Report Condemns Japan's Response To Nuclear Accident
mdsolar sends this quote from an article at the NY Times:
"From inspectors who abandoned the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant as it succumbed to disaster to a delay in disclosing radiation leaks, Japan's response to the nuclear accident caused by the March tsunami fell tragically short, a government-appointed investigative panel said on Monday. ... In particular, an erroneous assumption that an emergency cooling system was working led to an hours-long delay in finding alternative ways to draw cooling water to the plant, the report said. All the while, the system was not working, and the uranium fuel rods at the cores were starting to melt."
... there would have been less "soteigai" and more "seppuku".
Once that plant started to melt down any work on site was going to be long and dangerous. The only way to protect the local people was to move them away. So its pretty clear that the local area was not evacuated fast enough, but I don't see that using a different approach in the first few hours would have helped. That plant was gone and about to melt down. It was destroyed by a big earthquake and at least two big waves.
http://michaelsmith.id.au
Can you imagine if 1% of cars would randomly blow up? How about 1% of airplanes have their engines fall off in flight? There wouldn't be cars or airplanes.
But, 1% of all nuclear power plants in the world have now experienced melt downs. Per wikipedia, 441 operating plants in the world.
echo 5/441 | bc -l .01133786848072562358
So, OVER 1% catastrophic failure. .I'm sure all the pro pro pro nuke industry apologists on /. will mod this to oblivion. Facts can be inconvenient.
I wonder if pro-nuclear advocates will just ignore this report?
Do post hoc government reports ever not condemn agencies/corprations etc?
Hmm mdsolar posting anti nuclear, yes it was a disaster but the submitter appears to have an axe to grind based on previous nuclear story submissions. I am pro nuclear and renewables both have a role in future energy mix
Anyone in Japan who has followed the developments would have told you so much. I was hopeful until the Sunday after the quake, when it became plainly obvious that the government and TEPCO are lying about the extent of the damage. It was obvious that a meltdown has occurred at the time of the first explosion, but nobody with even a textbook understanding of how a reactor works would have had any doubts after unit 3 sent large concrete blocks 150 meters up in the air.
Yet, the Japanese government and TEPCO "admitted the possibility" of meltdowns in the beginning of May, and admitted meltdowns have actually occurred in late July. All this was done while the nuclear industry was faking support for nuclear energy all over Japan, and officials in Japan alongside with power company officials were twisting arms, legs and other limbs to avoid responsibility.
I won't even discuss the irresponsible dispatch of highly radioactive water on barges and into the ocean and the venting of radioactive steam in the air, which continued for weeks, etc. Now, when the cooling of the reactors has allegedly finished, TEPCO has few hundred tons of highly radioactive sludge in containers on site, waiting for the next quake and tsunami to wash them over the landscape. These will, supposedly, be "dealt with" in the distant future.
What is really surprising is not only the abysmal response of TEPCO. Nuclear industry in Japan has forever been plagued by accidents. What is un-fucking-believable s the continuing complacency of the government about it. There have been no investigations, no arrests, nothing.
A government panel, composed mostly of "old boys" (former execs from the nuclear industry, who now serve as "regulators" on taxpayer dime and whose job is to excuse the fuckups of their former colleagues) estimated that Fukushima will increase cost of nuclear power by 20%. Independent experts estimated that actual increase will be more like 3-4 times the current cost. Guess what -- TEPCO already wants the price of electricity to rise by about 20% from next year -- that is just to cope with the immediate cost of the Fukushima cleanup and compensations. The independent experts may yet turn out to be right about a fourfold cost increase.
Considering the size of the accident and the level of criminal complacency and negligence that lead to it, the report doesn't even come to "damning". It is more like a strongly-worded letter. What is needed in this case is some good ole criminal prosecution, some long terms in the PMITA prison for the TEPCO board members and plant managers, and restructuring the company so that investors who cheered the bad safety practices are heavily punished. A cleanup of the regulatory bodies won't be a bad thing as well.
But it is Japan, so none of these are very likely to happen. Instead, we'll have another accident in a few years.
Why don't nuclear power plants use steam engines to run the cooling pumps? They would run till it cooled, don't need any fuel or electricity, work underwater and can be thermally activated when the reactor gets too hot without any intervention.
those who have no honor, no respect for community, no regard for actions taken; we now have name for them, "Fukushima Daiichi."
Both terrible and the government response in both Japan and the USA an absurdity, theaters of clowns and fools and much worse.
...would just shuttup about it. Everything's fine now. Remember BP? They were worse. Please move along.
If you want to complain about the safety of nuclear power tell us what you want to replace it with. Be honest and include the expected change in fatalities resulting from switching over to your alternative.
Replace it with the hot air from congress. Safest source known to man.
Shai Schticks:"You don't make peace with friends, you make peace with enemies"
With about 75 years of uranium left at the current consumption rate, bringing on China gets us to less than 40 years. So, a plant built now will run out of fuel before it is payed off. The sooner China comes on line, to sooner we'll be done with nuclear power.
I have read US reports and findings that that type of reactor will melt down about the time that they now admit that did.
Did they think that their reactor was magical?
Sitting at home in your livingroom and one trip to wikipedia, you had all the information you needed to know when the reactor's melted down. The buildings exploded from the hydrogen produced from the breakdown of the cladding of the fuel and radiolysys, both of which show that the fuel was melting. Do you actually think that the engineers did not know this?
I think that it is easier to accept that they made mistakes, rather than admit that they lied.
https://www.youtube.com/c/BrendaEM