has to go into refining U235 (or Pu239) in order to make a bomb. The only explosions you can get are chemical explosions like the Hydrogen gas explosions, or exploding pressure vessels. These can still be catastrophic (see Chernobyl), but are dirty bombs rather than nukes.

    7. Re:Fukushima Accidend NOT an error, It is a CRIME by DrBoumBoum · · Score: 5, Interesting

      The design flaws were known from the beginning, three GE engineers resigned in 1972 over their warnings and recommendations being ignored. Then as recently as two years ago the IAEA warned Japan that the reactors were not safe in case of an earth-quake.

    8. Re:Fukushima Accidend NOT an error, It is a CRIME by DrBoumBoum · · Score: 2

      They can add to the rods inside of the reactor.

      Unfortunately it's more the reactor rods (about 100 tons) that will add to those on the roof (about 1600 tons).

    9. Re:Fukushima Accidend NOT an error, It is a CRIME by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 3, Insightful

      There is a certain amount of reason to suspect that they were packing the spent-fuel ponds rather tighter than would really be advisable in an area where damage to the powered systems is known to be plausible...

      The reactors themselves, the really complex bits, seem to be doing comparatively adequately; but the condition of the fuel ponds seems pretty dodgy(since, after all, simply spreading the spent assemblies out more, or having bigger ponds, while more costly, would have been a trivial way to increase the safety margin with minimal engineering complexity.

      Nuclear reactors are hard. Nuclear fuel ponds are safety-critical applications of swimming pool technology...

    10. Re:Fukushima Accidend NOT an error, It is a CRIME by randomsearch · · Score: 2

      The worry of critical mass is not within the reactor, but within the cooling pools.

      I wouldn't be surprised if this has already happened.

      However, I haven't read anywhere that this will lead to an explosion - rather, just a lot of high-level radiation.

      RS

    11. Re:Fukushima Accidend NOT an error, It is a CRIME by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      It's not that unpredictable. To get a nuclear explosion you need weapons grade uranium, which is IIRC 90% fissionable isotopes, whereas at a power-plant you typically have fuel grade uranium which is something like 3% fissionable isotopes.

      To say the reactor can cause a nuclear explosion is to say that broken eggs can spontaneously reform when hurled at the ground, a deep violation of entropy.

    12. Re:Fukushima Accidend NOT an error, It is a CRIME by Amorymeltzer · · Score: 1

      The plant was designed to withstand an 8.2 magnitude quake, which is over 15 times weaker than a 9.0. I do not know how much energy of the quake was dissipated hitting Fukushima, but I can guarantee you it wasn't 94%. And that's to say nothing of the tsunami.

      --
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    13. Re:Fukushima Accidend NOT an error, It is a CRIME by FriendlyLurker · · Score: 4, Informative

      that is the opinion of ONE man out of millions. Don't give it more weight than it deserves.

      As he points out in the interview, it is easy to see plenty of serious security oversights that could warrant criminal investigation. For example: "The location of central Japan, near the sea is the cheapest. Emergency generators are not buried and, of course, were flooded instantly...."

      Great, some good old character assassination shoot-the-messenger reactions going on later in this thread in response to this interview. He must of touched a nerve. The only difference between this man and millions of others, is the he is a certified nuclear expert with plenty of published papers in respected scientific journals under his belt, and who also happened to be former director of the Soviet Spetsatom cleanup agency. He apparently now teaches and advises on nuclear safety in Vienna... so some forum claims that he must be crazy or not an expert should be taken with more than a few grains of salt.

      Full translated interview:

      17/03/2011 Rafael Poch, Berlin Correspondent

      Andreyev: "In the nuclear industry there are no independent bodies" "The most dangerous reactor in Fukushima is 3, because it uses a fuel of uranium and plutonium," said Yuli

      He spent five years at Chernobyl. Spetsatom was deputy director of the anti-Soviet body nuclear accidents and knows very well how the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) works.

      Yuri Andreyev (1938) is one of the most knowledgeable in this area. To Fukushima includes four scenarios of varying severity, from mild to very severe.

      "In Fukushima, the most dangerous reactor is three, because it uses MOX fuel more plutonium uranium that France is being used experimentally in two Japanese plants," says this expert.

      In 1991 everything fell apart in Moscow. The salary of deputy minister of atomic energy, the position he was offered Andreyev, not enough for anything. The Academy of Sciences of Austria was invited to lecture and eventually settled in Vienna as adviser to the minister of environment, universities and the IAEA itself.

      Chernoby is still surrounded by lies, says. The accident was not the responsibility of plant operators, as stated, but a clear design flaw in the RBMK reactors result of cost savings. Proper design of those Soviet reactors required a large amount of zirconium, a rare metal, and a maze of pipes, special techniques for welding of zirconium, stainless steel and huge amounts of concrete. It was a fortune, so they decided to save money, said Andreyev.

      One of the resources of savings was to feed the reactor with relatively low enriched uranium, since uranium enrichment is a complicated and expensive. This increased the risks and was contrary to the rules of safety, but supervision in the USSR nuclear part of the Ministry of Atomic Energy. Something similar is happening today with the IAEA, as the UN agency "depends on the nuclear industry," said Andreyev, under which lies and secrets of Chernobyl are now fully present in Fukushima.

      Security, money, irresponsibility

      "Those who design nuclear power plants are pending on two things: safety and cost. The problem is that security costs money. If you spend too much on nuclear power plant it is not competitive. The accident at Three Mile Island is the perfect example. After the accident was to improve security in a convincing way to avoid repetition of the accident both plants more expensive, they lost all meaning. For thirty years in America was not built a single reactor. Chernobyl was all very complicated but also had to do with economics. Academician Rumyantsev showed that we had to close all RBMK reactors. Simply ignored. There are always people interested in hiding something ... "

      What are they hiding?

    14. Re:Fukushima Accidend NOT an error, It is a CRIME by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The actual earthquake is a red herring.
      It was the tsunami that took out the multiple-redundant cooling-power systems.

    15. Re:Fukushima Accidend NOT an error, It is a CRIME by Ecuador · · Score: 1

      The magnitude scale shows on the seismic energy released, so it does not depend on location. Your distance from an earthquake, and what is between you and the epicenter will affect the intensity of the earthquake at your location, and that is usually measured with the (empiric) Mercalli scale.
      Now, the plant appears to have been designed to withstand earthquakes to something like 8.2 magnitude, and I assume that means 8.2 magnitude even if you are close to the epicenter. Obviously, this covers you for bigger earthquakes farther away.
      This particular earthquake was probably far enough to not be worse than if an 8.2 magnitude earthquake occurred right there at the plant, judging by the fact that the Earthquake itself did not directly cause any significant damage. What was not expected, though, was that a much larger earthquake farther away could create an unexpectedly large tsunami. That tsunami destroyed the diesel backup power and started this whole mess. I guess after the Indian Ocean tsunami of '04 they should have considered the possibility...

      --
      Violence is the last refuge of the incompetent. Polar Scope Align for iOS
    16. Re:Fukushima Accidend NOT an error, It is a CRIME by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      English interview with Iouli Andreev could be found here:
      http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/03/15/us-japan-nuclear-chernobyl-idUSTRE72E5MV20110315

      He was one of the directors responsible for the Chernobyl [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chernobyl_disaster] cleanup.

    17. Re:Fukushima Accidend NOT an error, It is a CRIME by miffo.swe · · Score: 2

      "Third, if nuclear fuel is melted and damaged the reactor casing, emissions would be produced in series, which is quite serious but it would be the worst. That brings us to the Fourth, and most catastrophic, ie, if the fuel is precipitated to the bottom and acquires critical mass, then initiate an uncontrolled chain reaction, ie an explosion. In this case, the contamination would be very serious. From this point of view, the worst is the third reactor, because it uses MOX more plutonium-uranium fuel, that France is being used experimentally in two nuclear plants in Japan."

      Holy fuck Batman. And Yuri Andreyev is someone who actually knows what he is talking about but one of few not directly connected to the business.

      --
      HTTP/1.1 400
    18. Re:Fukushima Accidend NOT an error, It is a CRIME by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      Not to mention the automatic bias built in to TV interviews - the more sensational it sounds, the more likely you are to get on to TV. But what can you express from CNN, the channel where no one knows what a meter is (check any recordings of the reports on the day after the tsunami), much less how to distinguish between the prefixes milli and micro. Hello America - the metric system is about powers of TEN - how fucking hard can it be?

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    19. Re:Fukushima Accidend NOT an error, It is a CRIME by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      And that's to say nothing of the tsunami.

      Yes, please do say nothing about the tsunami. It's not like being under a wall of water 25 feet high and moving at 100kph can do more damage than an earthquake. /sarcasm

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    20. Re:Fukushima Accidend NOT an error, It is a CRIME by marcosdumay · · Score: 2

      He simply can't have it both ways. Either people cut costs on refining or there is a risk of criticality.

      And since nobody ever even said that they were using hightly refined fuel (and I fail to see why that is a problem), there is simply no reason to expect it to become critical.

      Also, after the fuel is "burned" you'll need more mass for criticality. Your "completely unpredictable" proposal is way off. If the used fuel somehow emanated thermal neutrons or even more fast neutrons than the original fuel, nobody would discard it, and the reactor would called "breeder".

    21. Re:Fukushima Accidend NOT an error, It is a CRIME by CensorshipDonkey · · Score: 2

      I guess after the Indian Ocean tsunami of '04 they should have considered the possibility...

      They did consider the possibility. It was built to withstand a 5.3 meter tsunami, which would have been of record size. Instead, less than half an hour after successfully dealing with the worst earthquake in history, they were hit with a 10 meter tsunami. This knocked out the diesel power to the cooling systems, but backup batteries actually kept it going safely for another 10 hours.

    22. Re:Fukushima Accidend NOT an error, It is a CRIME by LordLimecat · · Score: 0

      it is a crime

      Are you referring to the part where there was an earth quake, or the fact that the 50-year-old nuclear facility was unable to cope with the wave that wiped out pretty much everything else in the area?

    23. Re:Fukushima Accidend NOT an error, It is a CRIME by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And that's to say nothing of the tsunami.

      Yes, please do say nothing about the tsunami. It's not like being under a wall of water 25 feet high and moving at 100kph can do more damage than an earthquake. /sarcasm

      ...you're new to the entire concept of idioms and common conversational phrases, aren't you?

    24. Re:Fukushima Accidend NOT an error, It is a CRIME by Bobfrankly1 · · Score: 1

      I think the trouble is these plants were built in the early 70s, before all that. They require active cooling to be safe, and nobody thought they'd see a magnitude 9 earthquake in their lifetime...

      The plants survived the earthquake as planned. Cooling rods went into place and backup cooling pumps kicked in. The tsunami was the needle that broke the camel's back, disabling the backup generators that power the cooling pumps, which in turn led to the overheating they are struggling with today.

      If anything, it shows that backup power/cooling at coastal/near-coastal nuclear plants needs to be built to be able to function underwater for periods of time, especially when you consider how difficult it is to get manpower and equipment through an area just hit by a tsunami.

    25. Re:Fukushima Accidend NOT an error, It is a CRIME by pedestrian+crossing · · Score: 2

      The fuel in the pool by Reactor 4 was removed so they could perform maintenance. It's not necessarily depleted. Even if it was removed for re-fueling, the expended fuel can still go critical. They don't keep it in the reactor until it's completely "burned". That's why they have to keep it in a water/boric acid solution long after it has been removed from the core, to keep it from going critical.

      Also, I just read on the BBC that a TEPCO official has come out and stated that "The possibility of re-criticality is not zero."

      I agree that there is no danger of a nuclear explosion (requires highly enriched Uranium and exactly the right physical conditions), but criticality is definitely a possibility.

      --
      A house divided against itself cannot stand.
    26. Re:Fukushima Accidend NOT an error, It is a CRIME by Ecuador · · Score: 1

      I am saying that since the '04 tsunami was 10 meters, it was no longer that unexpected. Of course hindsight is always 20/20 and it is not a bad thing that a quite old reactor design more or less survived such a catastrophe, but it is a shame that the weak point were the diesel generators...

      --
      Violence is the last refuge of the incompetent. Polar Scope Align for iOS
    27. Re:Fukushima Accidend NOT an error, It is a CRIME by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I'm not saying this guys is wrong, but the media has been screaming, 24 hrs/day since the quake that there's going to be nuclear explosions and devastation everywhere... stay tuned, it could happen any second!

      Now we're all piping in, maybe prematurely, with the "Yeah whatever, there are reps from multiple countries on-site and if any country can keep it under control in this worse-than-worst-case scenario, it's the Japanese."

      Everyone from Michio Kaku to my Grandmother has been telling me we're all going to be dead by now. It gets old, and people get reactionary.

    28. Re:Fukushima Accidend NOT an error, It is a CRIME by jez9999 · · Score: 1

      The fact that the 50-year-old nuclear facility was unable to cope with the wave. Or more specifically, the fact that it was still running given that it was badly designed and many people had seen that it was an accident waiting to happen.

    29. Re:Fukushima Accidend NOT an error, It is a CRIME by spun · · Score: 1

      He's referring to the fact that if corners had not been drastically cut, we might not be facing this catastrophe. Don't believe what the industry is telling you. Historically, when profit is the motive, and safety is a concern, safety loses to profit every god damn time, unless there are very good cops on the beat. And there aren't. It's cheaper to buy the cops than fix the problems.

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    30. Re:Fukushima Accidend NOT an error, It is a CRIME by ToadMan8 · · Score: 1

      Alright, alright - enough with the word inflation. The actual earthquake may have been a catastrophe, the tsunami certainly was, but a nasty industrial accident in which no one has been killed and workers are still remediating is not close to the same magnitude.

      Like the recent economic recession is billed as "The Economic Crisis", this kind of linguistic drama does a disservice to the people who really got screwed, e.g. Haiti in their earthquake, Japan in the tsunami, etc.

      --
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    31. Re:Fukushima Accidend NOT an error, It is a CRIME by spun · · Score: 1

      This isn't over, calling it merely a 'nasty industrial accident' is premature. You don't even know that no one has died. Do you think anyone would let it slip that they had? The nuclear power industry is running terrified here, this isn't some unsafe Russian reactor, this is American GE technology, if things go seriously wrong, a lot of powerful men stand to lose a lot of money. That's a huge incentive to lie and cover up the truth. If the spent fuel rods boil off all the water in the containment pool, they will melt. If they melt, they will catch on fire. Some of them use MOX fuel. If they catch on fire, people will die. Do you want to be the guy who said, "this is all hunky dory" when people die? No? Then stop defending a situation and an industry about which you have, ah, how to put this nicely? less than all the facts.

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    32. Re:Fukushima Accidend NOT an error, It is a CRIME by NoSig · · Score: 1

      True, and it's not just that they are designed to prevent such a thing - it is exceedingly difficult to make an atomic bomb. It is by far not just a question of having lots of uranium or other radioactive material in a big pile. The problem is that the material will expand from heat long before it gets dense enough to create a nuclear explosion. So you need conventional explosives shaped in just the right way to compress your nuclear material into a small enough space. This is very difficult to get right which is why Iran won't have nuclear weapons just like that even if they do get their hands on the required material. The nuclear material in a nuclear reactor isn't even anywhere close to pure enough anyway that it could be used for a bomb as-is. Nuclear reactors cannot and will never generate nuclear explosions. However, in a worst case scenario they CAN burn and melt due to the heat they generate. More importantly they can release lots of radioactive material. They cannot explode in the way that a nuclear bomb does. If the chain reaction runs amok in a nuclear power plant, it will "just" get very, very hot - though that's bad enough on its own.

    33. Re:Fukushima Accidend NOT an error, It is a CRIME by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      So who forgot that facilities near the sea can end up flooded?

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    34. Re:Fukushima Accidend NOT an error, It is a CRIME by ToadMan8 · · Score: 2

      In a country like Japan (i.e. Not North Korea), I do assume that primary sources are providing pretty much accurate information. I noticed your username after I posed the first time; in light of that, it seems appropriate that you make doom and gloom assumptions of corporate and government cover-up. I will give my best attempt at getting the facts and avoiding the rhetoric (as another poster noticed the words "NUCLEAR NIGHTMARE" are being used as thousands are without power, food, water, and are looking for loved-ones. Seems to distract from the real issue at hand.

      --
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    35. Re:Fukushima Accidend NOT an error, It is a CRIME by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      It's not going to cause that many fatalities but it'll likely make large areas uninhabitable and a lot of farmland unusable.

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    36. Re:Fukushima Accidend NOT an error, It is a CRIME by spun · · Score: 1

      I pretty much assume corporate and government coverups, CYA is just human nature. I don't assume the nuclear problems will be anything near as serious as the actual earthquake and tsunami in terms of death and destruction. I actually support nuclear power as potentially one of the least environmentally damaging options, but things like this, corporate greed and corner cutting, undermine any efforts to achieve real energy independence through safe nuclear power. I'm pissed because this could have been safer. There was no need to crowd so many spent fuel rods into one pool. The backup generator should have been sealed against a tsunami, Japan has had bigger within living memory. The plant shouldn't have been built on the shore.

      Nuclear disasters are more frightening to people because they do not understand the dangers, which are generally invisible anyhow. People understand "earth shakes, buildings fall, people get crushed." They understand that big-ass waves wash shit away. They do not understand nuclear disasters, and so they are more frightening than disasters which actually do kill more people.

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    37. Re:Fukushima Accidend NOT an error, It is a CRIME by 517714 · · Score: 1

      I am very circumspect about any article without citations. The first article has none. I am not dismissing it out of hand, but I don't go for hearsay from a source that I have never heard of. Here is substantially the same information presented authoritatively.

      The second article addresses earthquake design basis, there is nothing to suggest at this point that the plant sustained any failures due to the seismic event per se. Japan's Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency analysis of the safety of the plants appears to be correct but, in hindsight, (like the warnings) too limited in scope.

      --
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    38. Re:Fukushima Accidend NOT an error, It is a CRIME by DrBoumBoum · · Score: 1
      In fact googling around you'll find a lot of articles about this GE engineer who publicly resigned in 1972, I read elsewhere they were three but am not able and too lazy to find the article back.

      Anyway what I currently find the most surprising is not the design of the reactors themselves but of the cooling ponds. The principal argument put forward by the countless arrogant and condescending pricks that here on slashdot and elsewhere sigh and call you a "luddite joe-six-pack" when you dare express concern about the risks posed by radio-nucleide pollution is that this danger is simply non-existent with current reactors because, contrary to how it was with Chernobyl, the 100 tons of fissile material in the core are hermetically contained and no radiation will ever escape from there ever.

      Then I learn that on top of the building are stored 1600 tons of the same material if not worse, i.e., basically nuclear waste, the very nuclear waste that is going to be burried under Yucca mountain and of which not one milligram will ever get out of there during the next hundred thousands years, promised (the USA are four hundred years old by contrast). This material is encased in spontaneously flammable zirconium rods and requires active cooling, without which it boils away its swimming pool in a few hours and ignites.

      So if I'm not mislead this design implies that in case of a final LOC accident, of which we were inches away it seems, in fact exactly one hydrogen or steam explosion away, that would have spilled enough radioactivity around to force the japanese to abandon the site, we would have seen about 1600 tons of radioactive waste going up in smoke in the atmosphere. And there are several pools, and one at least contains plutonium for good measure. Am I on track here? Is this even conceivable? Does anyone have any idea of what the consequences would have been? It seems to me that nobody dared really discuss this worst-case scenario because it at this point there was simply nothing to be discussed anymore.

    39. Re:Fukushima Accidend NOT an error, It is a CRIME by 517714 · · Score: 1

      First, the guy who resigned said his specific worries had been addressed. So what difference does it make?

      Cooling ponds are ponds (the kind frogs live in, but warmer) that heated water released from the plant are discharged into to allow the water to cool rather than being discharged into a river, lake or ocean with a big thermal impact on that body of water. The correct term for this case is spent fuel pool. If you wish for your opinions to be taken seriously, you have to be able to talk about relevant issues using appropriate terminology.

      No fissile materialis stored on top of the building. Spent fuel pools are low, and the material is essentially the same as is in the reactor, minus a bit of U235 and plus a bit of fission products, including plutonium. These tubes would be reprocessed with only a fraction of the material being buried. The USA is not 400 years old. Active cooling is not required on spent fuel pools, but the rods must remain covered so the water level must be maintained. Swimming is not allowed.

      Loss of Coolant has occurred already at three reactors. LOCA is a scenario that includes all kinds of possible scenarios like brake failure on a vehicle, if you are parked on a flat surface there is no consequence, if you are driving a loaded gasoline carrier going 80 mph downhill toward a cliff the consequences are a bit greater. Pronouncements such as "exactly one hydrogen or steam explosion away" are preposterous - radioactive release could occur without either, but both might occur without radioactive release.

      You are grossly mislead, but your fundamental concerns are valid. It is conceivable that a significant release of radioactive material will occur, but much of what you have said is utter nonsense.

      --
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    40. Re:Fukushima Accidend NOT an error, It is a CRIME by DrBoumBoum · · Score: 1
      You sound to be an awfully full-of-himself arrogant prick, and I'm very glad to have met you at slashdot because I've desired for a long time to have a serious discussion with your kind of people, basically the horde of haughty assholes that never cease scoffing the "joe-six-packs", the "luddite" and other "hippies" that don't buy their bullshit about nuclear power being safe. I'd be glad to follow this discussion with you on private mail if you'd wanted to.

      If you wish for your opinions to be taken seriously by an asshole like myself, you have to be able to talk about relevant issues using appropriate terminology.

      FTFY

      No fissile materialis stored on top of the building

      TEPCO seem to disagree with you (they introduced the term re-criticallity) but you probably know better.

      Spent fuel pools are low

      I don't understand what you mean by "low". They're on top of the reactor buildings, do you mean "deep"?

      plus a bit of fission products,

      A.k.a. "nuclear waste"

      Active cooling is not required on spent fuel pools,

      Possibly. They seem to have water recirculation though. The emptying of the pools are currently not well understood it seems.

      Swimming is not allowed

      You probably think of yourself as someone very smart, don't you? Please answer honestly. Will you?

      Loss of Coolant has occurred already at three reactors

      If was thinking total loss of water recirculation in the ponds. Let's say "total loss of water in the ponds", whatever the cause.

      Pronouncements such as "exactly one hydrogen or steam explosion away" are preposterous - radioactive release could occur without either, but both might occur without radioactive release.

      You're definitely the most pretentious asshole I've read today. But I guess you got my idea (in fact I know that you did and only quip on trivialities to stroke your sense of superiority; which is a granted for you, but who knows where the discussion might end up?)

      much of what you have said is utter nonsense.

      Much of what you wrote is utter bullshit.

      It is conceivable that a significant release of radioactive material will occur

      That's the only relevant point in the whole discussion, which you needlessly polluted with all those childish twits that you seem so very pleased with. And I notice that you didn't address it, wasting your time and mine nit-picking on the form and totally overlooking the content. So to repeat myself, in a way that you may be able or willing to understand and/or answer: what consequences?

    41. Re:Fukushima Accidend NOT an error, It is a CRIME by 517714 · · Score: 1
      The TEPCO official was either mistaken, misquoted or mistranslated. A spent fuel pool is forty feet deep, the bottom of the pool is at ground level (low) in a BWR, the spent fuel is in the bottom third of the pool. Access to the pool is on the top floor of the building, but there is no nuclear waste stored "on the top of the building". Here's a link with a nice description: http://www.ucsusa.org/nuclear_power/nuclear_power_risk/sabotage_and_attacks_on_reactors/spent-reactor-fuel-security.html

      If was thinking total loss of water recirculation in the ponds. Let's say "total loss of water in the ponds", whatever the cause.

      You can't say what you mean, and I am an asshole for not understanding you? I had thought you might wish to actually understand what is going on. I stand corrected.

      --
      The US government have made it clear that we have no inalienable rights; any we do not defend vigorously will be taken.
    42. Re:Fukushima Accidend NOT an error, It is a CRIME by DrBoumBoum · · Score: 1
      This blog displays a neat view of the plant building. Granted the guy says he modified it himself, still the proportions look plausible. On the schema the pools are clearly above ground. Are you sure that the schema you link to corresponds to the precise type of plants that are in operation at Fukushima? Anyway the relevant piece of information here is that the spent rods are stored outside of any serious containment structure, in open air, and can get emptied by a mere leak. This design seems to basically defeat the very concept of radioactive material containment. Somewhat akin to keeping your purse locked in a safe and putting your wallet on top of it. This would be funny if it were not criminal.

      You can't say what you mean

      I, like many, can but use the information that I get from the media. I am no nuclear engineer and cannot guess the proper jargon, not more than you could guess the proper terms deemed adequate in my particular little field of expertise. "Cooling pond" was used by the BBC journalist instead of "spent fuel pool", so be it. Still it seems that the spent fuel does require water circulation, even if the evaporation of the water without it should take days instead of hours.

      Anyway what I'm really interested in here is a plausible estimation of a plausible worst case scenario. I want it for the precise purpose of throwing it at the face of the next asshole who will parrot that nuclear energy is safe, proof being that there has been so little damage up to now compared to other energie sources. Of course the fallacies in this asshat discourse are glaring. First this only shows how sloppily the exploitation of coal and oil is done today (think BP oil spill), not how safe nuclear is. But above all this is akin to driving at 100mph and saying "I haven't had any serious accident yet, see how safe my driving is?" Except that it's not a motorist who's speeding, it's a school bus driver with one million kids in his bus.

      You need to consider the very worst case possible scenario in order to assess safety, so here we are. The crisis at Fukushima seems on its way to resolution with "limited" damage thank God. Unfortunately an army of motherfuckers are going - in fact they started on day one - to jump on the argument to maintain that nuclear power is safe. So since you seem to have some insight on the subject, please follow through this simple and "reasonable" worst case scenario: a major radiation leak happened on site, forcing definitive evacuation of any and all workers. The site has to be abandoned. The spent fuel pools are dry and the rods start burning. What happens next? How much radionucleides are sent in the atmosphere? What kind of radionucleides, including plutonium? How high and how far would the plume have gone? How many people affected, in how many countries/continents? What land area closed forever? And finally the killing one: how big compared to Chernobyl?

      Thanks a lot for your time.

    43. Re:Fukushima Accidend NOT an error, It is a CRIME by RockDoctor · · Score: 1
      10m + tsunami were well known long before 2004. In fact , in Japan they were known millennia before 2004, with written records going back centuries before 2004.

      Someone did their statistics and got it wrong. Which is worrying. Genuinely worrying. But some reactions are irrational.

      For example, the German closure of their nuclear plants, if it is predicated on fear of a similar incident, would have to be looking back around 9000 years to the last time that they got hit by a 10m-ish tsunami. And even then, it only affected relatively small areas in the north of the country.

      However, since this is the dreaded monster "Newklear Powah" with it's sidekick "Ray Diashun", one can expect irrationality to rule.

      FYI : my wife was working as a farm labourer around 100km downwind of Chernobyl when it blew ; we live in about the most radioactive city in the UK ; and one of my colleagues won't be in work on Monday because he's flying to Japan to help his wife look for her missing son. Irrational fears are wonderful as a spectator sport, but much less fun if you have to rationally analyse your best choice of actions.

      --
      Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
  25. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by FriendlyLurker · · Score: 1

    The jury is still out - you have no information to make "probable" guesses. Read this translated interview of a Nuclear cleanup expert to see the four possible outcomes of this accident.

  26. US Alarmed Over Deep Water horizon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How about "US Alarmed Over Deep Water horizon". I mean if choosing from the two, oil spill is the worst one. Sea life could survive in some diffused Radiation but not covered in oil. And no one gives a damn about it anymore, like nothing had happened.

    1. Re:US Alarmed Over Deep Water horizon by rubycodez · · Score: 1

      Hundreds of square miles of dead sea critters are of no import next to a situation that were it to go out of control could kill thousands of humans. A PETA type mentality is a symptom of wealthy society disconnected from world's reality.

    2. Re:US Alarmed Over Deep Water horizon by radtea · · Score: 1

      Hundreds of square miles of dead sea critters are of no import next to a situation that were it to go out of control could kill thousands of humans.

      Huh? How exactly is a nuclear meltdown with fire going to kill thousands of humans? The worst case scenario in Japan is considerably better than Chernobyl, and that killed what? A dozen?

      --
      Blasphemy is a human right. Blasphemophobia kills.
  27. Re:Hindenburg by TaoPhoenix · · Score: 2

    (ChildLeftBehind)
    Isn't that a type of cheeseburger? Or a town in Germany?
    (/ChildLeftBehind)

    --
    My first Journal Entry ever, in 8 years! http://slashdot.org/journal/365947/aphelion-scifi-fantasy-horror-poetry-webzine
  28. Re:not real likely by maxume · · Score: 1

    Didn't the battery operated pumps go out when the batteries ran out of energy?

    That's still a failure of that system, but it seems less of a maintenance failure and more of a part of the interconnected failures that came from underestimating nature.

    --
    Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
  29. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by east+coast · · Score: 2

    They should have put video footage of the Hindenburg ablaze with Herbert Morrison crying "Oh the humanity" in the background followed by the reporter looking directly into the camera and saying, in a grim voice, "this could be happening in Japan as we speak!"

    I'm sure people would have ate it up.

    --
    Dedicated Cthulhu Cultist since 4523 BC.
  30. not Japan's Katrina by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    Japan's Katrina x 100,000

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  31. Re:hundred thousand years by TaoPhoenix · · Score: 1

    Plus any kind of pesudo-timeline like that makes no sense either. "In a mere two hundred years or so" the tech will appear to molecular-sanitize a failed nuke site.

    --
    My first Journal Entry ever, in 8 years! http://slashdot.org/journal/365947/aphelion-scifi-fantasy-horror-poetry-webzine
  32. Where are the robots? by cormandy · · Score: 1

    Where the hell are all of the robots Japan has been promoting over the years? Instead of designing robots that mimic facial expressions or perform synchronous dance routines, why didn't they build any that could assist with such an obvious catastrophe? FFS Japan: get with the program!

    1. Re:Where are the robots? by jimmydigital · · Score: 1

      Cant' we have both? Robots who help repair reactors while dancing and expressing their scorn for their creators on articulate faces? Would we send a robot who looked like an innocent child into a deadly (damaging?) situation?

      --
      Every normal man must be tempted, at times, to spit on his hands, hoist the black flag, and begin slitting throats. -HLM
    2. Re:Where are the robots? by miffo.swe · · Score: 3, Informative

      Because electronics wont work in radio active enviroment. The russians tried it in Tjernobyl but they failed rapidly despite pretty heavy shielding.

      --
      HTTP/1.1 400
    3. Re:Where are the robots? by fnj · · Score: 1

      Christ, what an unimaginative answer. So the robots last 1 hour. Big deal. That's one hour more of useful work than you have without them. You get a thousand of them and send them in one after the other. So they only last 1 minute. So what. You make them scoot through rapidly and throw them away, replenishing with new ones.

    4. Re:Where are the robots? by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      Well, ok, but what if they don't have thousands? How long do you think it takes to build a robot capable of helping at the plant? How many do you think they have stockpiled around just doing nothing?

  33. Sarcasm at it's finest... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The moment the USA tells it's people to run slowly but steadily, it is time to run like you never ran before.

  34. Re:THIS IS NOT HAPPENING. by jbonomi · · Score: 1

    Where does this position come from? Can't you see that the whole situation warrants a bit more of a nuanced view? "Bad things have happened before, so we should never do it again" is a pretty underwhelming argument, especially when the cause of these problems is well understood and could be mitigated.

  35. He can't spell Chernobyl... by denzacar · · Score: 0

    ...and you question his "expertize" on the matter of nuclear disasters? Really?
    I fear that you, Mr. Anonymous, are overly optimistic regarding the education and intelligence of the average Slashdotter.

    --
    Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens
    1. Re:He can't spell Chernobyl... by Illicon · · Score: 1

      You are aware, aren't you, that Chernobyl is located in a country whose inhabitants are not native English speakers and that they may have a different spelling when the proper name of the city is translated to English? Apparently not.

    2. Re:He can't spell Chernobyl... by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      Do you say the same to people who write Czar as Tsar (or vice versa)? Hint: transliteration from the cyrillic to roman alphabet is not a one to one mapping.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    3. Re:He can't spell Chernobyl... by Dunbal · · Score: 1
      Transliteration is not a perfect process. Ask Kaddafi/Khaddaffi/Quaddafi/Ghaddafi...

      You're not a troll, just a dumb shit.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    4. Re:He can't spell Chernobyl... by denzacar · · Score: 1

      Transliteration is not a perfect process. Ask Kaddafi/Khaddaffi/Quaddafi/Ghaddafi...

      You mean like that time Americans didn't know how to pronounce Iraq? Despite being at war with that country.
      Hint: Most of the world doesn't have such a problem.
      Then again, most of the world knows that what is happening in Japan currently is a nuclear accident. Not nucular.

      You're not a troll, just a dumb shit.

      Well hey... Your mom doesn't seem to mind.

      --
      Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens
  36. Really? by deepershade · · Score: 0

    America overreactting and freaking out about something?
    Color me shocked.

    Someone should tell the US media that growing testicles doesn't cost money.

    1. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It does when they don't cater to their interest groups.

    2. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some asshat generalizing the entire US? Color me shocked.

  37. tell me if my understanding is wrong but: by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    the big error was in having the diesel generators in the basement. they got swamped by the tsunami. lesson: put the back up generators on the roof. or one on the roof and one in the basement, if you are afraid of a terrorist rocket

    now the japanese are dumping water on the reactors with helicopters and fire hoses, which is amateur hour because apparently the pressure in the reactor makes it hard to get water in there. an analogy i heard is it is like trying to weakly push water into a balloon full of air (without popping the balloon, might i add)

    therefore, the only real emergency solutions i see, correct me if i am wrong, is either: 1. get some new backup generators there asap, or 2. run some emergency electrical lines to the power plant asap

    they need to power that water cycling equipment, asap

    or rather, get it done 3 days ago ;-(

    i'm sorry japan, this is quite bad, i feel for your proud nation and this apocalypse. i am somewhat of a movie buff and have always admired your cultural output from afar, i often attend movie screenings at the japan society at 47th st in nyc. i even got to ask questions from the audience with famous japanese directors, like sion sono and go shibata, translated and answered, which was quite thrilling

    i will try to make a donation there. there's no other word to describe what is happening to your country: it is an apocalypse. i am very sorry

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:tell me if my understanding is wrong but: by xMrFishx · · Score: 1

      Part of the problem is that reactor is an older design whereby it even needed generators, whereas newer ones do not need to be made "actively" safe. This design should really have been decommissioned and replaced by something more capable of standing up to the earth opening up beneath it. The reasons why it wasn't replaced I don't know, nor if it Should have been (best guess is it should). The removal of needing generators to actively cool the plant remove one of it's major single-points-of-failure.

    2. Re:tell me if my understanding is wrong but: by zarzu · · Score: 2

      therefore, the only real emergency solutions i see, correct me if i am wrong, is either: 1. get some new backup generators there asap, or 2. run some emergency electrical lines to the power plant asap

      Incidentally, this is what they are doing. But since power isn't restored just by clapping your hands, they're doing whatever they can to delay meltdowns and spread of radiation.

    3. Re:tell me if my understanding is wrong but: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      therefore, the only real emergency solutions i see, correct me if i am wrong, is either: 1. get some new backup generators there asap, or 2. run some emergency electrical lines to the power plant asap

      Incidentally, this is what they are doing. But since power isn't restored just by clapping your hands, they're doing whatever they can to delay meltdowns and spread of radiation.

      This and hoping that the cooling system is still capable of being revived.

    4. Re:tell me if my understanding is wrong but: by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

      i am very sorry

      Circle, I'm not directing this at you personally so please don't take offense. However, i cringe when I hear statements of "sorry" in a time of crisis. For me at least, it's a statement of defeat in life and its acceptance in submission. Well screw that! All I have to say to the Japanese is this.

      GET 'ER DONE! Just finish the job. Even if it's a futile attempt, move on with cleanup containment, and post infrastructure changes as needed. But being "sorry" is a defeatist attitude leaving everyone else around you demoralized. Lets live, learn, accept, and move on.

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    5. Re:tell me if my understanding is wrong but: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      now the japanese are dumping water on the reactors with helicopters and fire hoses, which is amateur hour because apparently the pressure in the reactor makes it hard to get water in there. an analogy i heard is it is like trying to weakly push water into a balloon full of air (without popping the balloon, might i add)

      No, the helicopter and fire hoses are targetting the (open) spent fuel ponds. Those used to have a roof over them, but explosions left them exposed. They have to get those under control so they can work more easily in the reactors. By now the reactors themselves are more or less stable, not worsening too much.

      therefore, the only real emergency solutions i see, correct me if i am wrong, is either: 1. get some new backup generators there asap, or 2. run some emergency electrical lines to the power plant asap

      they need to power that water cycling equipment, asap

      or rather, get it done 3 days ago ;-(

      They did, but they kept having explosions and aftershock quakes take them out. And when things were looking up, the fuel ponds started messing things up with more explosions and radiations that made theme vacuate. So right now the emergency solution is to get water into the pond without being able to get close enough to put pumps and hoses in.

      Then you can get back to working on the pumps and cooling of the reactors. As I understand it those are sort of working, but if something breaks down again they won't be able to go in and fix it.

    6. Re:tell me if my understanding is wrong but: by roothog · · Score: 1

      the big error was in having the diesel generators in the basement. they got swamped by the tsunami. lesson: put the back up generators on the roof. or one on the roof and one in the basement

      It wasn't just a matter of swamped equipment, the tanks holding diesel fuel were also washed away.

    7. Re:tell me if my understanding is wrong but: by miffo.swe · · Score: 1

      I dare you to look up the nuclear plants in your country. If you live in the US you could ask yourself why you havent replaced them either.

      --
      HTTP/1.1 400
    8. Re:tell me if my understanding is wrong but: by Remus+Shepherd · · Score: 3, Informative

      therefore, the only real emergency solutions i see, correct me if i am wrong, is either: 1. get some new backup generators there asap, or 2. run some emergency electrical lines to the power plant asap

      3. Drown it in powdered boron, which is how they ultimately killed the Chernobyl fire. That seems to be the solution Japan is going for, but they have to get the boron from Korea.

      Boron has two uses; one, it melts and then evaporates quickly, which sucks a lot of energy out of any fire it hits, and two, it's a neutron absorber, which kills any runaway criticality in the core. It's the right tool for the job. I just wonder why a country so dependent on nuclear power doesn't keep an emergency supply of boron on hand. Maybe it was hubris; maybe they thought things would never get this bad.

      --
      Genocide Man -- Life is funny. Death is funnier. Mass murder can be hilarious.
    9. Re:tell me if my understanding is wrong but: by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      dude, of course every and all heroic effort can and should be made to avert further disaster. but you've got some interesting blinders on if you don't recognize the nuclear disaster that has already happened, that many people are very sorry about

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    10. Re:tell me if my understanding is wrong but: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree with you but that's hard to do: The antinuclears' favorite tactic is to claim that newer reactors are more dangerous than older reactors. I understand it is an efficient tactic for antinuclears in the long term to claim new reactors are more dangerous that the old ones since it delays the construction of new reactors but it leads to the nuclear industry wanting to keep its old reactor running as long as possible. I think antinuclears should on the contrary insist on closing older central instead of
      preventing new ones from getting built.

    11. Re:tell me if my understanding is wrong but: by xMrFishx · · Score: 1

      Oh no I agree, this is not just a Japan problem, it just happens that there is the unfortunate place where this has occured. It's the whole reliance on out of date technology. As someone said on a previous topic, we're not still driving Model-T fords, or DC-10 or Comets for that matter. For the record, I'm a brit, and our plants are probably horridly out of date too.

    12. Re:tell me if my understanding is wrong but: by fezzzz · · Score: 1

      I don't see this becoming a massive problem. The Japanese will work regardless if it costs their lives (recalling Kamakazi pilots) until the problem is as SAFE AS THEY CAN GET IT. Priority is the power lines, which have reached the plant already. These will be connected soon and the pumps will work, ensuring enough water to cool the reactors down. Radioactive Cesium and Iodine will continue to leak, but as is clear by now, the radiation from these dissipates quickly. If the pumps do not work as planned, they will continue with the helicopters and fire rescue and military trucks until they get it working. I don't get the public reaction. Why is America so afraid? Japan is facing the biggest disaster since World War II and all bloody America cares is about bloody America, blaming and accusing the Japanese of every stupid thing they can think about. This is like a well fed family man walking past a neighbor, who is trapped under a tree, and freaking out that the dying man will infect him. Why not help the dying man and stop accusing him of walking past the tree? I wish I was the supplier of radiation medication in America. I would like to have that market.

    13. Re:tell me if my understanding is wrong but: by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      they want to keep the old reactor as long as possible because its cheaper. new reactors cost a ton of money

      so it's really a quite the ridiculous belief you have that they don't switch reactors... because of tree hugging hippies!

      do you laugh or you cry that there are people out there like you who believe these insane things?

      i guess it's scientifically fascinating how perception gets completely disconnected from reality in thinking like yours, but politically, its just depressing

      btw: if i expressed the more rational opinion that tea party types would never support replacing old reactors with new ones, because of the governmental costs, how would you react

      (watch the knee jerk reaction, notice the lack of rational thought)

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    14. Re:tell me if my understanding is wrong but: by Sectoid_Dev · · Score: 1

      therefore, the only real emergency solutions i see, correct me if i am wrong, is either: 1. get some new backup generators there asap, or 2. run some emergency electrical lines to the power plant asap

      Incidentally, this is what they are doing. But since power isn't restored just by clapping your hands, they're doing whatever they can to delay meltdowns and spread of radiation.

      Has anyone tried clapping their hands? Maybe the backup generators have a clapper on them.
      or as known in Japan, a 'Crapper'

    15. Re:tell me if my understanding is wrong but: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No I only claim they are a factor of weak to moderate importance in the decision of whether to switch to a new plant or not. Building a new safer reactor will yield more protest than not closing an old less safe one. This impact the cost analysis and the decision of whether to build a new one or keep an older one. Without any protest, they'd probably build new reactors and keep older ones running. If ecologist protest against newer reactors and not against old ones, then they'll build less reactors and keep old one running. If the ecologists protested more against old reactors and less against new ones, then we'd close more old plants and build more new ones. Maybe you think ecoogists have absolutely zero impact on the political decision: possible: possibly but they should still concentrate their fight against the less safe plants instead of concentrating it on the safer plants.

        As for your question, I don't really care about the tea party (I'm not american).

    16. Re:tell me if my understanding is wrong but: by catmistake · · Score: 1

      Why is America so afraid?

      I'm not a psychologist or nuclear expert, but I'll give it a shot. We have 104 nuclear reactors operating in the United States (there's actually more, some being dismantled... I think the original number was 110, and then there's the military and research facilities). Some of these reactors are built on fault lines. Most of them are in well populated areas (not in centers of cities, but within 20 miles). Nearly all of them are operating far beyond their mandated lifetime. We have not solved the nuclear waste problem; we don't know what to do with it. All of the nuclear plants in the U.S. have temporary containment pools that have been at capacity for at least a decade.

      The current international political climate is scary in and of itself, and the United States is the target and sworn enemy of terrorists and extremists, which has lead to our government slowly but surely constricting rights our Founders intended to remain clearly enumerated (a challenge to habeas corpus, a reinterpretation of the 2nd from common defense to self-defense, an unchecked interstate commerce clause, the elimination of a right to privacy). We have a large number of pro-nuclear activists that marginalize the real possibility of and danger of a nuclear incident, the long term effects (to put it mildly) of radioactivity, and the importance of keeping a clean environment because nuclear power appears at first glance to be the easiest and shortest route to cheap power. We have a powerful and growing population coming from the political right, and this after and during an economic crisis brought on by the people they elected deregulating everything from the financial sector to corporate environmental responsibility. We have a press that has begun to utilize the first amendment in a way that no one expected, that, rather than reporting the facts are cherry picking and editorializing and interpreting the facts for us; impartiality is dead.

      This is all just off the top of my head, and with an obvious negative cast. I would applaud a response that talks about how great it is to be alive today... but I'd rather forgo electricity, plastics and modern conveniences and go back in time to, idk... live with the Native Americans long before the West was conquered (well, not really, but sort of).

      Apologies if I have rambled, but my point is, if there is one, that none of these issues should be dismissed offhand. We have no central issue that all can get behind and work together on (like... idk, American independance or WWII). These issues are complex, and the compelling arguments from both sides are difficult to recognize above the noise.

    17. Re:tell me if my understanding is wrong but: by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

      Of course, I know that an epic nuclear disaster took place. Perhaps it's just my mindset. Personally, I don't accept "sorry", and rarely (if ever) do give them out. I'm of the belief that we should accept the good, bad, and ugly in life. We learn from our actions and mistakes in life. But most importantly, we move on to make progress. The worst thing Japan can do is stagnate. I understand there has been a massive loss of life among shitty living conditions. But stepping into depression leads to a nasty little feedback cycle and thus can continue to drag a nation far below what it's capable of. And that's really what it's about. Forget the sorries. What these people need is a donation of resources to help them help themselves. That right there, is true support.

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    18. Re:tell me if my understanding is wrong but: by NoSig · · Score: 1

      I feel sorry for you.

    19. Re:tell me if my understanding is wrong but: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One of the problems with the diesel generators is that the Tsunami destroyed all the fuel storage tanks.
      Even if they were working there would have been no fuel for a long time.

    20. Re:tell me if my understanding is wrong but: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What people are not considering is that because boron is such a good neutron absorber, it quickly becomes radioactive.
      Now you have tons of radioactive boron isotopes to deal with too.

  38. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by Talderas · · Score: 1

    American jets?

    Excuse me for a moment while I bash my head against my desk.

    --
    "Lack of speed can be overcome. In the worst case by patience." --Znork
  39. fuel rods are explosive by gordona · · Score: 1

    The fuel rods in these reactors are made from a zirconium compound. This compound is explosive above 2000 deg. There are tons of this stuff to go boom spreading the radionuclides from the tons of the spent fuel, into the atmosphere. Is this shades of "On The Beach"? But, not to worry, the government says we are safe just like they said the environment around the WTC was safe.

    --
    "Gentlemen, you can't fight in here! This is the War Room!" -- Dr. Strangelove
    1. Re:fuel rods are explosive by rubycodez · · Score: 1

      no, the metal can ignite. Water can have its hydrogen separated at those temperatures, which can explode or catch fire (which have exploded and have caught fire a few times during this disaster) There is not enough contamination to have "On The Beach", but rather this is mostly dangerous to those within tens of miles if fuel pool fire or meltdown not contained, and later to those within hundreds of miles in the years after. If these cooling efforts are successful, then confined largely to site.

    2. Re:fuel rods are explosive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is just bullshit. Zircaloy melts at around 2000 C, and has likely already reached this point in a couple reactors (TEPCO confirmed), but hopefully hasn't reached a high enough temp to cause the fuel pellets (inside the zircaloy casings) to melt (which would be a partial meltdown). A criticality event in the fuel rods outside the reactor would release high levels of radiation (certainly lethal to those in range). It would neither explode, nor release material - casings remain intact, pellets do not break down or melt.

    3. Re:fuel rods are explosive by randomsearch · · Score: 3, Informative

      As others have pointed out, the rods won't go "boom" but some of the compounds in the rods will catch fire, and that will push radioactive material into the air.

    4. Re:fuel rods are explosive by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      Melting a burning is not the same as exploding. I'm sure you know that, but of course that would make it less exciting so you make shit up.

    5. Re:fuel rods are explosive by gordona · · Score: 0

      Gee--I learned something--burning is not the same as exploding. DOH! BUT, get this, zirconium was used in making flash bulbs. If you do your research instead of responding so glibly, you will find that the compound is explosive. See for example: http://techyum.com/2011/03/does-zirconium-explode-at-2000-degrees/.

      --
      "Gentlemen, you can't fight in here! This is the War Room!" -- Dr. Strangelove
    6. Re:fuel rods are explosive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And then what happens? Does the fire stabilize the temperature or will it keep climb to ~2000 deg?

    7. Re:fuel rods are explosive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah I read that article. It seems to say that claiming zirconium explodes at 2000 degrees is pure bullshit.

    8. Re:fuel rods are explosive by gordona · · Score: 1

      lets just say that there is some contention about the explosiveness of zirconium. An older article (http://www.sciencemag.org/content/148/3677/1594.abstract) suggests that it can be explosive (what about flaring, does that count)? Given that there are high concentrations of Hydrogen, the point may be moot!

      --
      "Gentlemen, you can't fight in here! This is the War Room!" -- Dr. Strangelove
    9. Re:fuel rods are explosive by Asmodae · · Score: 1

      Just to be a nudge, there's not a lot of difference chemically. Exploding is just burning very fast, bonus for how much gas/energy gets released during that particular chemical reaction. The more volume of gas gets released and the faster the burn the bigger the boom. We have two words since the effects can be dramatically different, but it's a continuum of chemical reactions not an either/or proposition. Something that burns - gasoline, can explode under the right conditions. If it is well airated with lots of available oxygen, boom. Makes your car go.

      Just because something burns at the conditions you are familiar with doesn't mean it can't explode under the right circumstances and vice versa.

    10. Re:fuel rods are explosive by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      You back up your claim with an article that says your claim is bullshit. Interesting debate technique.

      Flammable powders can "explode", yes. That doesn't mean lumps of solid or pools of liquid made of the same substance do as well.

    11. Re:fuel rods are explosive by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      The right conditions for zirconium are not meet by this. Otherwsie TMI would have gone bang. And Chernobyl would have gone bang in a different way.

      The zirconium does react with steam to produce hydrogen. And the hydrogen can then explode. But that's not the same as "this compound is explosive above 2000 deg".

    12. Re:fuel rods are explosive by gordona · · Score: 1

      Please note -- I didn't claim it was bullshit. Someone else did!

      --
      "Gentlemen, you can't fight in here! This is the War Room!" -- Dr. Strangelove
    13. Re:fuel rods are explosive by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      Of course you didn't claim it was bullshit, you claimed it was a fact. Then you referenced an article that says that the idea that it is explosive is bullshit, in order to back up your claim that it is explosive, which is simply a bizarre technique.

      Your post: "you will find that the compound is explosive. See for example: http://techyum.com/2011/03/does-zirconium-explode-at-2000-degrees/."

      That URL: "What set off my bullshit detector is Grossman’s claim that zirconium is dangerous because it’s used in old-school photo flashbulbs", "I can’t find ANYTHING about Zirconium exploding at 2,000 degrees that didn’t originate with Grossman.",

  40. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by Talderas · · Score: 1

    It's pretty funny, because the backup generators and the pumps were working right after the earthquake and the cooling was working fine too.

    Tip: When you're planning for disasters you treat each disaster separately, even if they can be linked (earthquake causes tsunami).

    --
    "Lack of speed can be overcome. In the worst case by patience." --Znork
  41. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by Illicon · · Score: 1

    Link, please. I would LOVE to see that.

  42. Re:Hindenburg by Illicon · · Score: 2, Funny

    I can see it now: Come down to Bob's for the Hindenburger. Only available well done.

  43. Japan nuclear by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    that is the opinion of ONE man out of millions. Don't give it more weight than it deserves. It is too early to say, with certainty, that the Japan nuclear corporation is guilty like BP:http://www.footholdshoes.com

  44. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by oh_my_080980980 · · Score: 0

    Not contained yet....

  45. Let's be precise here by Nailer235 · · Score: 1

    The summary says that "the fuel could combust." I'm not a nuclear engineer, but is this statement accurate? The article made it seem as though the fuel would reach very high temperatures, and things AROUND it would catch fire (and then carry the radioactive materials in the smoke). It didn't sound as though the fuel itself was going to combust, just that it would melt.

    1. Re:Let's be precise here by rubycodez · · Score: 1

      correct, uranium oxide can't burn. The metal cladding around the fuel can get hot enough to burn, and a metal fire accelerates release of contamination. It can accelerate melting of the fuel too.

    2. Re:Let's be precise here by muridae · · Score: 1

      The zirconium that encases the fuel pellets can, if I understand correctly, oxidize once it reaches a high temperature and release heat in the process. Sounds like combustion to me. Guess it weeds down to defining the fuel as just the fissionable material in the pellets, or as the entire pellet.

      That said, it isn't my field either so I am just summarizing what I read here and elsewhere.. It could be that there are other materials in the reactor that could also ignite at a high enough temperature.

  46. Re:THIS IS NOT HAPPENING. by ZigiSamblak · · Score: 2

    This may be moderated as flamebait, however this is exactly the attitude many people responding to the news of the Fukushima reactors on slashdot seem to have. How can you be so in love with nuclear that even when four reactors are in various states of melting down and leaking dangerous amounts of radiation into the environment that you find it necessary to attack any doubts on the supposed safety and environmental goodness of nuclear power?

    Reminds me of Inspector Drebin standing infront of the exploding building in Naked Gun. "Nothing to see here people!"

  47. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by tomhudson · · Score: 1

    People may not be able to live there yes, but Tjernobyl has shown proven the saying "life finds a way" true again. The area around Tjernobyl has become one of the most biologically diverse in the area... probably in large part due to the lack of humans around.

    Mutants will do that ...

    Just joking ... stop looking at me so funny, 3-eyes!.

  48. the media by Charliemopps · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This disaster has destroyed what little faith I had left in the media. It's disgusting what they are doing right now.

    1. Re:the media by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah but remember the Slashdot posts about how everything is being exaggerated and fear mongering, remember how +5 insightful posts all mention the situation is only going to get better and the rods will cool down. Well..... they haven't and the situation is getting worse, we might end up having more dead from the radiation poisoning when the rods do melt and explode into the open atmosphere.
      No containment dome...

    2. Re:the media by Inzite · · Score: 2

      You're obviously consulting the wrong media.

      Some suggestions:
      * BBC
      * Russia Today
      * Bloomberg
      * The Guardian
      * The Wall Street Journal / The Financial Times
      * Al Jazeera (hit and miss - great coverage of Egypt/Libya/Bahrain, terrible coverage of Japan)
      * Der Spiegel

      Note: True financial publications like Bloomberg and The Wall Street Journal (e.g., NOT CNBC) tend to get their facts straight because their readership is much more demanding. Financial publications aren't perfect (The Financial Times' coverage of Russia has historically been pathetic), but they're a hell of a lot better than what passes for news in the US. I'm American and I don't even watch mainstream US news or read mainstream newspapers anymore - the signal to noise is just dismal.

    3. Re:the media by LordLimecat · · Score: 1

      You mean the callous disregard for the real disaster, or the way theyre turning it from "Nuclear issues in Japan, should we help" to "Should we ban nuclear in the US"? I just love how its no longer about them and the tens of thousands of displaced people, its about us, and what we should do about a non issue.

    4. Re:the media by jez9999 · · Score: 1

      And it isn't just the media. A retarded politicial from Germany, made the EU Energy commissioner (Guenther Oettinger) said he thought the word 'apocalypse' was well-chosen to describe the situation at the plant. In Europe, some give these politicians quite a lot of respect.

    5. Re:the media by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Russia Today

      A semi-official Kremlin foreign propaganda machine? You've got to be kidding me.

  49. Query by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I may be missing something but what I don't understand is that if the issue is just of shortage of water, aren't there enough methods to overcome this. I read that they are using helicopters to drop water. Couldn't they use the same to also fill up the pools that are running short of water.

    Surely, there must be some other blocking factors, but it would be great if somebody could enlighten me on that.

    1. Re:Query by rubycodez · · Score: 1

      Those pools are 40' cubes, half a million gallons of water each. Each helicopter load is 900 gallons. Do math.

    2. Re:Query by rubycodez · · Score: 1

      Just saw another news article on NHK claiming 7.5 tons per load, or 1800 gallons seawater. Still, to replenish a pool that's down by half or more would take over a hundred trips, let alone with boiling or high evaporation rate near boiling

  50. Re:THIS IS NOT HAPPENING. by FictionPimp · · Score: 1

    This is why I push so hard for coal mining to be banned. I've heard that entire US towns have been made uninhabitable due to coal fires that won't go out for hundreds if not thousands of years. ( http://www.offroaders.com/album/centralia/centralia.htm )

  51. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by elrous0 · · Score: 1

    Beats their initial reporting. When they initially reported a "hydrogen explosion" at one of the reactors, apparently they had a big problem with people equating this with a hydrogen *bomb* explosion.

    --
    SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
  52. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by RKThoadan · · Score: 1

    The media talks about a meltdown as if it's the end of the world and we have nothing to handle it. In reality handling a meltdown is precisely what the containment system is designed to do. It's certainly possible that it could fail or have been damaged from the earthquake, but it's also possible that it will work just fine. Without knowing a whole lot more, I'm not going to judge which is the most probable.

    At this point I definitely agree that the pools with the spent fuel rods are likely to be the biggest problem.

  53. of course it isn't easy by circletimessquare · · Score: 0

    but the backup electricity better get there as if by clapping your hands, with absolutely any and all means necessary possible to be summoned by the entire nation of japan

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  54. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by putaro · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I think the failure in planning here wasn't in any of the systems in the plant. It was in not realizing that something like a tsunami would cause so much devastation around the plant that restoring power would be so difficult.

  55. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by jdfox · · Score: 1

    We now have four rectors that needs to be cooled down, built in and kept under close watch for a couple of hundred thousands of years.

    Try switching to these four rectors instead then. They look pretty cooled down from here, and I seriously doubt they'll be around for a thousand days, never mind years.

  56. Re:THIS IS NOT HAPPENING. by Beyond_GoodandEvil · · Score: 1

    How can you be so in love with nuclear that even when four reactors are in various states of melting down and leaking dangerous amounts of radiation into the environment that you find it necessary to attack any doubts on the supposed safety and environmental goodness of nuclear power?
    Probably as a reaction to the severe and unmigitaged NEWS CHANNELS running some sort of extinction level event coverage 24/7 w/ every anti nuclear asshole they can find to provide baseless supposition about what is happening and see every "journalist" and news reader get basic facts about radiation wrong. Oh and dangerous amounts of radiation requires many qualifiers and explanations. Meanwhile, several thousand people are dead yet no one wants to declare war on the sea and mighty Neptune. Fuck it, how long til Bird Flu comes back around to kill us and our children too! Won't someone think of the children!

    --
    I laughed at the weak who considered themselves good because they lacked claws.
  57. Why people are afraid by seyyah · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It is amusing to see the comments here which excuse the problem at the Japanese nuclear plant because the earthquake was really big. You see to many people who don't have an automatic fear of anything nuclear, there remains the problem of the people running it. The technology might be safe but when those in charge aren't doing their jobs then there is basis for distrust.

    1. The earthquake was big: It's Japan. You can't not expect a big earthquake. Everything has to be ready for it.

    2. The tsunami unexpectedly washed out the generators: see point 1.

    3. It was an old plant, the new ones are safer: if this one wasn't safe then why was it running?

    The point to me is not that nuclear power is unsafe, but rather that unacceptable risks were taken in this case. Does the same problem exist are other sites in other countries? I have no idea (and I bet the armchair Slashdot crowd doesn't know either), but there is a serious lack of trust right now over how that risk is being evaluated.

    None of this excuses the sensationalism in the media or the fools in the US who are buying anti-radiation tonic in preparation, or even the foreigners who are fleeing the entire country of Japan over the threat of 'meltdown'.

    PS. What if all six reactors had been working?

    1. Re:Why people are afraid by roothog · · Score: 2

      It is amusing to see the comments here which excuse the problem at the Japanese nuclear plant because the earthquake was really big.

      The issue was the tsunami, not the earthquake. The plant handled the quake just fine, the reactors automatically scrammed. However, the tsunami knocked out the fallbacks because it well exceeded any expectations: in Japan, a 3-meter high tsunami triggers their highest warning level. This tsunami was 10-meters high. It's a once-in-1000-years event, which in engineering is a rather acceptable risk to take.

    2. Re:Why people are afraid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      1. This is the fourth-largest earthquake ever recorded on Earth, ever.

      2. See point 1. They had a big fucking seawall; the tsunami was bigger.

      3. Ironically, reactor #1 was scheduled to be decommissioned later this month. In any case, nuclear plants are expensive so people try to keep them running longer than they perhaps should. It's like, I've got no problem with Indian Point (better that than a big coal plant upwind of NYC), but decommissioning it on schedule in 2013 seems fine to me, too.

      PS. If all six reactors had been working, #4's fuel would be in the containment and not in some uncovered fucking pool on the roof. That's the real thing I'm worried about; it looks like 1-3 will be relatively fine; if the fuel storage at #4 goes re-critical we're going to have a major problem. This isn't mentioned in that "MIT letter" or whatever that's making the rounds, presumably because the author wasn't aware of it at the time.

      Regardless, the main take-away I'm getting here is that we aren't going to know 100% of what the hell is going on until after this is over. Which, frankly, should be obvious: where did this entitlement mentality for minute-by-minute updates come from, anyway?

    3. Re:Why people are afraid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I agree - I was darkly amused at all the people on Monday who assued us on slashdot that there's nothing to worry about. Since then there are fears of a meltdown and a 20km radius around the reactor has been evacuated.

      Nothing to worry about at all.

      3. It was an old plant, the new ones are safer

      The new ones are perfectly, completely and utterly safe, until the next unexpected thing happens. Then everyone will say "Oh, I didn't think of that! I'll design it better next time!"

    4. Re:Why people are afraid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It was scheduled to be decommissioned this month I believe.

    5. Re:Why people are afraid by slim · · Score: 2

      1. This is the fourth-largest earthquake ever recorded on Earth, ever.

      2. See point 1. They had a big fucking seawall; the tsunami was bigger.

      I'm afraid that's not good enough. People have only been recording earthquakes for some 100 years. Seismologists knew a big one could happen pretty much any time, and they knew it would result in a tsunami.

      You might say it was foolish to build *anything* within reach of a tsnunami -- I mean, 10,000 deaths projected. Let's guess that the risk/reward ratios work out so that, as grim as it sounds, those deaths and the cost of all the rebuilding, are outweighed by the benefits. It seems to me that when the disaster scenario is a partially uncontained nuclear meltdown, the risk/reward ratio is a *lot* worse.

      The facility shouldn't have been built there; or, its defences should have been better.

    6. Re:Why people are afraid by pushing-robot · · Score: 3, Informative

      An abridged list from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historic_tsunamis :

      2004: Indian Ocean - The initial surge was measured at a height of approximately 33 meters

      1993: Okushiri, Hokkaido, Japan - Okushiri, a small island near the epicenter...was struck with extremely big waves, some reaching 30 meters

      1983: Sea of Japan - The waves exceeded 10 meters in some areas.

      1964: Alaska, USA - The waves were up to 100 feet tall, and killed 11 people as far away as Crescent City, California.

      1960: Valdivia, Chile - It spread across the entire Pacific Ocean, with waves measuring up to 25 meters high.

      1958: Lituya Bay, Alaska, USA - an earthquake caused a megatsunami to reach a height taller than the Empire State Building, measuring over 520 metres (1,706 ft), killing two. ...

      1923: Kanto, Japan - waves reaching 12 meters were recorded.

      1896: Meiji Sanriku, Japan - the waves, which reached a height of 100 feet, killed approximately 27,000 people

      1854: Nankai, Tokai, and Kyushu Japan - Earthquake generated a maximum wave of 28 meters at Kochi, Japan

      1792: Mount Unzen, Nagasaki Prefecture, Kyushu, Japan - the waves reached a height of 330 ft, classing this tsunami as a small megatsunami.

      1771: Yaeyama Islands, Okinawa, Japan - Estimates of the highest seawater runup on Ishigaki Island, range between 30 meters and 85.4 meters

      --
      How can I believe you when you tell me what I don't want to hear?
    7. Re:Why people are afraid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If it is so safe, why don't you take a trip over there and help them shut down the plants?

      I agree with what you say,except the two last lines which was meant to fit into the /. crowd, or else, your post would never be modded up in the first place.

      This is the reason /. is off my bookmark list and why everyone here seems to agree. Pathetic!

    8. Re:Why people are afraid by Isaac-1 · · Score: 1

      Safe is relative, life has risks, your never going to design anything that is completely safe. You could go out and build a nuclear power plant 100 times more resistant to disaster than this one, and a chunk of rock the size of a small house from space could land on it. Of course the earth getting hit by one of these is a once in a million year event, and the chance it hitting a specific spot is much less likely, but hey it could happen so we should not take the chance right????

    9. Re:Why people are afraid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Point 1) BS. A 9.0 mega thrust is a once in between 100 and 500 year event. The people who designed those reactors imagined we'd be living on the moon by now. They never intended the reactors would be in operation 40 years later. Nuclear hysteria prevents the construction of new plants, and corporations who (by definition) put profit first keep the plants in operation beyond their design life. Now I'm going to yell: DESPITE THAT, THE REACTORS ALL CAME THROUGH AN EARTHQUAKE THEY WEREN'T EVER EXPECTED TO SEE INTACT.

      Point 2) See point one. It's easy to arm chair over the tsunami threat but tsunamis really weren't on the civil protection radar until 2004. Even if the Japanese had wanted to, it's doubtful that they could assessed and redesigned the the seawalls on all of their plants in six years. Over and over I've seen it repeated. The only large scale structures man can design and build on short order are shopping malls. Most importantly, it was the TSUNAMI that did the damage. It's also worth noting the sea side american nuclear reactor most likely to get hit by a tsunami has a 26 foot sea wall. It seems likely that humanity simply doesn't have a real grasp on the tsunami threat.

      Point 3) See point one. Also, the reactors are safe. Even in the event of a full on melting of the reactor core, the reactor containment structures are designed to limit radiation escape to the immediate area around the reactor. If the media were to report on all of the safety mechanisms built into this design they wouldn't have a story.

      The unacceptable risks taken in this case were unacceptable in hindsight. It's really easy to arm chair from thousands of miles away well after the fact, isn't it? If the people evaluating the risks can be faulted for anything at this point, it is not being more open. Given how the media has taken everything they have said and blown it out of proportion, I don't exactly blame them. They are still wrong not to fight disinformation with information, but I can't say I'd make the right choice under the circumstances.

    10. Re:Why people are afraid by jez9999 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It's a once-in-1000-years event, which in engineering is a rather acceptable risk to take.

      Um, bullshit? The typical life of a nuclear plant is 50 years. That gives a 1-in-20 chance of this occurring during the life of the plant. It's near enough to Tokyo, the most inhabited metropolitan area in the world with 35 million people.

      I support nuclear power because modern plants can be safe, but the negative image for nuclear power and potential health damage this may cause make me want to weep.

    11. Re:Why people are afraid by popeyethesailorman · · Score: 1

      It is amusing to see the comments here which excuse the problem at the Japanese nuclear plant because the earthquake was really big. You see to many people who don't have an automatic fear of anything nuclear, there remains the problem of the people running it. The technology might be safe but when those in charge aren't doing their jobs then there is basis for distrust.

      1. The earthquake was big: It's Japan. You can't not expect a big earthquake. Everything has to be ready for it.

      2. The tsunami unexpectedly washed out the generators: see point 1.

      3. It was an old plant, the new ones are safer: if this one wasn't safe then why was it running?

      The point to me is not that nuclear power is unsafe, but rather that unacceptable risks were taken in this case. Does the same problem exist are other sites in other countries? I have no idea (and I bet the armchair Slashdot crowd doesn't know either), but there is a serious lack of trust right now over how that risk is being evaluated.

      None of this excuses the sensationalism in the media or the fools in the US who are buying anti-radiation tonic in preparation, or even the foreigners who are fleeing the entire country of Japan over the threat of 'meltdown'.

      PS. What if all six reactors had been working?

      Safe nuclear power is incompatible with Private industry - they must cut corners to maximize shareholder returns. That’s why Congress (foolishly) passed the Price-Anderson Act.

      The Navy has never experienced a core melt-down (that we know of) despite operating many nuclear-powered subs and aircraft carriers – but they don't have the competitive pressure to maximize profits.

    12. Re:Why people are afraid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It seems to me that when the disaster scenario is a partially uncontained nuclear meltdown, the risk/reward ratio is a *lot* worse.

      There have been no deaths due to the meltdown at Three Mile Island. WHO estimates about 3500 deaths associated with long-term effects from Chernobyl. You consider this a *lot* worse than 10,000 acute deaths from a tsunami? Why?

      The facility shouldn't have been built there; or, its defences should have been better.

      You do know that there hasn't been any release of radioactive material yet, right? There's a lot of radiation around, but the activity is, so far, all contained. The work that's being done now is to prevent a further meltdown, not because meltdown would release radioactive material, but because it's a pain in the ass to clean up. And because there's a chance that the last line of defense against release of radioactive material, the containment building, might have been damaged enough by the quake that it might possibly fail. Why test your last line of defense if you don't have to.

      This point, that "meltdown" does not mean "Chernobyl," is the most important point that the media have missed. Three Mile Island was a meltdown: there is no exclusion zone. There are 30 years of long-term epidemiology showing no public health effects of any sort. Chernobyl was a meltdown without a containment building. Fukushima's reactors all have containment buildings. Please wait to throw your tantrum until after the facilities defenses have failed.

    13. Re:Why people are afraid by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      What a 'once in a thousand year event' means is that it happens once every thousand years at a given location, not once in a thousand years, period. Just because I got a hundred-year rainstorm here (near Seattle) two years ago, doesn't mean Portland can't get their own next winter.
       
      And you could at least try and comprehend the list, rather than just cutting-and-pasting under the mistaken impression that 'proves' something. For example the Lituya Bay mega-Tsunami was caused because an entire freaking mountainside collapsed into a fairly small bay - akin to dropping a bowling ball onto a soda can.

    14. Re:Why people are afraid by radtea · · Score: 1

      The point to me is not that nuclear power is unsafe, but rather that unacceptable risks were taken in this case.

      "In this case" is something I'm hearing a lot of lately. The question is: what are the odds of equally unacceptable risks being taken in other cases?

      Think about it in these terms: there are maybe 1000 fission reactors running world-wide. In this on there just happened to have been unacceptable risks that were revealed when there just happened to be a 9.0 earthquake. If not for the quake, the unacceptable risks would have continued to exist until some other error triggered a comparable disaster.

      From this, I infer that the vast majority of nuclear plants on Earth have comparable unacceptable risks being taken. It unfortunately stands to reason: what are the odds that the one plant that happens to have unacceptable risks being taken also happens to be hit by a huge earthquake and its aftermath?

      The only reasonable conclusion is that basically every reactor out there has comparable risks, just waiting for some unfortunate event to reveal them.

      At which point people will say, "Oh but that was only in this case!"

      --
      Blasphemy is a human right. Blasphemophobia kills.
    15. Re:Why people are afraid by slim · · Score: 1

      It seems to me that when the disaster scenario is a partially uncontained nuclear meltdown, the risk/reward ratio is a *lot* worse.

      There have been no deaths due to the meltdown at Three Mile Island. WHO estimates about 3500 deaths associated with long-term effects from Chernobyl. You consider this a *lot* worse than 10,000 acute deaths from a tsunami? Why?

      I didn't say the outcome was worse. I said the risk/reward ratio was worse. If a/b > c/d it does not follow that a > c.

      I'm saying the economic value of all that living/working on low coastal land must have been *huge*, *maybe* high enough to outweigh the risk. ... and the value of siting the nuclear power station just there? Relative to the risk? Not as good I don't think.

      The facility shouldn't have been built there; or, its defences should have been better.

      You do know that there hasn't been any release of radioactive material yet, right?

      Perhaps I've missed something; if there are unusually high radiation levels outside the reactor building -- high enough to evacuate staff -- doesn't that mean radioactive material has been released?

    16. Re:Why people are afraid by pclminion · · Score: 1

      You see to many people who don't have an automatic fear of anything nuclear

      You're saying the correct stance to take is to have an automatic fear of anything nuclear? In other words remove critical thinking from the picture. Uhhhh, okay.

    17. Re:Why people are afraid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You forgot to mention that these reactors were sold to the public as being safe. Recommendations that they stop licensing these designs due to safety concerns were ignored because it would have been bad for the nuclear power industry. Perhaps newer designs are safer. Why should we trust nuclear power experts when their recorded pattern of behavior is to advocate for themselves to get what they want, dismiss concerns, and then insist it's safe? People are part of the design and operational systems of all nuclear power plants, and they will screw up. And they cannot plan for every eventuality. Worse are the chilling effects the money involved has on any possibility of legitimate dissent from industry talking points by those who know the most about the issues.

    18. Re:Why people are afraid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The facility shouldn't have been built there; or, its defences should have been better.

      If I sat around at work bitching and whining like this about something which has already happened and can't be undone, I'd be reprimanded.

    19. Re:Why people are afraid by slim · · Score: 1

      The facility shouldn't have been built there; or, its defences should have been better.

      If I sat around at work bitching and whining like this about something which has already happened and can't be undone, I'd be reprimanded.

      How do you learn from mistakes, if you don't recognise them when they happen?

    20. Re:Why people are afraid by Hazel+Bergeron · · Score: 1

      It's a once-in-1000-years event, which in engineering is a rather acceptable risk to take.

      Commissioned 1971. Was due to operate another few years.

      50/1000 = 1/20. No, it isn't acceptable.

    21. Re:Why people are afraid by NoSig · · Score: 1

      There are many other reactors that have survived earthquakes and Tsunamis of the same size. For example there are lots of other reactors in Japan that were impacted by this event and they don't have these issues now.

    22. Re:Why people are afraid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In America, people push the safety/acceptance limit on so much, that I'd be afraid of it for that reason alone.

    23. Re:Why people are afraid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1. The earthquake was big: It's Japan. You can't not expect a big earthquake. Everything has to be ready for it.

      It was built to withstand large quakes but nothing of that magnitude. This was a "crazy big" quake.

      2. The tsunami unexpectedly washed out the generators: see point 1.

      This, yes, is strange. I'd expect some design that takes this into account, but again, it's so difficult to plan for such a large scale event. The best you can do are estimates and even then, see my reply to point 1. "crazy big" quake = bigger tsunami than planned for.

      3. It was an old plant, the new ones are safer: if this one wasn't safe then why was it running?

      Maybe because it *was* safe?

    24. Re:Why people are afraid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What if all six reactors had been working?

      Then you could use the power from one of the other 5 to power the cooling!

    25. Re:Why people are afraid by airdweller · · Score: 0

      "It was an old plant, the new ones are safer: if this one wasn't safe then why was it running?"
      It was scheduled for decommission this month.

    26. Re:Why people are afraid by x_IamSpartacus_x · · Score: 1

      It's a once-in-1000-years event, which in engineering is a rather acceptable risk to take.

      Um... I used to work in a civil engineering office (before I moved to Mozambique, Africa) and I can absolutely tell you that a "once-in-1000-years event" is NOT an acceptable risk to take, especially with something so monumentally important as a nuclear power plant. We even had terms surprisingly similar to the one you used. The 50-year event, the 100-year event, the 500-year event, and the 1000-year event. ALL of these events were designed for. We used to joke that if Phoenix, Arizona (where I worked) ever got hit with a tsunami all the buildings may be wiped out but our bridges would still be there!

    27. Re:Why people are afraid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "3. It was an old plant, the new ones are safer: if this one wasn't safe then why was it running?"

      If eating an Apple was safer than eating an Orange, that doesn't mean the Orange is equivalent to eating cyanide.

      Nuclear plants that have been running for many decades have not been receiving upgrades to newer methods as they're developed. This is because it's an expensive thing to do. In some cases it's basically like building a new station from scratch - and nobody wants to fund it, as it would usually be done through government money. (Or high jumps in electricity costs.)

      The situation is pretty similar around the world. Consider the nuclear reactor in Canada a year or two ago that was used to produce a large portion of the world's medical radioactives. It was an old plant. Not nearly as "safe" as existing models, but that doesn't mean it could melt down if you looked at it funny. It was just too expensive to rebuild until it was absolutely necessary to do so, and it couldn't be taken offline without causing a shortage (Which reinforced the first part)

    28. Re:Why people are afraid by Algae_94 · · Score: 1

      Just to further illustrate how unacceptable 1/20 is: That gives us a 5% chance of a 1-in-1000 year event occurring at one plant in one year. Spread out over 50 nuclear plants in Japan (a think there are a few more than that but...) gives a 7.69% chance of no incident at all the plants or on the contrary, a 92.3% chance that at least one of the 50 nuclear plants will have one of these events EVERY YEAR. over the course of 50 years the chance that there is no 1-in-1000 year event is 2.04e-54% which means it is a near complete certainty that at least one of the 50 plants would have a 1-in-1000 year event in it's lifetime. Unless you want to change the odds, by assumptions such as if one plant avoids an event in a year, it is very unlikely that the plant down the road would have an event. I have to agree with the GP on one point though. The issue was the tsunami. More specifically the tsunami knocking out the cooling systems. If these reactors had passive cooling systems that didn't need electricity, it wouldn't have been an issue. That isn't a simple bolt on for a BWR, but a different reactor design. The only easy way to improve existing plants of this design, is too harden the backup power and water systems.

    29. Re:Why people are afraid by cbhacking · · Score: 1

      No. I'm sorry, but you're wrong. There were some risks that should not have been taken, like the manner in which the fuel was stored (outside of containment), but "unacceptable" applied to the situation as a whole is bullshit.

      This was the fifth strongest earthquake we've recorded. Not in Japan, but globally. The amount of kinetic energy unleashed was greater than just about anything human beings can directly cause; flying planes into skyscrapers is barely a blip on the same scale, and even fusion weapons aren't nearly as strong. A meteor impact is the only thing that readily comes to mind which would be greater.

      "Safe" isn't a binary state, like you and so many other *ahem* individuals *ahem* seem to be trying to claim. The WTC towers to designed to resist the impact of smaller planes. Cars are designed to keep their passengers alive in collisions up to a certain speed. Fission power plants are designed with a certain degree of safety built in. The catch, in all cases, is that there's always going to be something worse.

      Take the safest systems we have right now, like molten slat reactors where the failsafe is passive; the reactor literally cannot produce enough heat to melt down because the hotter it gets, the less energy it releases, until it arrives in equilibrium. Nor can the coolant boil off; the vaporization temperature of the salt is above that equilibrium point. Now, hit such a reactor with a meteor. You'll still end up with radioactive fuel being launched into the atmosphere and spread widely. Is it the planner's fault for not anticipating this? Is it an "unacceptable risk" to use a design with such a deadly known danger? Of course not! It's absurd to even suggest so.

      Mind you, I don't disagree that we should modernize our fission reactors. Their are lessons to be learned here, not about the risks of immense, possibly once-a-lifetime earthquakes, but about why certain failure points are too vulnerable. The coolant cycle is a good example; by relying on external power to the pumps, it put the safety of the reactor partially in the hands of external factors. Newer reactors don't have that risk at all, but older ones could be modified to mitigate it.

      --
      There's no place I could be, since I've found Serenity...
    30. Re:Why people are afraid by ShooterNeo · · Score: 1

      Did they get hit by the Tsunami?

  58. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by elrous0 · · Score: 1

    Anyone who has ever dealt with the press knows that they are frequently laughably inaccurate/sensationalistic/alarmist on all but their most basic stories. In the wake of this nuclear incident, CNN, Fox, MSNBC, et. al. have featured a virtual parade of Chicken Littles literally yelling at the camera, including a number of anti-nuke environmentalists who clearly have an agenda to push. If you were to just watch the news, it would be nigh impossible to get a grasp of what's really going on or the actual technical issues involved. All people hear is "radiation scare" with absolutely no context as to the type or level of radiation, for example.

    --
    SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
  59. Japanese Say SDK has Spotted Water in #4 Pool by rubycodez · · Score: 4, Informative

    Japanese dispute claim of no water in #4, claim helicopter crew was able to see water but the level isn't known. Last night saw on HNK news the U.S. will fly unmanned drones to verify water level, as getting close to pools involves very high exposure.

  60. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

    The interesting thing here is something I've noted elsewhere: a big difference in expectations of education between science and everything else. The reader is expected to be familiar with a specific event in history (to know what the Hindenburg is), but isn't expected to know what element 1 is. They are explaining something that you'd see in on of your first science lessons in school, in terms of a fairly specific instance in history. People who don't know about history or geography are regarded as ignorant in our society, while people who know nothing about science are just considered normal.

    --
    I am TheRaven on Soylent News
  61. The stupidist move was auto-shutdown by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So far I haven't heard anyone opine on the wisdom of automatically shutting down the reactors simply because there was an earthquake. Seems like just a political regulation divorced from common sense. I'd rather have humans make these critical decisions based on the circumstances at hand.

    This whole crisis could arguably have been avoided if they had simply throttled down to 10%, and disconnected from the grid; allowing ample power to run the plant systems, at least until the backup power was reliably established.

    1. Re:The stupidist move was auto-shutdown by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      AFAIK, human based decision resulted in the three miles island incident.

      Maybe you should know that BWR need to be actively cooled after having been stopped, and maybe you should just not criticize things you can not understand, often, "What should be done" is different from "What you think should be done" because you do not have all the clue in hand.

    2. Re:The stupidist move was auto-shutdown by rubycodez · · Score: 1

      No thanks, mag 9 earthquakes can damage cooling and power systems. Losing coolant on a reactor running full power is what the Chernobyl operators did (in their case just by virtual of the void at the ends of their control rods that pushed them over the edge), rumor is things didn't go so well for them after that.

  62. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by throx · · Score: 1

    Yes, this is a very different situation to Chernobyl but the worst case is actually far, far worse (in some ways of measuring at least). The problem here isn't the reactors themselves but with the spent fuel stockpile. Estimates have the potential for an uncontrolled meltdown in the spent fuel pile at orders of magnitude higher radiation exposure than were experienced from the Chernobyl incident, added to this exposure causing major problems in continuing to cool the reactor cores still under threat.

    I have no idea what you're talking about "thousands of people to try to control the Russian plant" either. For a start, it was Ukrainian or Soviet but let's not stand on petty national boundaries too much. Second, about 30 people died as a direct result of the incident which makes it, uh, 0.03 thousand?

    --

    Fear: When you see B8 00 4C CD 21 and know what it means

  63. I'm not happy by ciderbrew · · Score: 4, Insightful

    My wife is Japanese and most of her family lived in that area, some only 1km away from the Fukushima power plant.
    I've been so upset by the event and livid with the BBC and I'll not even talk about other news sources in the UK. I want a law to block the sensationalism I've been seeing. Keep that for guff filler shite celeb stories and film releases.

    It is harrowing and needs no build up. I can't watch another presenter, first being told by some expert that there is no threat, to only then ask the question "What about the worst case?". You’ve just asked him, you had your answer about the now and the future, and now you want guy to make up an answer? Well fuck you BBC. For balance, what is the best case? If this works, how soon can people return? Will the farms in the area be safe?

    The expert may be proved wrong tomorrow, but he gave his opinion about today. Why do you have the need to constantly push for the worst case?
    How is that the news? I can't read another statement about radiation going up 4 times and how awful that is, only to find out that the level is less than a scan at a hospital? Do these people have any journalistic pride any more? I've seen so many stories and write-ups pro and con that I now have no idea who to trust or what is really going on.
    So whilst the nuclear pro and con here spout the next 10 pages of stuff, I’ll be still no better off from their posts. ... ... And lots of other stuff too!!! / rant and vent over.

    1. Re:I'm not happy by kaiidth · · Score: 1

      Completely agree with you about the sensationalism of the media, and the vulture lobbies, who are treating this as though everybody's ideological Christmas has come early. The whole feeding frenzy is in very poor taste, foul and dehumanising. Plenty of time for zOMG NUCULAR! once this situation has been resolved. I finally blew a fuse last night and put the BBC, Telegraph, Guardian and Independent in my hosts file underneath the entry identifying the Daily Mail as 127.0.0.1. In the short term, turning off the TV is probably the best move, but perhaps it would be worth sending a complaint to the BBC. The coverage of this has hit rock bottom in quality.

      Be all that as it may, I wish you all the best - that all goes well, that your wife's family and friends are OK, and that the area recovers quickly from the earthquake damage and everything else that has happened since.

    2. Re:I'm not happy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      What do you want, soothing words or the no-bullshit answer? If the fuel pools and reactors can't be cooled, then the reactors will be as good as their containment systems, which should mean a meltdown is not a problem. There is a hole in the containment system of reactor #2 (suppression torus) though, no one knows how that will impact the performance of the containment vessel around the reactor. An uncontrolled spent fuel pool fire would be the worst thing that could happen, would release more contamination than Chernobyl. So do you trust that they can keep the reactor and pools cool for the next two days while emergency power line brought in and attempts made to start site pumps?

      No-bullshit answer is any relatives or friends within 1km are too close if current cooling efforts fail, the best thing if possible is to back off 50 or more miles (90 km) at a minimum.

      I was a scheduler at a nuke plant.

    3. Re:I'm not happy by Isaac-1 · · Score: 1

      How about the "Experts" that likely failed freshman Physics, I heard one on TV while I was in a waiting room to get an x-ray taken a couple of days ago expounding on the "fact" that radiation exposure is NOT cumulative, that it is all about the intensity and not the duration. The x-ray tech got a good laugh out of that one while she was standing behind the leaded glass barrier.

    4. Re:I'm not happy by ciderbrew · · Score: 1

      Thanks, I like the no-bullshit answer. I can't do anything with soothing words. Everyone has been evacuated to 60miles away. So I hope that will be enough. The Tsunami took out their farm; but I can still see their house on google maps. It may be a wreak though. I'm wondering how much of a write off the surround area (1km) will be in the months/years to come. I do not think eating crops or drinking local water would be a good idea.

    5. Re:I'm not happy by BJ_Covert_Action · · Score: 2

      My wife is Japanese and most of her family lived in that area,

      I know it's not much, but you have my sympathy. I hope your wife's family is safe. My thoughts go out to you, them, and the thousands of other people this calamity has claimed. If you ever need to vent or talk, you can feel free to e-mail me, or track me down on facebook or something. I use this same pseudonym just about everywhere on the net these days.

      Good luck.

    6. Re:I'm not happy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just to answer that. I would be concerned about the worst case, if my intention was to give people the means to protect themselves. Yea the worst case might not manifest itself but better that they evacuate for no reason, then they come streaming back because they are believing the "best case" and end up sick. I know the "worst case" idea made a lot of people in California go crazy buying anti-rad pills but at least people are informed. Radiation from nuclear energy does present real dangers - of course so does radiation from laptops, cellphones and microwaves. :p - at least it got people thinking.

    7. Re:I'm not happy by rubycodez · · Score: 2

      I'm properly logged in this time, so not AC for 2nd round of no-bullshit. note readings 30km (12 miles) away are now 17 millirem / hour (0.17 mS per hour), that kind of dose over a week is over 3 REM! Even for adults every REM of dose increases number of deaths by cancer 0.04% over normal, to say nothing of many times that for non-fatal cancers. Two weeks at that level and radation poisoning starts. For children under 8, divide the time to stated risk by factor of five (ie, don't be there). For babies and fetuses, by more than ten (don't be there!!)

    8. Re:I'm not happy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You should avoid Glenn Beck then.

    9. Re:I'm not happy by TheTurtlesMoves · · Score: 1

      Well there is in fact the so called threshold model. There is quite a bit of medical data to back it up. The idea is that below a level of exposure your risk is not increased at all. However since the linear model (any exposure increases risk) is more conservative, typically this model is the accepted one to use. For obvious reasons.

      --
      The Grey Goo disaster happened 3 billion years ago. This rock is covered in self replicating machines!
    10. Re:I'm not happy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've seen so many stories and write-ups pro and con that I now have no idea who to trust or what is really going on..

      As with the vast majority of discussions in life, the truth is in the middle. Life is gray, it almost always is.

  64. The last big thing and the next big thing... by KingAlanI · · Score: 1

    yeah, media concern about the current major story tends to force previous major stories out of the news, relatively speaking. Here, the last major story is probably the Libyan revolt, though something else happened to oil-spill news in a similar fashion

    --
    I listen to both RIAA and non-RIAA stuff if I like the music, tangential business/politics nonwithstanding.
  65. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by Tyler+Durden · · Score: 3, Informative

    It's kind of depressing if you think about it. Humanity is a bigger scourge to biological diversity than massive doses of radiation.

    --
    Happy people make bad consumers.
  66. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I hate to rain in on the parade, but running a nuclear power plant requires criticality and a chain, self-sustaining nuclear reaction. Critical mass does not equal a nuclear blast. If everything goes wrong over there, and there's criticality achived after a melt down, things will get hot enough that the radioactive mass will make near sub-crustal magma look cool. There will be no solid on our planet that will withstand that, and thus it will start sinking quire rapidly in a pool of molten rock, and will bury itself, so to speak. Things would be way easier in Chernobyl if the melted down core actually did go critical!

    Sure, it'll leave some mess behind, but I don't see any way there will be a nuclear explosion like from a nuclear bomb. If it were so easy, you wouldn't have North Korean duds. Per your reasoning, various plutonium and uranium criticality accidents that occurred in various labs/processing plants around the world would leave craters behind. Guess what: there were people who lived long enough to tell the story after standing right next to a vat of critical UF6, or to a critical plutonium sphere. Sure they died "soonish" thereafter, but there weren't even explosions. A boiling liquid at best. They died of exposure to neutrons (like in a neutron bomb).

  67. It's a death trap, it's a suicide rap by countertrolling · · Score: 1
    --
    For justice, we must go to Don Corleone
  68. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by Samalie · · Score: 1

    Bullshit. Utter fucking bullshit.

    THe odds on an actual "nuclear blast" as you suggest are about 1 in a billion.

    Nuclear Explosions don't just happen...they require VERY precise conditions, with geometrically shaped charges and layout, to bring about an actual blast. Yes, bad shit can happen, without a doubt...but a spontaneous nuclear blast is probably somewhere in the magnitude of a 1 in 1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 event.

    Quit spreading shit.

    --
    09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
  69. You can't spell it either by rubycodez · · Score: 1

    Go to this web page, and look in the title of your browser window of the word enclosed in double quotes. Then report back who is the ignoramus who can't spell properly the name of the city. http://chornobylmuseum.kiev.ua/index.php?lang=uk

  70. Chain is only as strong as the weakest link by cyclocommuter · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What this incident proves is that the chain is indeed as strong as its weakest link. If it is now obvious that nuclear power generation is a long complex chain, with each link requiring utmost planning and care. People may argue that newer reactor and/or containment designs may be safer and/or stronger but what about the other links like backup power, spent fuel storage, pipe fittings to withstand the tremendous pressures inherent in the generation of power from nuclear energy? Part of that chain is also the proper training of personnel not only to operate the plants properly and minimize human error but also on how to manage a crisis situation. They should be drilled every day on how to go about this during a plant blackout or plant fire scenario. The more complex the chain, the more there can be weaknesses. If plants are to be built in the future each of these links in the chain must withstand close scrutiny.

    1. Re:Chain is only as strong as the weakest link by LordLimecat · · Score: 1

      If it is now obvious that nuclear power generation is a long complex chain,

      You wouldnt possibly be making an assumption here, would you? My understanding is that its a rather short chain, and with proper design, the reactors automatically shut down-- LIKE ALL OF THEIR REACTORS DID. Everything generally went as well as can be expected, given the most severe earthquake ever recorded by japan.

    2. Re:Chain is only as strong as the weakest link by cyclocommuter · · Score: 1

      The reactors did apparently shut down as they should but still needed cooling and these is where the other "links" appeared to have failed, and I stress appeared here as this will only be apparent when this whole thing is analyzed months or years from now:

      1. Generator backups swamped by tsunami.

      2. Battery backups died after these ran out.

      3. Responders made mistakes to shut and/or open certain valves.

      4. Water supply ran low in the spent fuel rods container.

      5. There appears to be no adequate disaster preparation as in: Clear monitoring of radiation levels, and at what levels should evacuation of people start. For example, there is confusion whether at the present levels the exclusion zone should stay at 30 kms or, as the US is suggesting, be expanded to 80 kms (50 miles).

      As I am pointing out above there are numerous other vectors where problems can start even if you had the best designed reactor such as possible attack by stucknet type worms, by terrorists, etc. Don't discount the possibility of software failure too. I would be especially wary of new, unproven (in the field) reactor designs... we all know the inherent problems of Version 1.0 systems... and these are complex systems with multitudes of interfaces.

    3. Re:Chain is only as strong as the weakest link by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The reactors did apparently shut down as they should but still needed cooling and these is where the other "links" appeared to have failed

      So modern reactor designs, which don't require cooling when they're shut down would seem to shorten the chain substantially. Hence the GP's claim that the chain is only as long as the reactor design.

    4. Re:Chain is only as strong as the weakest link by LordLimecat · · Score: 1

      For example, there is confusion whether at the present levels the exclusion zone should stay at 30 kms or, as the US is suggesting, be expanded to 80 kms

      It sounds like your definition of "confusion" is "Japan has clear cut policies, but the US thinks theyre wrong". Well gee, Im glad its our country to run then.

    5. Re:Chain is only as strong as the weakest link by maxume · · Score: 1

      Why would you not expect better? There were engineering and economic decisions made about the design of the plant, both of which have proven to be insufficiently conservative.

      Of course this is much clearer in hindsight, but the fact that they lost normal cooling operations is exactly a failure of planning and design.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    6. Re:Chain is only as strong as the weakest link by jchoyt · · Score: 1

      The reactors did apparently shut down as they should but still needed cooling and these is where the other "links" appeared to have failed, and I stress appeared here as this will only be apparent when this whole thing is analyzed months or years from now:

      It was nice of you to use your genius to save them all that time! And from thousands of miles away, too.

      --
      Sometimes the truth is arrived at by adding all the little lies together and deducting them from all that is known.
    7. Re:Chain is only as strong as the weakest link by lexman098 · · Score: 0

      *sigh* You skeptics need to read up more. Skepticism is only useful if it motivates you to learn. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_reactor#Reactor_types Notice the Light Water Reactor (LWR) description mentions a "negative feedback system". This technique is very common for guaranteeing stability in lots of other disciplines outside of nuclear engineering. I really don't know why it took nuclear engineers so long to implement it, but that delay has had a real negative impact on public perception. This particular Japanese reactor was not designed as such modern reactors are.

  71. When... by JaneTheIgnorantSlut · · Score: 2, Funny

    When do the TEPCO executives start committing seppuku?

  72. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by Luckyo · · Score: 1

    I think you'd have a promising career as news producer!

  73. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by localman57 · · Score: 2

    Looks like it's gone now. CNN often rewrites articles under the same URL when things are developing. Again, the NYT beats them on credibility by posting a change log for corrections at the bottom of the page. But at least one of CNN's local partners picked up the story off of their wire and has archived it: http://www.12newsnow.com/Global/story.asp?S=14254119&clienttype=generic&mobilecgbypass

  74. ATTENTION C64 POLICE!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    This account is yet another sockpuppet for commodore64_love. We all have gotten sick of c64love due to his increasing tendency to troll in recent months, and as a result he has negative karma and can only post once per day, or something like that. Problem solved, right? NO! He has created a legion of sockpuppet accounts, including C_amiga_fan, commodore_6502, theaveng, and now this one. The others have been modded into oblivion, as they deserve, but this one is, somehow, able to post at Score: 2. This is possibly due to a recent misleading post which several mods hit +1 Insightful on (because it sounded good at first read) without bothering to check the source and discover the original source conveys the opposite sentiment to that which cpu6502/c64love is pretending it conveys. So, without further ado, please go take care of this problem if you care about this community we call Slashdot and don't wish to see it ruined by mindless trolls.

    1. Re:ATTENTION C64 POLICE!! by dwillden · · Score: 1

      But what is the factual problem with his post? It's simply pointing out that just because someone says something doesn't make them actually knowledgeable experts on the ongoing situation. You don't like the person, fine, but your diatribe ignores the whole point of his post. Who is the person being quoted what is the basis of his knowledge and why should we care what he says?

      --
      I'm too lazy to compose a creative sig.
    2. Re:ATTENTION C64 POLICE!! by fishexe · · Score: 0

      But what is the factual problem with his post?

      There isn't. Some AC and I just want people to be aware that he's out there making a bunch of other trollsome posts, some of which are getting modded up by unaware moderators. That's all.

      --
      "I don't care about the Constitution!" --Bill O'Reilly, November 17, 2009
    3. Re:ATTENTION C64 POLICE!! by cpu6502 · · Score: 0

      Allow me to address your post, minus the Personal attacks.

      Unfortunately there was nothing left for me to respond to. Sorry.

      --
      My AC stalker: " I personally agree with your posts most of the time, but that won't keep me from modding you troll"
    4. Re:ATTENTION C64 POLICE!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      So you went out of your way on at least two different posts of his, both of which were topical, just to let people know that you think it's a sockpuppet.

      Well, frankly I'm relieved that Slashdot has forum enforcement now.
      Stay topical yourself, chief, and leave the OMGSOMEONESWRONGONTHEINTERNET BS to some other forum.

    5. Re:ATTENTION C64 POLICE!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Okay, address the part where commodore64_love is claimed to be the same person as cpu6502.

      That's not a personal attack, that's an indication of you maintaining more than 1 active account, which violates lots of peoples expectations regarding behavior on this forum.

    6. Re:ATTENTION C64 POLICE!! by spun · · Score: 2

      You are a sockpuppet. You use multiple accounts because you are a known troll and have fucked up your original account, but you are so damn dumb, you make all your sockpuppets Commodore related. All these Commodore related accounts started popping up right around the time the c64_lurv got chopped at the knees. And they all write the same bullshit in exactly the same way. We know who you are, m'kay? Most of us just don't give a shit. We know its you, and so we just ignore you like we always have. But some people here apparently just fucking hate suckpoppets like you, and judging from past experience, they will never stop hounding you.

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
  75. ATTENTION C64 POLICE!! by fishexe · · Score: 0

    This account is yet another sockpuppet for commodore64_love. We all have gotten sick of c64love due to his increasing tendency to troll in recent months, and as a result he has negative karma and can only post once per day, or something like that. Problem solved, right? NO! He has created a legion of sockpuppet accounts, including C_amiga_fan, commodore_6502, theaveng, and now this one. The others have been modded into oblivion, as they deserve, but this one is, somehow, able to post at Score: 2. This is possibly due to a recent misleading post which several mods hit +1 Insightful on (because it sounded good at first read) without bothering to check the source and discover the original source conveys the opposite sentiment to that which cpu6502/c64love is pretending it conveys. So, without further ado, please go take care of this problem if you care about this community we call Slashdot and don't wish to see it ruined by mindless trolls.

    --
    "I don't care about the Constitution!" --Bill O'Reilly, November 17, 2009
  76. Where is the hightech robots? by Sla$hPot · · Score: 1

    Where is the hightech robots that Japan is known for?
    Isn't it strange that there is no autonomous or even remote controlled vehicles ready for cooling the fuel rods.
    This would be the showcase of all times, to show what automated vehicles can do.
    North Korea has armed robots that can move about and shoot down apples at more than a one mile distance.
    US has several advanced military robots.
    Example: http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/systems/ground/ugv.htm
    But why don't we have firefighting robots or a fuel rod excavator.
    It shouldn't take more than a day to rig an excavator with fire a hose.
    Just like during the oil well fires set of by Saddam under operation desert storm.
    Engineers added jet engines to fire hoses and mounted them to tanks with great success.
    Why haven't we seen the same kind of enginuity from the Japanese.
    Dropping water from helicopters is ridiculous and probably just causes more problems to the exposed fuel rods.

    And can anybody tell how much plutonium the area (nearest 300km) can take before you have to abandon it permanently?
    And how far will the cloud spread if all the rods decide to ignite and puff into the air?
    How many kilo's of plutonium does it takes to kill the pacific ocean?
    How does plutonium mix with air and water. Does the heavy atoms fall out or will they just float about for days/weeks/months?

    Ups.! That was a lot of questions.

    1. Re:Where is the hightech robots? by rubycodez · · Score: 1

      Have you seen the pictures of the buildings and debris around them? Ever been in a nuke plant? Your unmanned vehicle is going to climb stairs or industrial ladders to put these hoses and pumps and support equipment in? The famous japanese robots clean houses and clear dishes from tables for old people.

    2. Re:Where is the hightech robots? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are robots that are meant for working with reactors, however radiation plays havoc with most electrical circuits.

    3. Re:Where is the hightech robots? by Sla$hPot · · Score: 1

      Have you seen the pictures of the buildings and debris around them?
      I think it looks like the ruins left over from a war.

      Ever been in a nuke plant?

      Erhmm..no.

      Your unmanned vehicle is going to climb stairs or industrial ladders to put these hoses and pumps and support equipment in?

      I don't think that stair climbing is necessary to get to the fuel rods.

      The famous japanese robots clean houses and clear dishes from tables for old people.

      Technically thats a lot more complicated than moving a vehicle over random obstacles.
      That is why I don't understand why FEPC don't have a crane or a tank rigged with a fire hoses.
      Getting close to the hot spot would help a lot, compared to dumping water from a helicopter.
      Perhaps the rods could be knocked into each other causing the meltdown to accelerate.
      Radiosity can also destroy the electronic circuits used to control the helicopter and could cause the aircraft to crash.

    4. Re:Where is the hightech robots? by rubycodez · · Score: 1

      I've worked at a nuke plant. stairs everywhere. reactor and containment vessel is over 100 feet tall, fuel pool is above that in this design. lots and lots of climbing.

    5. Re:Where is the hightech robots? by Sla$hPot · · Score: 1

      I've worked at a nuke plant. stairs everywhere. reactor and containment vessel is over 100 feet tall, fuel pool is above that in this design. lots and lots of climbing.

      Ok i get the picture.

  77. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by oddaddresstrap · · Score: 2

    The problem in Japan is that the rods in question are in cooling ponds with no coolant. They are outside the containment (ie, not in the reactor). The power company itself said yesterday that "The possibility of re-criticality is not zero". You're probably right in that they'll most likely get water back into the ponds and things will settle down. Keep your fingers crossed. There are three ponds in this state and the engineers don't seem to know if the ponds are even able to hold water after the earthquake.

  78. Godzilla is about to be born (reborn?) by Nyder · · Score: 1

    Don't worry anyone, Godzilla is just making a come back.

    --
    Be seeing you...
  79. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    Stop.
    Lying.

    Please. Shut. The. Hell. Up. You have zero clue what you are stating, and are showing yourself to be either a shill for the oil/coal companies, or just too clueless to know better. By chance, are you being paid by Fox News?

    Do you have any idea of the lies you are spouting? It is not going to blow up even if all the rods turn into one big blob, just because the uranium is not the right isotope. If this were the case, Iran would just empty all the rods from an existing facility and use that in their devices, as opposed to all the work with the centrifuges.

    Nuclear power 101. Yes, power reactors get hot, but they do not get even near a mass critical enough to do a detonation. No reactor ever designed would do this. Yes, they will melt, but they will not be turning into a Fat Man ever.

    At least learn about the subject you are trying to scare people on. As of now, your post history shows that you are a liar, a troll, a shill of a company/organization who wants nuclear power killed, or mindlessly spouting someone else's rhetoric that you do not understand.

  80. Re:So by Dunbal · · Score: 1

    Just like 1000 MICROsieverts is different than, say, an invading German army.

    --
    Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
  81. Even more so. by formfeed · · Score: 1
    This is happening in Japan. A highly developed and highly organized country with a educated civil society proud of their organizational skills, disaster plans, and government services.

    A similar accident in a third world country would result in something much more harmful to the world as a whole. And third world countries are the place where nuclear power is growing massively.

  82. This is not an "unprecedented" event by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've heard many people saying a natural disaster this severe wasn't expected, that the engineering of the reactors did a great job surviving such a serious earthquake, and that it's "only because of the tsunami" knocking out the backup systems an hour later that things have gotten so bad.

    It is truly impressive that the reactors tolerated the shaking from a M8+ earthquake with minor damage. But the impression that the system has broken down only because this event is so far out of the range of what's normally expected here is a complete load of nonsense. Any geologist who has studied the region knows this, including plenty of them in Japan. The current event is not significantly worse than events that have happened over Japan's history. What you saw on the TV as the tsunami swept across the landscape was astonishing to most people because these events are so rare, but they DO happen, and are expected to happen again. If you asked a knowledgeable geologist before this event "could a M8+ earthquake and a 7-metre tsunami occur here", they would say "Yes, because it's happened here before". If you ask for details they would even be able to tell you how far the many previous tsunami flooded the terrain, and be able to give you an estimate of the expected frequency for these rare events. Then you could crunch the numbers to decide whether to build for what's been actually experienced before or cross your fingers and hope that it won't happen in your lifetime.

    Look at this list of major historical tsunami, and how many of them are in Japan. For a particularly instructive example, in AD869 an estimated M8.4 earthquake happened off the same coast and produced a tsunami that extended 4km inland and was several metres high. There is no practical difference in terms of effects from that 869 event versus the current one along the Sendai plain, except that the area being inundated has many more people now. Many of the cities are built on top of the sediment deposits and ruins from the previous tsunami, such as Tagajo, which was again severely damaged in this one.

    This is the reality people aren't getting yet: the Fukushima nuclear plant was built in a spot that had experienced tsunami on par with this one, and the operators were foolish enough to do it without adequate protection for backup systems from a several-metres-high tsunami -- the expected range from historical events. What's unfolding at Fukushima is not a demonstration of some amazing engineering toughing it out from a severe and "unprecedented" event, it is a demonstration of a really serious failure to build for the known natural conditions of the site. The same could be said for any other nuclear plants along this coastline that aren't designed to handle multi-metre tsunami.

    1. Re:This is not an "unprecedented" event by fnj · · Score: 1

      +1, insightful.

    2. Re:This is not an "unprecedented" event by Muad'Dave · · Score: 1

      As another poster said, it's reasonable to engineer to a once-in-a-thousand-years standard. It sounds like they where only off by 142 years.

      --
      Tiller's Rule: Never use a word in written form that you've only heard and never read. You will end up looking foolish.
    3. Re:This is not an "unprecedented" event by maxume · · Score: 1

      That 'reasonable' depends an awful lot on the costs involved.

      If building the tsunami resistance to a 10,000 year standard increased the lifetime costs of the plant by 0.01%, I wouldn't call it reasonable to engineer them to a 1,000 year standard.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
  83. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by MechaStreisand · · Score: 2

    It sure takes some balls to publicly display the level of ignorance required to believe that this could turn into a nuclear blast. Gotta commend you for that, at least.

    --
    Disclaimer: IANAL. This post is, however, legal advice, and creates an attorney-client relationship.
  84. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by Dunbal · · Score: 1

    Well to be fair the plant was designed and installed by GE.

    --
    Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
  85. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

    Oh jeez. While true, it really shows the expectations of science education in the US. I mean who is a sentence like that aimed at? Kids? They don't know what the Hindenburg is? Seniors? They invented the hydrogen bomb. People should know what hydrogen is.

    Look, this example pertains to a whole other discipline, but when my lady and I went to Panama and we were checking in at the airline counter the girl at the terminal there said "Panama? You mean, like the island?" I don't remember what my response was, but I have to admit that it wasn't to educate.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  86. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by Dunbal · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Nuclear blasts involve supercritical masses, not critical masses. That's why you have the whole "explosives to compress the core" thing dontcha know. While criticality will produce a shitload of nasty (read gamma rays) radiation as opposed to less harmful alpha and beta particles, and it would also produce enough heat to melt and even vaporize the fuel, leading to a nice plume of radioactive material, you are NOT going to get a "nuclear blast". EVER. So how about learning some physics if you want to keep coming to this site?

    --
    Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
  87. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by Dunbal · · Score: 1

    You know that with hindsight, the Japanese government is probably going to consider processing these fuel rods now instead of leaving them lying around, in a pool or otherwise...

    --
    Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
  88. Having your country invaded is a bit different by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Having your country invaded by the most effective army ever seen on the planet is a bit different from being miles away from the really very safe nuclear station in a completely different country.

    Reminds me of Rambo being too scared to fly to the UK because of terror threats after 11/9.

    Also the double standard wrt terrorism: IRA blows up people in UK for decades: pay the IRA fundraisers money for "the Auld country" and hide the "political prisoners" seeking sanctuary. ONE attack on US soil and it's all "this is the WORST ATROCITY EVER!!!".

    Americans.

    Bunch of pussies.

    1. Re:Having your country invaded is a bit different by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Does it still count as an invasion when you let them in without a fight?

    2. Re:Having your country invaded is a bit different by phoenix321 · · Score: 1

      No, that would be politically incorrect. The correct term is "enrichment", no matter it it makes the state poor.

  89. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by sycodon · · Score: 1

    If they can't even get fundemental information like this correct, how are we to trust any other hyperbole, I mean"news", they publish?

    --
    When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
  90. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, don't want to sound like a dick or nothin', but, ah... it says on your chart that you're fucked up. Ah, you talk like a fag, and your shit's all retarded.

  91. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by Hijacked+Public · · Score: 1

    I'll note here that I know little about nuclear power or nuclear reactor design. I know enough to throw out the obvious lies told by the extremes from each side.

    So I'm wondering, if the containment system can handle a meltdown just fine, why are they going to such great lengths to try to cool it despite having undergone at least a partial meltdown?

    I can see the owners of the plant wanting to save their economic investment by doing everything possible to save it. And very small releases of radioactive iodine in vented steam or the like is probably an acceptable tradeoff. But at this point is the facility recoverable? If not, why not evacuate the workers and let the core melt into containment? Then construct something specifically to cool that, so it can be dealt with.

    Serious questions, that nag at me anytime I see an assertion that this reactor design can handle a meltdown just fine.

    --
    "Sacrifice for the good of The State" - The State
  92. Recycled Headline by MrKane · · Score: 0

    This is a very similar headline to one the BBC were running yesterday: Japan earthquake: US alarm over nuclear crisis
    I'm not sure the content of the article is much better either. The Register's Lewis Page has been running some quite sensible, albeit pro-nuclear reports on this.

  93. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by Low+Ranked+Craig · · Score: 1

    I thought you were traveling to a song from 1984.

    --
    I still cannot find the droids I am looking for...
  94. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're perfectly right, corium won't turn into plutonium then cause a nuclear blast (fat man was a plutonium bomb)

  95. The Horses Mouth by meekg · · Score: 2

    http://www.tepco.co.jp/en/press/corp-com/release/index-e.html

    Just read the Fukushima updates. How come nobody links to this?

    If the #4 pool is NOT dry, then that NRC official should be fired...

    That said, I can't understand why the spend fuel pool is not inside any containment structure and not at ground level.
    This is not a "First generation product" issue. This is a cost savings issue.

    1. Re:The Horses Mouth by rubycodez · · Score: 1

      That particular horse has already been proven to be lying low-balling ass to protect shareholder value. Also to have covered up many nuclear plant accidents in the past, quite infamous in Japan for that.

      NHK world news is some better.

      However, in the case of this particular issue, the pool may not be dry (would have expected metal cladding fire by now if it were), it's the word of helicopter pilot who saw water vs. workers who said boiling and near bottom two days ago. NHK says US will fly unmanned drones to ascertain true coolant level

    2. Re:The Horses Mouth by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      That said, I can't understand why the spend fuel pool is not inside any containment structure and not at ground level.
      This is not a "First generation product" issue. This is a cost savings issue.

      It is a cost saving issue - it's very freaking expensive to build a separate containment system for the pool and contained and secure method of moving the fuel between the two. Not to mention that increasing the handling of the fuel and moving it longer distances increases the chance of an accident during that handling. (The Brits had a fuel bundle catch fire because the truck moving it from the reactor to the pool broke down.)
       
      I know we'd all like everything to be perfectly safe and 110% secure - but in the real world of engineering, that's just not possible. There isn't infinite cash, nor is there always a 'perfectly safe and secure' sweet spot on the trade-off matrix.

    3. Re:The Horses Mouth by cartman · · Score: 1

      That said, I can't understand why the spend fuel pool is not inside any containment structure and not at ground level.

      The main spent fuel pool is actually separate from the reactor, even in Fukushima. However, each reactor has its own small spent fuel pool for recently used fuel. It's located on top of the reactor.

      I think the reason that the small spent fuel pool is located on top of the reactor, is because they load the fuel using a crane from above, and it's very quick to move the fuel from the reactor to that pool.

  96. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by fnj · · Score: 1

    Yes, it was a comparatively shit design. The mirror image of that is that the Japanese accepted and bought the shit design. You get what you pay for.

  97. This just brings up more questions by MobyDisk · · Score: 1

    Japanese officials denied that the water is gone from the spent-fuel pool, the Associated Press reported.

    Severe structural damage is the only way the fuel pool could be emptied, Helwig said. The 50-foot-deep pools have no outlets at the bottom, thus preventing them from draining in case of an accident.

    So there's no confirmation that they lost the water, and no one can explain how that could possibly happen. That water shouldn't get hot enough to boil. Supposedly, the earthquake didn't damage the structure. I wouldn't expect a giant wave of water to result in a sudden lack of water...

    If the fuel pools are exposed to the air, the radiation doses coming from them could be life-threatening up to 50 yards, Alvarez said.

    Yards... not miles. :-)

    1. Re:This just brings up more questions by rubycodez · · Score: 1

      One of the scenarios for Chernobyl-scale disaster at any nuke plant that needs to eject spent fuel, that does not involve reactor at all, is that earthquake or attack cracks the spent fuel pool sufficiently that replenishment isn't possible. Been well known and warned about for decades in the industry, but mostly ignored in that backup circulation and cooling systems don't exist at many plants for the pools.

  98. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by mcvos · · Score: 1

    The mistake was also that a nuclear power plant near a fault line was only designed to withstand a 7.9 earthquake. That's good enough for most earthquakes, but bigger earthquakes are possible, and with something as dangerous as risky as nuclear power, you don't want to take any chances.

    Another mistake is that it relied on outside infrastructure for cooling. When off-site power dropped, they had to rely on diesel generators which lost their fuel due to the tsunami, and the backup batteries didn't have enough power to run the cooling system for the days required to cool everything down.

    Personally I think nuclear power plants need some sort of passive cooling system that works automatically, even if everybody on the site drops dead and all outside power is cut. No idea what such a system would look like, though.

  99. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by srobert · · Score: 1

    Have you ever actually been to the United States?
    You can't underestimate how much exposition is required to explain a technology story to an American audience.

    Also,
    "Everything will be fine. Just remember one thing. You can't put too much water in a nuclear reactor."

  100. You do not understand the subject matter by dbIII · · Score: 1

    In terms of actual constructed nuclear reactors this IS A MODERN DESIGN mainly because it has been updated with extra safety features over the years. Westinghouse will sell you something very much like it now and I believe there is a similar plant under construction (it's late and I can't remember where - look it up yourself since you're interested in nuclear power or just assume I'm wrong if you like).
    What you are talking about as "modern" is prototypes like China's new pebble bed reactors (designed to never be able to fail this way), a plant under construction in India and other stuff that has not even been designed yet let alone tested - it's the stuff of the future instead of "modern".

    1. Re:You do not understand the subject matter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Eh, Mk-1 containment? Pretty damn sure nobody's selling those anymore, since like the '70s.

      Lack of turbine-power for the ECCS (and hence, reliance on backup generators, which were lost in the tsunami? That's fixed, too (in BWR-5, I think, but I'm not certain).

      Yeah, there's much confusion out there between the new intrinsically safe designs, and the modern revisions of old designs that make up the bulk of recent installations. But make no mistake, modern BWRs are significantly safer than this relic.

    2. Re:You do not understand the subject matter by rubycodez · · Score: 1

      Westinghouse would sell a boiling water reactor (BWR)? with a Mark I containment system? A generation I or II reactor requiring active cooling? Utter Bullshit. What they would sell is a Generation III+ like the AP1000, decades of experience ahead of this obsolete GE BWR crap.

    3. Re:You do not understand the subject matter by speroni · · Score: 1

      Westinghouse is building the AP1000 plant. First 4 are in China and the next for are in the us in Georgia and South Carolina.

      The AP1000 is much better in design than the 40 year old fukushima plants. To point out one major difference the AP1000 reactor coolant loop has been designed to support natural convection, which means in the case of loss of offsite power and loss of back-up diesel generators, the AP1000 will continue to cool the core.

      --
      Eschew Obfuscation
  101. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by binarylarry · · Score: 1

    We're also lucky that we have a huge amount of land.

    The Japan have a (relatively) tiny island and massive power requirements. What else are they going to do?

    --
    Mod me down, my New Earth Global Warmingist friends!
  102. Ironic ... by CensorshipDonkey · · Score: 1

    Does anyone find it ironic that the problem was caused when a giant, nuclear electricity plant was damaged by a lack of electricity?

    1. Re:Ironic ... by rubycodez · · Score: 1

      There are newer designs that have emergency cooling systems that can run off of residual heat. Shame we're not using those and our advances have 30 year gap because of past hysteria over accident that was properly contained. I'm a huge fan of generation III+ and IV type systems, there would be no issues in Japan now were they using such (they do have new Gen III at other sites)

    2. Re:Ironic ... by ShavedOrangutan · · Score: 1

      I have to wonder if this would have happened if they'd left one of the reactors operating during the quake. Shutting them all down and relying on external power seems to be the root of the problem.

      But, yeah, how could lack of electricity be a problem? It's a nuclear fricken power plant!!

      --
      Godaddy is a scam and a ripoff.
    3. Re:Ironic ... by cartman · · Score: 1

      It's ironic, but it has long been recognized as a danger. When a nuclear power plant loses all power, it's called a "station blackout," and is regarded as one of the most dangerous things that can happen at a nuclear power plant. That's why they have so many backup diesel generators (which were all inundated by the tsunami).

  103. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by wytcld · · Score: 1

    Don't have the link right now, but read a news item yesterday asserting that TEPCO had specifically claimed, several years ago, that each of their plants was fully capable of surviving a tsunami. So maybe it's true that they didn't really expect a tsunami. Maybe they just said they had fully anticipated tsunami damage, and were prepared for it, while they told themselves it would never happen, and their public statements were just so much PR.

    --
    "with their freedom lost all virtue lose" - Milton
  104. Re:Hindenburg by tsm_sf · · Score: 1

    Too soon, too soon.

    --
    Literalism isn't a form of humor, it's you being irritating.
  105. Re:THIS IS NOT HAPPENING. by SaroDarksbane · · Score: 0

    How can you be so in love with nuclear that even when four reactors are in various states of melting down and leaking dangerous amounts of radiation into the environment that you find it necessary to attack any doubts on the supposed safety and environmental goodness of nuclear power?

    Because people who don't form knee-jerk opinions based only on what they hear on cable television might know that even with disasters (this, Chernobyl, TMI, etc.), nuclear still remains the safest technology per amount of energy produced. All other forms of energy production (except perhaps geothermal), if scaled up to the amount of energy produced for us by nuclear power, would harm many more people.

  106. radiation sickness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://science.slashdot.org/story/09/07/17/1231204/Cure-For-Radiation-Sickness-Found

  107. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by wytcld · · Score: 1

    Your passive cooling system might utilize the heat from the rods to circulate water in a closed loop. You might need a very large reservoir of water - or something like a massive radiator - to dissipate the heat. And I've no idea how to translate the heat into circulation with the fewest moving parts.

    But in this case, if they'd kept one of the reactors running, to generate the power to run the cooling to keep the whole complex stable, wouldn't they be far ahead of the game? Still, even when you shut them "off," they aren't really off, so there should be a way to capture some of the continuing heat to run pumps to cool the reactors.

    --
    "with their freedom lost all virtue lose" - Milton
  108. capital it fails us now by djfake · · Score: 1

    given the man's insatiable desire for electricity it seems ironic that any nuclear plant is run for-profit.

    --
    www.itjerk.com
  109. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'd equate allowing a reactor to meltdown instead of making any attempts to cool it at its current state to letting a wastepaper fire in a corporate office burn the place down (while protecting the surrounding buildings) instead of attempting to use an extinguisher or built in fire suppression system to put it out.

    Letting the cores melt means releasing a massive amount of heat and radiation in the last level of containment that you don't know for sure is stable after the earthquake. It's containable and able to be cleaned (albeit a decade down the road), but why would you let it get to that state when you have tools at your disposal to fix it now. It won't be a functioning reactor after dousing it with seawater, but at least you can clean it up and build a new one. A melted core won't be so easy.

    The great lengths they are going to cool the reactors now are nothing compared to the time and length they will have to go to clean up a melted core.

  110. Cultural mindset by MaWeiTao · · Score: 1

    While the Western media is truly sensationalizing this, attitudes in Asia are different than those in the West. Americans and Europeans are far more cynical of technology, corporations and government than Japanese are. So they're far more likely to question everything. Japanese, on the other hand, are more likely to trust that the experts have the situation contained. Just because they aren't worried, doesn't mean there isn't a real problem there.

  111. Re:ATTENTION C64 POLICE by cpu6502 · · Score: 0

    Dear Fishexe:

    Please allow me to address your message, but without the ad hominem attacks (logical flaw):

    .....

    Unfortunately after I deleted the ad-homs, there was nothing left. Maybe you should try rewriting your posts based on FACTS and leave out the personal insults. Thank you.

    --
    My AC stalker: " I personally agree with your posts most of the time, but that won't keep me from modding you troll"
  112. Money. by FatSean · · Score: 1

    Problem is the same everywhere. Replacing the design would negate years of profits, so why not take the risk that it won't happen! Then, if things go really bad, the country as a whole gets to pay for the cleanup.

    Smells like the usual "privatise the profits, socialise the risk/cost" BS we've been seeing.

    --
    Blar.
  113. No. by FatSean · · Score: 1

    First, I'll ask for a source of your claim. Second, I didn't realize anti-nuclear protestors were so powerful all of a sudden :D

    --
    Blar.
    1. Re:No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://www.greenpeace.org/france/campagnes/nucleaire/fiches-thematiques/l-epr

      Citation: "C'est le réacteur plus puissant au monde, mais aussi le plus dangereux. "
      Translation "This si the most powerful reactor in the world but also the most dangerous".

      So the newer french design with two containing vaults, the corium recoverer and 4 independent control system
      is more dangerous than the russian RBMK that had no safety features at all. I'm not claiming it's a safe design or not,
      just showing how newer reactors are claimed to be less safe than older ones.

  114. Nobody doesn't love molten boron. by FatSean · · Score: 1

    And this is just one more reason why.

    --
    Blar.
  115. Boron Glass as a Nuclear Quencher? by grikdog · · Score: 1

    So... Apparenly, Korea is dragging its heels about supplying Japan with enough boric acid to shut down those four nuclear reactors damaged by the Sendai temblor.

    Makes sense, in a strictly technical way. It takes millions of dollars to refine uranium to the point it can be used in a reactor. So if the reactor core gets out of control, what you do is unrefine it.

    I don't know what they used at Chernoble, but in Japan they'd like to use Boron, a neutron quencher one spot left of Carbon, which was Fermi's control rod in the first sustained nuclear pile ever (Stagg Stadium, University of Chicago, 1942).

    How do you deliver something like that to a hot nuclear core in Japan? I'd recommend 20-Mule Team Borax, tons of the stuff, maybe melted into a couple hundred tons of potmetal, tin and pewter. Once the reaction is diluted to the cooling point, what you got left is a chunk of high-quality uranium ore.

    And, as any potter with experience mixing glazes can tell you, you don't want pure elements in your glaze anyway, you want the pre-mixed kind, the fully-adulterated mixtures provided by aeons of geological weathering.

    Just a thought....

    --
    ``Tension, apprehension & dissension have begun!'' - Duffy Wyg&, in Alfred Bester's _The Demolished Man_
    1. Re:Boron Glass as a Nuclear Quencher? by Animats · · Score: 1

      Actually, they've been using boric acid mixed with seawater.

      (Incidentally, names of elements are not capitalized.)

  116. Cooling the fuel rods -- Wait, What? by Sectoid_Dev · · Score: 1

    So are the reactors continuing to generate heat? or are those things just so hot that they are extremely difficult to cool without active cooling It seems any cooling done would produce a slow but steady lower temperature. Do they just not have enough time to let things cool down with the sea water that flashes into steam because the heat is damaging the containment vessel?

    I keep thinking about it in terms of my water cooled computers if the pump broke. Sure there is water in the system, but if it doesn't move it gets hot quickly and doesn't cool, then one of the lines break. But can you turn off the computer? or does it matter?

    1. Re:Cooling the fuel rods -- Wait, What? by DCFusor · · Score: 1
      When the fuel is fresh -- uranium and perhaps plutonium for the MOX type, yeah, it doesn't self heat much unless you are chain reacting with neutrons. That has been stopped all the way in all the reactors.
      However fission -- look it up -- means splitting atoms. In other words, the fuel becomes full of the results of that, some of which are extremely short half life, and make plenty of heat with no chain reaction at all going on, just normal (for the resulting isotopes) radioactive decay, as the fission products are mostly unstable. This is because things like uranium and plutonium have a lot more neutrons per proton than any stable ligher element, and the extra neutrons cause the reaction products to be unstable, usually decaying via beta (a neutron becomes a proton and emits an electron) or alpha (emission of a helium nucleus) and gamma (photons) due to the excitation of the recently busted up nucleus.
      At end of life, a fuel rod makes about 7% of the heat just sitting there as it would at full chain-reacting output. (why they let it go that far I don't know, but I'd guess economics). This might not seem like a lot, but remember if you were producing say 1 gigawatt thermal normally, that would still be 70 million watts of heat for the whole core, even after all the chain reactions have stopped. Hence the need to continue active cooling long after the reactor has been "scrammed". It's not that it's hot (it is) but that it's still making more heat.
      That's a lot of heat being produced -- it's not just how hot (thermally) they started out, they are still making new heat. Most of it is from very unstable (and thus short lived) isotopes decaying, and after a fairly short time that 7% becomes a far smaller number. But until then, a spent fuel element is sitting there making quite a lot of heat.

      Clear that up for you?

      The fuel itself can't burn -- it's already an oxide. The danger is the rods, which are made of a zirconium alloy, can burn, and release the fuel and byproducts, most of which are quite nasty for awhile. Further, at high temperatures, zirconium (or for that matter a lot of things) can split water in to hydrogen and oxygen, giving you a chemical explosion risk that can spread bad things around.
      Zirconium is used as it doesn't itself absorb neutrons very well, and the other choices are all worse -- Beryllium is for example poisonous all by itself. Carbon catches fire...we only have the periodic table to choose from.

      --
      Why guess when you can know? Measure!
    2. Re:Cooling the fuel rods -- Wait, What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ahh... but that's the hundred million refugee question, isn't it? Will the fuel rods remain straight and upright, merely spewing cesium and iodine into the atmosphere, or will they twist and melt into slag on the bottoms of their respective reactors or cooling pools, go prompt critical again and ruin everybody's lunch in the western hemisphere for the next twenty to forty thousand years, give or take?

    3. Re:Cooling the fuel rods -- Wait, What? by rubycodez · · Score: 1

      Even when not critical, decay processes in fuel make the reactor give off 6% of full power energy. You might be interested to know, even after a year one rod (about a ton) gives off 10KW of heat energy. after 10 years, 1 KW of energy. They remove fuel from pond and put in cask storage from 10 to 20 year mark, cask has to be designed to provide robust air cooling or bad things can still happen!

  117. I am now more afraid of nuclear for other reasons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't doubt that nuclear power could theoretically be made very safe. However, a requirement for that is a lot of transparency and that the issue is taken extremely seriously. And I've always thought that it is being taken. That chernobyl couldn't happen again not only because technology has advanced but also because modern nations won't repeat those same errors (A lot of people died because the government wasn't honest about the crisis, etc.).

    However now that we have something of a crisis in Japan, we hear a lot of alarming details. Wikileaks leaked that two years ago the plant received a warning that it wouldn't withstand a major earthquake but nothing was done. Apparently it is questionable whether Japanese government and the company involved are honest about the severity of the situation. etc.

    I'm not affraid because of what is happening: OK, a major natural disaster and some radiation leaks out. I'm much more concerned that one of the nations that I consider very trustworthy doesn't appear to deal with nuclear related issues with the honesty that is required to keep it safe. How many nuclear reactors around the world are managed poorly and not able to withstand the stuff that they should be? How could we know, now?

    It's a valid point to say "But that's not argument about nuclear energy. That's argument for more transparency and regulations in it". I just don't know whether transparency is realistic and whether regulators can be trusted.

  118. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by Pinky's+Brain · · Score: 1

    You can't process them right after they come out ... they have to "cool" down.

    To me it seems though that these storage pools should be holes in the ground ... so it can't leak as easily and you can at least fill them up with sand/rubble and top them off with concrete even if water does somehow drain away faster than you can fill it.

  119. Flaimbait by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is it just me? Or are rabid nuclear proponents somewhat subdued since the last slashdot summary on the subject? Their concern from the future of the proliferation of nuclear power appears now focused on trashing news outlets. Well, a step in the right direction. Welcome to the human race, brothers. No one wanted this to happen.

    I feel nuclear power could be made safe, but in doing so we edge closer and closer to economic inviability. Knowing what we know now, if only we could go back in time to the early 50's and realized we just didn't need so many reactors for bomb fuel, built safer designs without that constraint, and poured more resources into solar power, then today no one would be saying solar was too expensive or not green enough.

    1. Re:Flaimbait by rubycodez · · Score: 1

      Modern designs would have no problems in the present scenario, no active cooling and no ejection of spent fuel into a cooling pool for 10 to 20 years needed. I'm pro-modern nuclear, but this obsolete shit designed in the 1950s has got to go (not the 60s as some imagine, there was more than 10 years delay)

    2. Re:Flaimbait by ShooterNeo · · Score: 1

      Umm, the best modern designs have a big tank of water at the top of the plant, so that a passive feed of water cools the reactor. It eliminates the need for an active electric pump - but you still get a radioactive mess if the piping breaks, and you still get a mess if the water in the tank leaks out from the same damage that killed the main cooling...

      Pebble bed reactors are as of yet unproven, and they aren't compatible with existing fuel pellet technology which will drive the cost up.

    3. Re:Flaimbait by rubycodez · · Score: 1

      piping won't break, the Fukushima plant piping was damaged by hydrogen explosion of which the root cause was need for active cooling. You might speculate about a plane or bomb being launched at containment building, but reality is anything short of a tactical nuke isn't going to do much.

  120. Re:Hindenburg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Its a type of very smelly cheese. Get a brain moran.

  121. Re:You are aware, aren't you... by davidgay · · Score: 1

    [...] so that we can check for proper spelling?

    Spoken like somebody who has never paid any attention to the difficulty of transliterating (not translating) Cyrillic.

    As an example, from wikipedia (and note that the first letter of Tchaikovsky is the same as the first letter of Chernobyl...):

    His names are also transliterated "Piotr" or "Petr"; "Ilitsch", "Il'ich" or "Illyich"; and "Tschaikowski", "Tschaikowsky", "Chajkovskij" and "Chaikovsky" (and other versions; the transliteration varies among languages).

  122. If only... by denzacar · · Score: 1

    ...we were typing this in Ukrainian and using Ukrainian transliteration instead of English.
    Or do you suggest we all start using our native languages for discussion? How 'bout alphabets? We already got a Japanese version so...

    --
    Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens
    1. Re:If only... by rubycodez · · Score: 1

      No, but there is more than one system for rendering Ukrainian into English, Chornobyl is one common alternative. The starting letter that looks like a backwards four or funny Y to Roman alphabet user is often transliterated as Tj

    2. Re:If only... by dunkelfalke · · Score: 1

      It is neither a common alternative nor a different system. "Chornobyl" is the transliteration from Ukrainian, "Chernobyl" from Russian, that's all.

      --
      "It's such a fine line between stupid and clever" -- David St. Hubbins, Spinal Tap
    3. Re:If only... by rubycodez · · Score: 1

      Tj is international transliteration, I've seen Tjernobyl in many of my nuke plant docs, type in google earth and you'll zoom right over there

    4. Re:If only... by dunkelfalke · · Score: 1

      Not really. It is Swedish or Danish. International transliteration from Cyrillic uses the Czech character "c with hacek" for the ch sound according to the ISO 9 standard.

      --
      "It's such a fine line between stupid and clever" -- David St. Hubbins, Spinal Tap
  123. It is where I'm from... by denzacar · · Score: 1

    If we're gonna talk about alphabets.

    Then again, that is a bit of a "oranges and tangerines" situation there, with tsar, tzar, czar being variations of transliterations of a single term from several languages, with added s-z letter-play for British-American variations. Bonus points for the word originally being a distorted form of Caesar.
    Kinda the way Charlmagne transformed into the word meaning the king in Slavic languages.

    On the other hand, Chernobil has only one correct transliteration into English.
    Or are you suggesting we also start calling it Cherunobiru or whatever the transliteration from Ukrainian to Japanese to English may be, considering that this is a story about a nuclear accident in Japan?
    Or should I start writing all names in my native language as well (whatever its name may be this week)?
    ernobil. Naaah... wouldn't work. Slashdot keeps eating my characters.

    --
    Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens
    1. Re:It is where I'm from... by spun · · Score: 1

      Just drop it dude. No one is buying your side of it. The more you argue, the more foolish you look.

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
  124. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by rubycodez · · Score: 1

    absolutely false, an uncontrolled fuel pool fire would release many times the contamination of a Chernobyl. Chernobyl ejected 40% of its 180 tons of fuel, a spent fuel pool has hundreds of tons of contaminated fuel.

  125. Re:Japanese Say SDK has Spotted Water in #4 Pool by Bobfrankly1 · · Score: 1

    Japanese dispute claim of no water in #4, claim helicopter crew was able to see water but the level isn't known. Last night saw on HNK news the U.S. will fly unmanned drones to verify water level, as getting close to pools involves very high exposure.

    I hope they remember to disarm this one...

  126. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by Petaris · · Score: 2

    From what I was reading a few days ago you just described the new type of reactor know as SBWR or the variation ESBWR (which is under review in the US) which I have heard referred to the Type III, while the reactors at this plant are Type II. The type III uses a passive cooling mechanism. You can read a bit more about them here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boiling_water_reactor (part way down the page).

    I would still be more interested in the type that lets us use up all of those spent fuel rods we have to deal with storing waste. The IFR or a relative of it is an idea but introduces liquid sodium as a coolant which could introduce other issues. Read about the IFR here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Integral_Fast_Reactor

    --
    ~Petaris "The world is open. Are you?"
  127. Reactor status info. by Animats · · Score: 1

    See the Japan Atomic Industrial Forum site for reactor status reports that have real information. The latest status report (22:00, March 17) Their table for the spent fuel pool in #4 says "Level low, preparing water injection, damage to fuel rods suspected."

    Reactors 1,2 and 3 still have water levels below the top of the core, and seawater injection continues. So they still haven't reached cold shutdown.

    Desperate attempts are being made to fill the spent fuel pool. which, incidentally, is well above ground level in a severely damaged building that has just had a fire. Radiation levels are too high for anyone to approach. Helicopter water drops have been tried. Military fire trucks, ones that can spray water without the operator getting out of the truck, are being used. "The effect of these operations is under evaluation".

  128. Re:Japanese Say SDK has Spotted Water in #4 Pool by slyborg · · Score: 1

    It's ridiculous that this is being quibbled over. It's apparently so dangerously radioactive in the area that people cannot approach to even look in the building. There was an explosion and fire of something that apparently generated intense radioactivity in unit 4. If there's still 100 gallons of boiling water left in the pool or not seems kind of irrelevant at this point.

  129. Re:THIS IS NOT HAPPENING. by prestonmichaelh · · Score: 1

    leaking dangerous amounts of radiation into the environment

    The problem with that is that there are not dangerous amount of radiation leaking into the environment. For a good, more informed, less bias summary, read here:

    http://theenergycollective.com/barrybrook/53461/fukushima-nuclear-accident-simple-and-accurate-explanation

    No one has died from radiation poising, and as of now, it doesn't look like anyone will. The major concern right now is a financial one, not an environmental or safety one. If they wanted, they could let the "cores melt down" and nothing really bad would happen. The cores would be contained in the designed containment chambers. The only downside is that you loose a lot of really expensive uranium and can't really put a new plant right there anymore.

    Also, take this into account, Chernobyl, which by all accounts was worse than Japan's situation could turn out to be killed between 28 and 700,000 people (depends on who you ask, but lets go with the "long term effects, people who got cancer in their 70s that maybe wouldn't have and use the 700,000). Each year in China alone, 700,000 die from air pollution related causes, mostly from coal power plants:

    http://www.pri.org/business/global-development/thousands-of-deaths-because-of-china-s-coal-energy2500.html

    In addition, on average 30+ workers die in China's coal mines each year. 28 workers total died in the Chernobyl meltdown.

    Coal kills way more people than nuclear energy has. It is kind of like terrorism in America. Everyone is going through crazy steps like the TSA to prevent another terrorist attack, even though your are 8 times more likely to be killed by a police officer than by a terrorist (in the USA).

    Is nuclear 100% safe, no it isn't. Neither is walking down the street or drinking water. The fact is we need energy for the world, to provide heating and cooling, to help produce food, and to help our economies grow. With the technologies out there right now, nuclear is, in my opinion, by far the best option. It is cleaner and safer than coal and is about the same cost per kwh. Hydroelectric would be better, but it is limited as to where you can put it. Solar and wind are great future technologies, but until efficiency is greatly improved and/or better storage techniques are developed, they can't supply the power requirements we have right now, much less in the future.

  130. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by Talderas · · Score: 1

    I read one article that made the statement that the tsunami was above the magnitude they had prepared for.

    --
    "Lack of speed can be overcome. In the worst case by patience." --Znork
  131. Media and panicking retards go hand in hand by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    People that are knowledge in radiation safety, come out and say that there is focus on the WRONG disaster. Tsunami and earthquake has killed 11,000+ people and counting. Lives are at risk because of fear. Thank god that Japanese are not panicking as much as the foreigners - foreigners in Japan are pretty much the only panicking folks.

    But retards in other countries are panicking too - look at the iodine tables sales in the US. Seriously, in Poland, they did a review of the effects of iodine to protect the thyroid after Chernobyl. They said that the iodine was given too late (in Poland's case) and that giving large doses of iodine resulted in large number of cases where people fucked up their thyroids, permanently. People will do that in the US - iodine is NOT safe and inert, it will overload your thyroid. Many countries already have small levels of iodine in salt so they are not deficient so they should NOT be taking these pills unless they are VERY CLOSE to the accident (like 20 km). In Poland's case, almost ALL cases of thyroid problems after Chernobyl were caused by "iodine supplementation". There were almost no problems in people that did not receive any iodine and Poland does not supplement salt with iodine either. BTW, I was 300km from Chernobyl, had no help, and lived there for years afterward. I'm still here. So did everyone I know there.

    In Ukraine, kids developed thyroid problems from Chernobyl because officials hid the problems, and the kids drank contaminated milk, milk from cows that ate contaminated grass immediately after radiation fell and lots of cows ended up dying from radiation.

    But look now, Kiev is OK and it's less than half the distance to Chernobyl than Tokyo - worse civilian radiation disaster to date.

    And what is actually very funny is US military, a nation with thousands of nuclear weapons, ready at hair trigger to destroy and irradiate the entire planet, is now also almost in freaking out too - at least some of the troops are, see the media.

    The US military is allowing families of troops stationed on the Japanese island of Honshu to leave, reports AFP news agency.

    And it is the same people that think nothing about using Uranium shells to blow holes in 1950s-era tanks only a few years ago in Iraq. Unfucking believable.

    some sane quotes of today's news,

    Gian, in Torino, writes: "I live in Italy, but my (Japanese) wife is in Japan and pregnant and could not travel. I believe what is happening is a terrible environmental crisis and there might be people who will never be able to see their homes again (if the worst case scenario comes true), but the situation is safe away from the area of the nuclear plant: yesterday the Italian relief agency tested for radiation on the roof of the Italian embassy in Tokyo, and they got a reading which is actually lower than the usual reading in Rome (where no nuclear power plants exist). This kind of news gets rapidly filtered out of the stream of sensationalist overdramatisation.

    Professor Gerry Thomas, the director of the Chernobyl tissue bank from Imperial College London, says too much emphasis is being put on the nuclear issue. "I think we're getting an accurate picture as far as the radiological alarm is concerned. What concerns me most is that we're actually focusing on the wrong disaster. The real disaster is the tsunami and the number of people who've lost their lives that way. We're focusing on a disaster that isn't a disaster."

  132. Cue the outcry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Cue the outcry about how all this is rubbish, nuclear power is perfectly safe, and it's all just lies made by up the liberal media.

    Slashdot is disconcertingly similar to Rush Limbaugh and Glenn Beck at times, really. We've got our opinions, it seems, and nothing anyone might say can change these, and if somebody says something that doesn't fit in with them, we accuse them of lies, of propaganda, of trying to manipulate the public for ulterior and (it is implied) sinister purposes.

    Wasn't being open to different points of view, basing your opinions on facts and arguments, and engaging in rational debate considered part of our defining characteristics, once? Whatever happened to that?

  133. Not the case... by denzacar · · Score: 1

    OP was using Swedish transliteration. Google Tjernobyl - you should get Swedish Wikipedia entry for Chernobyl among the first results.
    Chornobyl is transliteration into English of Ukrainian name for the place.
    Chernobyl is transliteration into English of Russian name for the place - the source of the word in most languages around the world as it was the name it became "famous" for. Russian being the language of the land and all, land being the former USSR.

    The starting letter that looks like a backwards four or funny Y to Roman alphabet user is often transliterated as Tj

    Nope. You are thinking of another Cyrillic letter. Chernobyl or Chornobyl - either word uses a much "harder and stronger" letter.
    Both are also available in latinic form.

    Not that Tj would be proper transliteration of either of those in English. Much too soft for "tshe", utterly wrong for "che".

    --
    Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens
  134. If we're gonna start throwing insults and all... by denzacar · · Score: 1

    Spoken like somebody who has never paid any attention to the difficulty of transliterating (not translating) Cyrillic.

    Spoken like someone whose native language is not Slavic...
    Just because your language can't handle affricates properly, doesn't mean everyone else can't handle 'em.

    And again... OP was mixing Swedish in with the English, along with displays of highly trollish and idiotic behavior.
    Personally, don't really have a problem with the first part, but it was easier to point at and make fun of.

    --
    Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens
  135. Drop it? by denzacar · · Score: 1

    Just drop it dude. No one is buying your side of it. The more you argue, the more foolish you look.

    But I paid for the full course!
    And I'll have you know, ladies quite like the way I look.

    --
    Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens
    1. Re:Drop it? by spun · · Score: 1

      I just don't find nerd catfights funny anymore. People get their back up, get defensive and find themselves backed into a corner with no face saving way out. It has happened to all of us, hearing that little voice in the back of our heads going, "God DAMN it, they are RIGHT and I am WRONG! This can not be! Maybe if I keep arguing they will go away before everyone realizes the truth..." I've been there. I mean, if you are smart, you are opinionated, because you are used to being right. Which makes it that much harder to admit when you really are wrong. And the tjernobyl guy, as right as he is about the transliteration, is still an idiot, which just makes it burn that much more.

      You know, on a dare from a girlfriend, I once tried to be an idiot for a week. She said I couldn't possibly do it, that there was no way I could act stupid and ignorant for a whole week, letting people think I was dumb, never chiming in with the "right" answer, asking questions instead of handing out facts. I lasted less than a day, trying to be stupid was psychological torture for me. But it helped me see how illogical my logic really was, how emotionally attached to being right I was, and I hope it helped me be less pedantic and more open to learning new things rather than assuming I already know them.

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    2. Re:Drop it? by denzacar · · Score: 1

      You know, on a dare from a girlfriend, I once tried to be an idiot for a week. She said I couldn't possibly do it, that there was no way I could act stupid and ignorant for a whole week, letting people think I was dumb, never chiming in with the "right" answer, asking questions instead of handing out facts. I lasted less than a day, trying to be stupid was psychological torture for me.

      Interesting experiment there.
      But besides being at a disadvantage (unless you go on a vacation or something) cause people you communicate already know you, I'm guessing that you would have to make some really stupid choices cause you'd be agreeing with a lot of stupid people.
      Cause, while I guess that one could put himself/herself into shoes of an idiot and develop a pattern of idiotic thinking/logic - it would be hard to un-remember all the stuff you picked up along the way so far.
      Stupid ain't just the way of thinking - stupid also includes difficulties in learning.
      At best, you would need weeks to prepare for that role - AND people buying your act.

      It has happened to all of us, hearing that little voice in the back of our heads going, "God DAMN it, they are RIGHT and I am WRONG! This can not be! Maybe if I keep arguing they will go away before everyone realizes the truth..." I've been there. I mean, if you are smart, you are opinionated, because you are used to being right. Which makes it that much harder to admit when you really are wrong. And the tjernobyl guy, as right as he is about the transliteration, is still an idiot, which just makes it burn that much more.

      Nooo... not really. I tend not to go into arguments unless I am certain about something. I know... not very gentlemanly, like betting on a sure thing, but hey...

      Problem with the "catfight" above is that I went into it for fun, pointing at and making fun of a troll - and then people decided to take that way to seriously and pick on me on a point that I am pretty fucking certain of.
      And I mean like 2nd grade stuff certain, cause that is when I was taught Cyrillic in school.

      Granted, not Russian or Ukrainian "flavor" of Cyrillic, but very close to it. And in neither of those is Ch in Chernobyl pronounced anything remotely close to Tj. - there is simply no basis for it to be transliterated that way. I have no idea how Swedes pronounce it though. Maybe their "tj" is English "ch", I don't know.

      So, I am quite certain how it sounds in my native language, I am quite certain how it sounds in Russian or Ukrainian and how each of the characters in the name is pronounced AND I am quite certain how it is pronounced in English.
      Not with a "tj" as in... well, nothing comes to mind - but with a "ch" as in chocolate or in Che Guevara.

      I even provided links that explain where they are wrong with transliteration for those who believe that it should be Tjernobyl.
      It was a fun "catfight" for a while though.

      --
      Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens
    3. Re:Drop it? by spun · · Score: 1
      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    4. Re:Drop it? by denzacar · · Score: 1

      Reeeeally not sure what you meant by that.

      --
      Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens
    5. Re:Drop it? by spun · · Score: 1

      Showing several different transliterations of that same Cyrilic character in common usage, and negating your argument.

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
  136. Re:ATTENTION C64 POLICE by spun · · Score: 2

    Address the fact that a number of Commodore related accounts popped up right around the time that the well known troll account "commodore64_love" was banned. No insults, just facts that need to be addressed in order for you to retain any credibility.

    --
    - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
  137. Re:I'm not happy, also part of AGW by omb · · Score: 1

    No, and neither am I, this is part of the AGW scam which the Lame Stream Meidia
    are in up to their armpits.

    When you can see the radiometer readings they are ~0,2 mS, ie BACKGROUND but
    pools are boiling, containment MAY be breached, reactors are in scary MELTDOWN
    days after they SCRAMED. Pull the other leg.

    Asshole America under Obama is being talked up for another ban like the Gulf drilling
    ban and the fracking ban ... and all the other bans which leave Windmills which don't
    work

    Meanwhile Obama now thinks the US should invade Libya.

  138. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by mcvos · · Score: 1

    That's exactly what I was thinking. If you've got heat you need to get rid of, can't you use that heat to do so? They still turn water to steam. Can't you use that to drive a generator? Presumably a different kind than when the plant is running, but it only needs to power the cooling system, rather than an entire city.

    And if that doesn't work, something with giant heat sinks and stuff like that. It sounds all pretty obvious to me, but I'm no nuclear engineer.

  139. ich bin Hinderburger! by Thud457 · · Score: 1

    Remember folks, it's only a genuine Hindenburger if it's made with soylent green. Don't be taken in by cheap imitations.

    --

    the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

  140. What could possibly go wrong? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    [sic]

  141. enriched geothermal? by Thud457 · · Score: 1

    So if it all melts down into one big blob and sinks into the Earth, why not just leave it there, run some pipes to force in water and some pipes to extract steam, and run generators off that? It's not like you could make the mess any worse, right?

    OK, so you'd probably be running radioactive steam through your generator loop, but they have to deal with that with reactors, don't they?

    --

    the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

  142. More sensationalistic news from the mainstream by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Go figure. Yet another sensationalized report from the soon bankrupt American Media. I'm amazed to see how much direct misquotation that is done both in mainstream print and televised news. Down with CNN and Fox, they're both mouth breathers.

  143. Re:Japanese Say SDK has Spotted Water in #4 Pool by rubycodez · · Score: 1

    But it would be nice if level 20 feet or more of the 40+ foot depth to cover fuel to prevent cladding fire. Actually a crucial piece of information to know if fuel pool fire is imminent or not, as that would be much worse if left uncontrolled than the "meltdown" in reactor everyone is programmed by Hollywood to fear.

  144. Has anyone heard how? by Beryllium+Sphere(tm) · · Score: 1

    The outside of the rods is an alloy that's almost all zirconium. The Material Safety Data Sheet for zirconium says that powder and shavings are flammable, but the bulk metal isn't (analogous to iron that way). So how does a spent fuel pool fire work? If the zirconium cladding melts, you're left with uranium dioxide, which is already oxidized. You'd get a release of volatile fission products, plenty bad, but not a fire.

    1. Re:Has anyone heard how? by KeensMustard · · Score: 1

      As I understand it (second hand information here) - if the stack of rods outside the chamber reach a certain temperature, then the structure that holds them apart (presumably a rack) will collapse due to heat stress, which will allow the rods to come into closer proximity -> more fission -> meltdown. Outside of the pool of water they start heating up straight away but the rods individually do not have enough mass to melt down. The fire that is causing this risk is not the rods themselves (although obviously the latent heat from decay contributes to the problem). Again, IANANP.

  145. Not a conservative design by today's standards by Beryllium+Sphere(tm) · · Score: 1

    Wikipedia gives a sourced number of 0.18 g for the designed peak ground acceleration. That's actually a relatively low number as severe quakes go, though I can't easily find out whether that was known at design time.

    Japanese engineers must believe in big safety margins, judging from how intact the reactors were at the end of the quake.

  146. this is as bad as the media is saying by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    call be callous, but the nuclear disaster has far more long lasting consequences to the people in that area than several thousand people dying.
    the sensationalist media is needed to bring more urgent attention to the issue. this particular incident is extremely serious and more resources need to be thrown at it.

    im not saying nuclear power is less safe than fossil fuels, but this particular incident obviously has the potential to be worse than chernobyl. 6 extremely densely packed reactors and spent fuel pools without containment chambers, workers who are not allowed to go in when radiation levels spike, no power, escalating incidents everywhere around the plant: i think the media should be even more sensationalist than it is.

  147. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by mldi · · Score: 1

    It's kind of depressing if you think about it. Any animal on top of the food chain is a bigger scourge to biological diversity than massive doses of radiation.

    FTFY

    --
    If you aren't suspicious of your government's actions, you aren't doing your job as a responsible citizen.
  148. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by mldi · · Score: 1

    I didn't realize GE was responsible for keeping this thing running, updating it, and providing maintenance on it. For 40 years. Huh.

    --
    If you aren't suspicious of your government's actions, you aren't doing your job as a responsible citizen.
  149. fucking hose pipes anyone ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Jap engineers are fucking up. Why are they using frickin helicopters ? Hose pipes anyone ? They are next to the SEA !

  150. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by mldi · · Score: 1

    Or we could just not play the role of Captain Hindsight. They had backups, emergency backups, and emergency backup backups. They did everything within reasonable human planning, including sea walls. Really, the sea walls were the only part that failed at doing their job.... but only because a quake hit that was well over 10x more powerful than ever recorded, or at least 6x more powerful than any earthquake's estimated power in any signs of history they could find (8.1-8.3 in 869... yes, 869).

    Are we going to start building levies in New Orleans that are 5x higher than the worst that we could ever imagine could happen in the area? If they do, what happens when we get something even more powerful than THAT? Are we going to point fingers and say "horrible planning, tsk tsk"? There's just no end to it. They planned well, but what happened, happened. All we/they can do now is go "well, I guess we learned how this can be avoided in the future" and move on. You can't blame them when over-the-top measures were being taken to prevent disaster.

    You can plan for the "worst" all you want, but Mother Nature is a vicious bitch that'll show your arrogant ass how shit gets done around here.

    --
    If you aren't suspicious of your government's actions, you aren't doing your job as a responsible citizen.
  151. Hope for the best. Prepare for the worst. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hope for the best. Prepare for the worst. I can't imagine how difficult the latter would be when it involves one's own family, but the strategy is wise nonetheless.

  152. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by Tyler+Durden · · Score: 1

    Any animal on top of the food chain is a bigger scourge to biological diversity than massive doses of radiation.

    Nonsense. How many animals can you think of that have caused a global extinction event?

    --
    Happy people make bad consumers.
  153. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by ShooterNeo · · Score: 1

    Yes, nuclear engineers thought of this at least 30 years ago. Many of the newer plants, including some ones that were retrofitted, have steam powered pumps for emergency cooling.

    With all that said, these do in no way make nuclear power "perfectly safe". For the pumps to work, the right valves have to be open and so on. Undoubtedly there's a way for even the modern plants to catastrophically fail that is most likely far higher in likelihood than the ridiculously low estimates that the reactor designers publish. And each major design revision adds new failure modes.

    How would you contain a liquid sodium fire if it's contaminated with fuel products?

  154. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by ShooterNeo · · Score: 1

    No one has ever tested the tertiary containment. The mountain of concrete around the core is SUPPOSED to contain a melted reactor core, but it's never been tested.

    Also, at least one of the containment is thought to have a leak to outside somewhere because an explosion caused a pressure drop.

    And finally, that containment on this particular reactor design is relatively weak and has known flaws. It might hold the core and it might not. This is why the workers aren't writing off the plant secure in their knowledge that it can take any disaster.

  155. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by ShooterNeo · · Score: 1

    No, it's letting a wastepaper fire burn inside an "explosion proof" safe full of high explosives. Oh, and the safe has never been tested to see if it can take an explosion, and there's 30 year old criticisms saying it won't. And you have stacked up a bunch of other, weaker explosives in crates all around the "explosion proof" safe.

  156. Cue the Pro-nuke parrots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Now we hear again the same old same old:

    The reactors are safe, they are working just as designed, radiation won't hurt you, its good for you. Everything is fine, the media are biased and stupid, it is the Greens fault. No one could have known there would be an earthquake but it worked just fine, no one could have known the backup generators would be flooded in a flood plain in a tidal wave zone but it will never breach containment. It was human error not the fault of nuclear engineering, if only this, that or the other thing...
    if only they built new ones everything would have been fine, blah fricking blah.

    Meanwhile I live next to one of those Jiffy-Pop design reactors, in a flood plain with record floods predicted and it is run by humans that make errors.
    The nuke techno-fantasy crowd is the same as the faith based creationists: totally missing reality.

  157. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by speroni · · Score: 1

    Not only that but the U is not nearly enriched enough to support an explosion. If you were to take U from a commercial power plant and put it directly in a warhead under all the same conditions as weapons grade uranium, you still couldn't cause an explosion.

    --
    Eschew Obfuscation
  158. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by speroni · · Score: 1

    Japan does reprocess the fuel, or they send it to a safer storage location. It does have to sit around for about 2 years though in order to become less radioactive enough to handle.

    --
    Eschew Obfuscation
  159. theory vs reality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let's see now... in arguably the most earthquake prone country on earth, these geniuses built a cluster of plants at sea level on a fault. Does that sound like there are wise people in charge?

    It's important to distinguish between "background" radiation and fallout. Background radiation is in the form of rays, from space, local uranium, etc., while fallout is in the form of particles that can be eaten and inhaled.

    I strongly suspect that the people telling us not to worry are either long on theory and very short on experience, or they are industry propagandists. The nuke industry is infamous for secrecy and lying since the very first day of it.

    See this from Greg Palast, who speaks as an investigator into industry practices:

    http://www.gregpalast.com/no-bs-info-on-japan-nuclearobama-invites-tokyo-electric-to-build-us-nukes-with-taxpayer-funds/

    As usual, there is a huge difference between theory and reality. For some insight on human nature you might want to read physicist Richard Feynman's account of the Challenger disaster - another chain of bureaucratic fuckups.

  160. Help from Canada by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Pardon me for asking, but couldn't Canada send a couple CL-415 over to safely drop water form higher altitude ?

    That plane is marvelous to control fires, refills water in ~12 secs...

    The difficulty is travelling 8000 Kms
    CL-415 Range is ~2400Kms, with a special tank it fitted inside, it could make it to Hawai, maybe even refuel by landing on water ?).

    Stupid idea ?

  161. FUD - petro-energy forces exploiting crisis by drwho · · Score: 1

    News outlets seem to be trying to outdo each other in predictions of doom. In reality, the worst case scenario isn't so bad, and even that's not likely to happen. Additionally, the problems of Fukushima are not likely to occur in plants of a newer (4th generation) design.

    Who benefits by bringing nuclear power into public disdain? The petro-energy companies, and the speculators of petroleum products. Wind, Solar, etc. do not have the capacity to replace gas, coal, and oil fired electric power plants. Only nuclear energy does. The possibilities of a previously obscure design, that of using thorium and molten salts, promises cheap, efficient, plentiful power. This threatens that Rockefeller legacy and the Sheiks of Saudi Arabia, and Hugo Chavez and Vladimir Putin. They're making their influence felt in the media and government.

    If you really want to know what's going on at Fukushima, read http://www.energyfromthorium.com

    1. Re:FUD - petro-energy forces exploiting crisis by DrBoumBoum · · Score: 1

      Wind, Solar, etc. do not have the capacity to replace gas, coal, and oil fired electric power plants

      They certainly do. Solar energy alone received by Earth (annual average) represents five thousand times the total current energy consumption of humanity. And that's only solar. On top of that there's wind, hydro, tides, waves, currents and geothermal to use. So how can you maintain that the capacity is not there?

      Now granted, renewable energy sources are diluted and unpredictable on the short term, so there are quite a few technological challenges there too. But considering that developing commercially viable breeder reactors or a complete and safe reprocessing industry is deemed a cinch by the average slashdot nuclear proponent, how can these intimidate them?

  162. Oh Noes! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So let me understand correctly. Besides the 9.0 earthquake (which all the plants survived), and the tsunami (which flooded the diesel generators used as pumps to cool the reactors), these 40 year old reactors which had been scheduled for permanent shutdown, but due to environmentalists, not wanting new nuclear reactors, were not already replaced. I do seem to recall that due to earthquake alone, some of the OIL refineries caught fire. They were billiowing CO2 in the resultant fire. I can count on one hand all of the serious radiological accidents in the nuclear industry in the last 50 years. I can't count with a 16 bit computer all of the times the oil industry has had serious accidents in the last 50 years (the Exxon Valdez killed more wildlife than Chernobyl), the BP disaster in the gulf is killing a lot more than 3 mile island. I keep hearing stories about refineries exploding, Neighborhoods blowing up. And constant pollution. Yet one radiological disaster, and everyone goes into ultra-hyper-super-mega panic mode. Run for your lives, run for the hills. The earthquake and tsunami have killed an estimated 10,000 so far. The reactors? None. There might be some, we will have to wait and see. The earthquake killed quick. The tsunami killed quick. Oil kills slowly, and radiation kills slowly (but both can kill quickly, depending on how exposed you are to them). Why do we give car accidents a pass, overeating a pass, the oil industry a pass, drunken drivers a pass (all of which kill millions around the world every year), and yet nuclear power is a pariah? Yes, like anything else, it has to be taken seriously, you can't afford to be sloppy or half assed. But we have chosen long half-life waste in order to build bombs as a sideline (the Chinese are using molten salts with waste half-lives of 12 seconds and 22 minutes... leave it for 3 months, and the most sensative geiger counter can't pick up anything but background radiation... and yet we still maintain the stupid mistakes and bad choices of the past will be carried forward in the future. We insist on poking and pointing at 40 year old technology, not completely taken out when the rest of North Western Japan was, and claiming that 'its bad like that everywhere'. Are people nuts, or is there some kind of 'we luv oil' agenda? Oh, do the 'green' folk know what powers the sun? Has anyone sprung the news on them?

  163. Re:magnitude they should have prepared for by DocSavage64109 · · Score: 1

    That's very easy to say in hindsight. As in the 9/11 disaster, this was an unprecedented failure, but right now, there are more fault tolerant gravity-fed cooling designs. What you need to realize with over-designing, is that it involves increased costs. You have to determine the increased costs verses the odds and results of any foreseeable disasters. Maybe back in the 70s, they didn't have enough spare cash to throw around? Or maybe they were just gambling? Who knows.

  164. Re:magnitude they should have prepared for by shilly · · Score: 1

    I know it involves increased costs. Well, them's the breaks when you decide to deploy extremely energy-dense and toxic power sources. Pay to extract, pay to build, pay to clean up. Expensive business, nuclear.

  165. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by dgatwood · · Score: 1

    We're working on it.

    --

    Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

  166. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by slew · · Score: 1

    Well to be fair the plant was designed and installed by GE.

    Technically, although Fukushima Daiichi 1 and 2 were GE reactors, FD-3: the one that is running MOX (mixed plutonium oxide fuel), was a reactor supplied by Toshiba (a japanese company if I'm not mistaken). If you had to rank something bad happening, well, I'm pretty sure most experts would agree that having plutonium excape into the enviornment would be pretty bad in the scale of things...

  167. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by dgatwood · · Score: 1

    Chernobyl did not have a containment vessel to catch and contain a melted core.... it melted out the bottom of the reactor and through the floor.

    Doesn't matter. Chernobyl got hot enough to melt both steel and concrete. At its hottest point, Chernobyl reached 2255 Celsius, and was still at 1600 C after four days. Containment vessels are designed to capture a momentary catastrophic explosion, not to handle a Chernobyl-style meltdown in which uncontrolled fission occurs on a continuous basis over a protracted period of time.

    --

    Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

  168. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by cartman · · Score: 1

    This is the least informed comment I have ever read on [slashdot]

    You're exaggerating. Although it was in the bottom 40%.

  169. Re:magnitude they should have prepared for by quintesse · · Score: 1

    100% security does not exist. Car, trains, boats, planes, all have calculated risks of grave/fatal accidents and yet year after year we all accept the possibilities of dying in one of them that are way higher than being affected (let alone killed) by a nuclear accident.

  170. Re:magnitude they should have prepared for by DocSavage64109 · · Score: 1

    So how strong is strong enough? Suppose for each level of magnitude for the reactor to withstand involves a 10x cost. Would you design a magnitude 12 reactor for 10,000x the cost just so the current situation would never occur? What if the next earthquake was mag 13? What if the next Tsunami is 100 ft tall? There is a point where if they cost too much money, the reactors wouldn't have been made and then what? They just do without electricity?

  171. Nuclear Welfare by isochroma · · Score: 0

    It's time to get the nuclear industry off taxpayer-funded welfare. No more loan guarantees and liability limitations for that vicious, corrupt and polluting industry. If they can't afford to pay their own insurance in the much-loved free market, then they can bloody well fail.

    And since no insurer will write a policy for a nuclear plant in the USA without both loan guarantees and liability limitations - the funding for said having been filched from the pockets of taxpayers by your ever-loving government - there will be no more nuclear plants in the USA.

    Turns out Japan's nuclear industry is on taxpayer welfare too. A taxpayer-funded liability limitation of $1.2 billion, in particular.

    The people in Japan pay thrice: once for the industry's too-hazardous-to-insure nature, next for the actual power, and third when a reactor blows - the last with their lives.

    The USA's taxpayer pays four times: an additional theft of money for loan guarantees, which it seems the Japanese taxpayer doesn't have to fork over for.

  172. Re:magnitude they should have prepared for by DrBoumBoum · · Score: 1

    it involves increased costs

    At which point renewable energies start being economically more attractive. That's exactly the problem with energy generation today: non-renewable energy sources appear cheaper because currently polluting the biosphere is free, and the lives of peons affected by the pollution isn't priced much (see the BP oil spill). This shouldn't be the case.

  173. Re:I'm not happy, also part of AGW by yurtinus · · Score: 1

    Didn't we already invade Libya in that one Paulie Shore movie?

    --
    +1 Disagree
  174. Re:magnitude they should have prepared for by DocSavage64109 · · Score: 1

    So are you willing to pay at least 2x the current going rate for electricity, and force your neighbors to do so as well? I figure as more natural resources get consumed, nations will eventually have to do as you say, but we haven't reached that point yet.

  175. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by FormOfActionBanana · · Score: 1

    Big tank of water suspended above the plant. 3 Mile Island had this...

    --
    Take off every 'sig' !!
  176. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by putaro · · Score: 1

    The plant survived the tsunami. Nothing much around it did though. Roads are wiped out and the power grid is down.

    The plant went through all the emergency fallbacks that they could as an independent entity. No one planned for the rest of the infrastructure to be knocked out for so long.

  177. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by slew · · Score: 1

    So I'm wondering, if the containment system can handle a meltdown just fine, why are they going to such great lengths to try to cool it despite having undergone at least a partial meltdown

    IANA nuclear engineer, but this is my understanding of the current situation.

    First, there is no saving the reactor now that there is a partial meltdown. The reactor cores will have to be decommisioned because of many reasons (potential damage to the reactor containment, radiation all over the place due to the damage to the fuel rods, etc, etc). In fact, I think that at least one of the reactor cores that are currently problematic was scheduled to be decommissioned anyhow (apparently after a while exposing things to a bunch of radiation causes them to wear-out, no surprise there, and you want to decommission it before it reaches the end of it's predicted lifetime).

    AFAIK, there are three main things they are trying to avoid: 1. cleaning up will be much easier if the whole core doesn't melt down. 2. nobody knows exactly how much damage the reactor containment received and the probability of how much stuff will eventually leak as a result of that damage. 3. collateral damage to the spent fuel holding area due to excessive heating from the reactor.

    Out of an abundance of caution, I'm sure they are considering that the one variable they have possibly have control over is to reduce the potential additional damage that the core can do to the reactor containment by cooling it down as much as possible.

    But the main issue that everyone is worried about is #3. The spent fuel is hanging around next to the reactor in a pool of water (if you believe the USA-NRC, an empty pool of water). All that spent fuel is NOT in any type of reactor containment system, but is still hot and could cause a radiological disaster if the fuel rods are damaged allowing the fuel pellets inside to be exposed to the environment. Because the reactors themselves aren't being sufficiently cooled right now, they are apparently heating the pools of water where the spent fuel is being stored (some estimates are that the water is nearly at the boiling point ere the normal temperature is around 70deg). And if you listen to the media, it probably is starting fires in the building that houses the holding ponds. If the water in the holding ponds boils away, there will be a large increase in radiation (because normally the water absorbs some of the neutrons) possibly causing damage to the spent fuel rods. That would be bad.

    Of course this always brings up the issue of why are we storing the spent fuel rods in holding ponds near the reactor? Don't know if I can answer that one other than apparently the easiest thing to do from a security/safety point of view (don't have to move them very far after you take them out of the reactor because you want to keep them constantly under water while you move them) and currently, there's no other good place to put them.

  178. Re:magnitude they should have prepared for by DrBoumBoum · · Score: 1
    Are you willing to do the extra effort to put your litter in the bin, and force your neighbors to do so as well? I bet you are.

    This is the very definition of society: do everything you want but don't fuck with the life and future of my kids. Do not pollute their lives. You are not entitled to, however good it feels for you.

    By the way to answer your question, I'm willing to pay ten time as much, not only for my electricity but for all the energy I use, and even much more than that. You see contrary to lots of people around it seems, I love my kids very much, including their own kids who aren't here yet. I'd live in a cave and give my blood if needs be to see them laugh and sing and be happy. I don't need all the bullcrap that advertisers are trying to shove down my throat, I don't want it. Like he said: "All you need is love" (I loved that guy very much). Oh this reminds me of a song that I liked so much too

    All you need is love and understanding
    Ring the bell and let the people know
    We're so happy and we're celebrating
    Come on and let your feelings show

  179. deploy the robotic overlord fleet by Eil · · Score: 1

    So I've been watching this fracas for a week now and nobody has yet asked the most obvious question:

    Where are the robots?

    This is Japan we're talking about for crying out loud. Around the world, Japan is known for two things: robots and tentacle porn. It's unlikely that the tentacle porn is going to offer much in the way of assistance at this point, but god damn, where are all the robots in this nation's time of crisis? The media keeps talking about how the spent fuel in the cooling pools is going to explode and rain nuclear hellfire down upon the huddled masses because nobody can get in close enough to add water to the pools without sterilizing their weak human genitals and/or dying. For fuck's sake, in case you haven't realized, robots don't give a single shit about radiation. Since this is Japan we're talking about, a significant portion of their robotic population probably has genitals too but if those get irradiated, all that will happen is a new genre of hentai will be born.

    Japan, I urge you, look upon your library of millions of low-budget films and bring to fruition the event they have foretold: use your technologically superior robots to save the human race. Do it for your people. Do it for the world. Do it for tentacle porn.

  180. Sounds like they need Elvis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You know, the big water-carrying plane that is often used to extinguish fires. Use it to dump more water into the pools that the reactors use for coolant.

    Just a thought.

  181. Re:magnitude they should have prepared for by shilly · · Score: 1

    For sure. But none of them has the potential for causing such concentrated or long-lasting damage, so our tolerance is higher. It ain't rational, but it's human. No point railing against human nature.

  182. Re:magnitude they should have prepared for by shilly · · Score: 1

    I don't know. I don't much care, as I'm not the one wanting to build the reactors. All I can tell you is, we now know that the upper bounds on the design were an order of magnitude too conservative. It wasn't as though a mag9.0 earthquake was outside human experience. It wasn't something that has never occurred since the Triassic period. It was something that hadn't happened in Japan for a few hundred years.

    Obviously, the answer to "what do you do if the cost-benefit tradeoff becomes infeasible" is "try to change the variables (eg adopting an inherently safer design that cuts the costs" or "don't include nuclear as part of the energy mix" or "wait till scarcity of resource changes the balance of benefit once more"

  183. Re:magnitude they should have prepared for by quintesse · · Score: 1

    Aknowledging human nature should be the first step towards rationalizing about our fears and being able to put them in perspective to the bigger problems that are still there. And for long-lasting damage... I think cars have already caused much more damage to our environment and our health than 10 Tchernobyls ever will.

  184. Fuel Rods // Not An Issue Apparently by ParetoJ · · Score: 1

    There doesn't appear to be an issue with fires in spent fuel ponds according to this article I found (below), and the discussions I've been having here: http://bravenewclimate.com/2011/03/18/fukushima-radiation-tsunamis/

    Spent fuel heatup following loss of water during storage. [PWR; BWR]
    Benjamin, A.S. ; McCloskey, D.J. ; Powers, D.A. ; Dupree, S.A.

    Abstract: An analysis of spent fuel heatup following a hypothetical accident involving drainage of the storage pool is presented. Computations based upon a new computer code called SFUEL have been performed to assess the effect of decay time, fuel element design, storage rack design, packing density, room ventilation, drainage level, and other variables on the heatup characteristics of the spent fuel and to predict the conditions under which clad failure will occur. Possible storage pool design modifications and/or onsite emergency action have also been considered.

    http://www.osti.gov/bridge/product.biblio.jsp?osti_id=6272964

    A commenter posted:
    >>Importantly, reading the documents introduction
    >>& conclusion section seems to indicate that
    >>there is a “decay time” of 5 to 150 days after the
    >>BWR fuel assemblies are put in the spent fuel
    >>pond, after which the fuel assemblies do not
    >>reach the critical 850-950C following a complete
    >>water drain.

    The article seems to suggest it isn't a burning issue, although the radiation would be quite locally intense (within the pool itself) until it is recovered by water. Nothing would be leaking about into the air though. If anyone has a different take on the article share them.

    1. Re:Fuel Rods // Not An Issue Apparently by randomsearch · · Score: 1

      Thanks for posting that, interesting stuff.

      I checked, and the places I've read about the danger of spent fuel rods catching fire are all secondary sources, mostly consultants for (quality) media giving their analysis.

      Without going on an academic search to find contrary papers (I have a job to do!), assuming the above is right then the danger from the spent fuel rods remains high levels of radioactivity.

      However, it's worth noting that fires starting elsewhere in the buildings (and there have been some) close to the storage ponds may have damaged the spent fuel rods, and could also have contributed to their melting or brought their temperature towards 850C... and regardless, such fires will spread the radioactive material from the rods (which after all, is why the possibility of them catching fire is significant).

  185. 1 Chest X-Ray / Hour at the Gate? by ParetoJ · · Score: 1

    The radition dosage at the gates of the plant were about 10m/Sieverts for a while (1 chest X-Ray per hour) and bumped out to 100m/Sieverts at one point. Source: Wikipedia article, and their sources on it. As others have mentioned, the radition 10km away would be what one would get on a plane trip. If someone said radition dosage of a plane trip, eating a few bananas or smoking a cig or staying at my home, I'd have stayed.

  186. Re:magnitude they should have prepared for by shilly · · Score: 1

    I agree that cars have caused monumental damage. But nuclear plants have the *potential* (thankfully, not yet realised) to cause even more significant damage than that. They have the potential to render parts of the globe uninhabitable by humans for times well in excess of the length of human civilisations.

  187. Re:magnitude they should have prepared for by quintesse · · Score: 1

    I think you underestimate how far we are already on our way to make our planet uninhabitable (meaning: for humans who want to keep their current lifestiles). You keep talking about potential problems with nuclear reactors, while if they would all explode tomorrow 90% of the world would still be habitable. On the other hand we've been filling the airs and the seas with so much rubbish that slowly but surely we're poisioning ourselves.
    Now, of course I'm not suggesting we should just ignore problems associated with these kind of reactors, but we have too keep the perspective that we're doing massive damage all over the world and most people don't lose a minute's sleep over it, while on the other hand buying iodine pills because of a reactor that's thousands of miles away.
    Human nature indeed, but nature also gave us the capacity to learn.

  188. And the point is??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm sure everyone, including Japan, is alarmed over their nuclear crisis. I think their scientists, engineers, and resources are just as good as ours and they're dealing with the problem as good as anyone can. I suspect they also have contacts with anyone that can help throughout the world. Other than that, there's not much to do or say at this point.

    Perhaps nuclear power plants aren't a good idea in one of the most earthquake prone islands on the globe. But that's a topic for another day.

  189. Re:magnitude they should have prepared for by Lazareth · · Score: 1

    If the next earthquake is going to be mag 13 and the entire facility is built to withstand that, I want to move in and live there NOW. The scale is not linear, a mag 12 earthquake (> mag 13) would be part of a potential planetary extinction scenario. The most powerful "quake" measured is a magnitude 21 quake, also called a "starquake" because it happened on the surface of a neutron star (specifically a magnatar star), some 50.000 light years away. It was so powerful that the aftereffects could be measured in our atmosphere (gamma rays). If it had been less than 10.000 light years away, it would have fried us and wiped out all life on Earth.

    So yeah, the people doing the hindsight fandango saying 8.2 was a conservative criterion for the design brought about by evil capitalist corner-cutter needs to get stuffed. There is always going to be an upper limit to what a design can take and personally I think the Fukushima facilities are doing quite well considering how much they got fucked over by mother earth.

  190. Except you're not... by denzacar · · Score: 1

    1. You do notice that Tjernobyl page being in SWEDISH. I'm not saying that it is wrongly transliterated IN SWEDISH.
    I don't speak Swedish, and it would be rather bothersome to ask around for some Swedes to send me a recording of them reading that word. Maybe they pronounce Tjernobyl the way Chernobyl is pronounced in English, I don't know.
    But what I DO KNOW is that you don't transliterate "Che" as "Tj" in English. At least not if you want it done correctly.

    2. Seriously... Is there some reason you are pushing that straw man? Like what you mentioned above - "God DAMN it, they are RIGHT..." etc?
    Cause, I KNOW that you are not that dumb* not to notice that: a ) that word does not have the "Che" voice anywhere in it; b ) that those are examples of transliterations from various languages (as in from slightly different pronunciations of rather similarly sounding words) and c ) when read out loud in English they all sound about the same.

    You know - as in completely different from transliterating Chernobyl as Tjernobyl.
    FFS, just read those two out loud. This is not the case of Coca-Cola vs Koka-Kola but Coca-Cola vs Totta-Tolla.

    And yeah, I know... This is way off the deep end of xkcd-ism and a waste of time and all...
    But hey, so are most other "discussions" on Slashdot.

     
    *Not trying to be insulting there, I've been paying attention to your comments for some time as they tend to "pop-out" among others, what with 4-letter nick and 4-digit ID...
    And then there is that green pill... candy... light thingy next to it.
    And you are generally making rather insightful and informed comments. If anything, I'd swear that you are a rather intelligent and educated person.

    --
    Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens
  191. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by mldi · · Score: 1

    Zero. And that includes humans. However, local biological diversity is a different story, and ecological imbalances happen all the time.

    Things balance out when the dominating species runs out of resources (e.g. food).

    --
    If you aren't suspicious of your government's actions, you aren't doing your job as a responsible citizen.
  192. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by mldi · · Score: 1

    We're working on it.

    Even if it's caused by human activity AND the entire planet is covered by water, there's still a very rich and diverse marine life.

    --
    If you aren't suspicious of your government's actions, you aren't doing your job as a responsible citizen.
  193. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by Tyler+Durden · · Score: 1

    The article I linked to is a global event, not local. Also, when the animal in question (humans) is dispersed around the world, the whole globe is "local".

    The first hit to biological diversity happened when humans moved into other continents from Africa and encountered the large mammals existing there. These animals, unlike their African counterparts, had not evolved a healthy fear of these strange, small creatures and were readily hunted to extinction.

    For an eye-opening account of just how much of an impact we have on the environment, try reading The World Without Us by Alan Weisman sometime. You might not be so blasé about the topic afterwards.

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    Happy people make bad consumers.
  194. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by mldi · · Score: 1

    So what'd we do, kill the dinosaurs now? How about the dodo? Or many many other extinct species?

    Weisman has an agenda. Don't kid yourself. We have an impact, yes, but if we leave suddenly it certainly doesn't mean paradise for those poor, poor animals. Another species will come and dominate, and it'll have drastic impacts on whatever local ecological system they happen to be in. It's just how shit works.

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    If you aren't suspicious of your government's actions, you aren't doing your job as a responsible citizen.
  195. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by Tyler+Durden · · Score: 1

    No on the dinosaurs, probable on the dodo.

    Weisman has an agenda? Oh for Christ's sake! Why do I get the feeling this is a case of, "There exists knowledge that might counter my worldview, therefore the person who provides evidence contrary to it is probably suspect and all of the evidence can be ignored." Try growing some balls and challenging yourself sometime.

    Apparently you feel that there has existed a species who had a bigger impact on biodiversity than mankind. Name it. The best I can think of are the bacteria that caused the oxygen holocaust, and I don't think that would count since all life then was unicellular.

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    Happy people make bad consumers.
  196. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by mldi · · Score: 1

    Try growing some balls? LOL. You need to settle down a little.

    Yes, in the lifetime of our planet, there has existed many species who had a giant impact on "biodiversity". Seriously, think outside your own little span of a few thousand years. We haven't been here forever you know.

    You assume that things exist as they are without humans being there. Don't be so naive and ignorant. We're only a small part of this planet, and while we dominate it right now, we only have for a VERY brief moment in history. Species come and go. It's simply evolution. Every once in awhile a species is introduced that is so overpowering that it goes berzerk and wipes out everything it can use until there's nothing left for it. It's happened thousands of times, and we won't be the last ones to dominate this planet, either.

    Lastly, "probable on the dodo"? Based on what? Provide your evidence that humans are the only species responsible for any animal extinction or shut the fuck up.

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    If you aren't suspicious of your government's actions, you aren't doing your job as a responsible citizen.
  197. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by Tyler+Durden · · Score: 1

    Yes, in the lifetime of our planet, there has existed many species who had a giant impact on "biodiversity".

    Great. Name it.

    Every once in awhile a species is introduced that is so overpowering that it goes berzerk and wipes out everything it can use until there's nothing left for it.

    At a global scale like our species? Name it.

    It's happened thousands of times, and we won't be the last ones to dominate this planet, either.

    Great. Thousands of species have caused a global biodiversity extinction event. How easy it must be, then, for you to name one. I'll wait.

    Lastly, "probable on the dodo"? Based on what? Provide your evidence that humans are the only species responsible for any animal extinction or shut the fuck up.

    It's probable that humans were the primary cause of the extinction of the dodo based on this, among others. True, some of it involved humans introducing many new species to Mauritius, but it still makes humans the primary cause. Trying to find a case where humans are the sole cause of an extinction is ingenuine as many factors play a part.

    How about I don't shut the fuck up and you take your own advise on settling down a little. Sound reasonable?

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    Happy people make bad consumers.
  198. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by Tyler+Durden · · Score: 1

    ingenuine->disingenuous

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    Happy people make bad consumers.
  199. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by mldi · · Score: 1

    Guess what dominates the oceans. I'll give you a hint: it's not us. Until recently when we started overfishing the oceans, it was it's own world that was largely left alone by humans. You can bet it had certain species completely dominating at various times. Did they make some other species go completely extinct directly, acting alone? Probably not directly, but you can bet they played major roles.

    Guess what dominated fairly recently ago. Several species of dinosaurs. But oh, I suppose they had zero impact on the survival of less dominant species, huh?

    Otherwise, I don't have to name shit. The planet is billions of years old. We're but a drop in the ocean. It's scientific fact that the most dominant species has major impacts on biodiversity. That includes insects. Get over it.

    On the bright side, we're the only species that we know of that's capable of protecting and even reversing the destruction of biodiversity. Let's just hope things start leaning more that way and less the other, agreed?

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    If you aren't suspicious of your government's actions, you aren't doing your job as a responsible citizen.
  200. Re:Worse than Tjernobyl. by Tyler+Durden · · Score: 1

    Otherwise, I don't have to name shit. The planet is billions of years old. We're but a drop in the ocean. It's scientific fact that the most dominant species has major impacts on biodiversity. That includes insects. Get over it.

    Oh I realize just how short of a time we have been around. About 4 billion years of life on Earth, 2 million years of hominids and 200,000 years of modern Homo Sapiens. I'm certain I could find examples of a species dominating and taking another species or two into extinction. But I cannot find one example of a single species taking out as many other species in as short a time-span as us. I've looked, and except for maybe the Oxygen Holocaust event I mentioned earlier, I haven't found anything. (I think the legacy of dinosaurs is more a case of preventing other species from flourishing than blighting others out). So unless you or anyone else can point one out to me, I can only assume we're the only one. And that's depressing.

    On the bright side, we're the only species that we know of that's capable of protecting and even reversing the destruction of biodiversity. Let's just hope things start leaning more that way and less the other, agreed?

    I definitely agree that we should learn how to decrease (and preferably, reverse) the rate at which we contribute to the decline of biodiversity. But a big part of this is making as many people as possible aware of the scope of the problem.

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    Happy people make bad consumers.
  201. Is The Radiation Menace Low In Japan? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is The Radiation Menace Low In Japan?
    http://www.newscollective.com/blog/?p=4109