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TEPCO Readies Plan To Bring Reactor Under Control

Kyusaku Natsume writes "TEPCO has released details of their plan to bring Unit 1 of Fukushima Daiichi under control, to improve the working conditions inside the reactor building of this unit and install a new cooling system. From the success of this operation maybe we will know how they will address the emergency in the remaining damaged nuclear reactors."

3 of 116 comments (clear)

  1. Reasonable first steps by Animats · · Score: 5, Informative

    That's just the very beginning - hook up an air filtration system so humans can briefly enter the containment. Then try to hook up a water level gauge for the reactor pressure vessel, so they can actually tell how much of the core is uncovered. Then they can think about what to do next.

    All this work is taking place in partially collapsed buildings where explosions have destroyed the structure. Ordinarily, one would bring in big cranes with grabs and start removing debris. But they can't do that.

    The situation remains dangerous as long as there are still many red blocks on the JAIF's status chart. Note that reactors 1,2, and 3 still have not reached cold shutdown, where the reactor core is below the boiling point of water, all steam has condensed to water, and pressure in the reactor vessel is down to one atmosphere. All the ad-hoc cooling measures aren't enough to get the core temperature down. Normal time to cold shutdown for a GE Mark I reactor is about a day. Even at Three Mile Island, it took only about two days to reach cold shutdown.

    1. Re:Reasonable first steps by DerekLyons · · Score: 5, Informative

      Even at Three Mile Island, it took only about two days to reach cold shutdown.

      No, TMI-2 didn't reach cold shutdown until 27 April - nearly a month after the accident.

    2. Re:Reasonable first steps by Idou · · Score: 5, Informative

      That's all? So TEPCO did not falsify safety inspection records, cover-up a defective reactor, use the yakuza to get expendable workers, continue on with a foreign journalist QA session even without the foreign journalists, or make numerous blunders immediately after the tsunami to put us into the current situation ?

      What a relief . . . here I was thinking TEPCO would become the poster child of the part of Japanese society that remains corrupt, arrogant, and incompetent. Good thing they have apologists like yourself . . .

      --
      Sdelat' Ameriku velikoy Snova!