REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS

Japan - It's worse than you know....

POSTED BY: AURAPTOR
UPDATED: Thursday, April 28, 2011 20:19
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Thursday, April 14, 2011 3:32 PM

AURAPTOR

America loves a winner!



Pretty freaky videos, that speak for themselves. Just a couple, but there's more out there. I just heard about this myself recently, so sorry if it's old news to others.








" I do not love the bright sword for its sharpness, nor the arrow for its swiftness, nor the warrior for his glory. I love only that which they defend. "

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Thursday, April 14, 2011 3:45 PM

ANTHONYT

Freedom is Important because People are Important


Hello,

It's about as bad as I thought. But I thought it was pretty darn bad to begin with. I wish they'd catch a break.

When this started, I commented that everything the government and energy company was saying about the reactor reminded me of everything the Soviets said to downplay Chernobyl.

It gave me a creepy big case of Déjà vu.

I pray for the Japanese. I wish they'd turn to the world and make a desperate plea for help. I know it's not in their nature to do so, but I think it may be time. I'd rather see them live long lives than die with dignity.

Also, if radiation renders portions of the country uninhabitable, we need to consider immigration law changes to accommodate whoever would like to come on over. Those islands are already pressed for living space.

--Anthony


Assured by friends that the signal-to-noise ratio has improved on this forum, I have disabled web filtering.

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Friday, April 15, 2011 10:10 AM

HARDWARE


They've known about liquefaction for a long time. Anytime you have an area composed of sandy soil or fill and put heavier or solid objects on them, when they are shaken objects tend to sink to their stable point based on their specific gravity.

In the second video the narrator mentions that the park he is in was reclaimed from Tokyo bay. The water welling up out of the ground is probably bay water that has intruded into the subsoil of the park. With the earthquake it is rising to the surface, allowing heavier soil to sink.

Watching the cracks yawn open and close was very eerie.

The more I get to know people the more I like my dogs.

...and he that has no sword, let him sell his garment, and buy one. Luke 22:36

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Friday, April 15, 2011 12:43 PM

AURAPTOR

America loves a winner!


Quote:

Originally posted by Hardware:

Watching the cracks yawn open and close was very eerie.

The more I get to know people the more I like my dogs.



It is eerie. The citizens seemed to try to take things in stride, but still... it was as if they didn't know exactly what to do.

Reminded me of the scene from War of the Worlds. (remake) When the cracks in the asphalt first appeared, folks started walking up and gathering around... I thought that was mostly just Hollywood theatrics, that folks would keep their distance in situations like that. But, as we saw in those videos, folks went right up the the cracks in the ground and got a closer look.

Not something I'd have done, but it takes all types, I guess.


" I do not love the bright sword for its sharpness, nor the arrow for its swiftness, nor the warrior for his glory. I love only that which they defend. "

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Friday, April 15, 2011 2:53 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Curiosity. It's what makes us human.

Anyway, yes it really is worse than we know.

Quote:

Fukushima Groundwater Radiation Level Jumps Several Dozen Times In One Week, More Measurement Devices


TEPCO continues to be stuck between a rock and a liquid place. Following recent efforts to stop the spillage of radioactive water into the ocean, the pseudo-nationalized utility is now experiencing the aftermath of radioactive water retention. From Kyodo: "The concentration levels of radioactive iodine and cesium in groundwater near the troubled Nos. 1 and 2 reactors at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant have increased up to several dozen times in one week, suggesting that toxic water has seeped from nearby reactor turbine buildings or elsewhere, Tokyo Electric Power Co. said Thursday. According to the latest findings, a groundwater sample taken April 6 near the No. 1 reactor turbine building showed radioactive iodine-131 of 72 becquerels per cubic meter, with the concentration level growing to 400 becquerels as of Wednesday. The concentration level of cesium-134 increased from 1.4 becquerels to 53 becquerels." Conventional thought is that this is due to contaminated water used to cool down overheating reactors: "A total of around 60,000 tons of contaminated water is believed to be flooding the basements of the Nos. 1 to 3 reactor turbine buildings as well as trenches connected to them, and the water is hampering work to restore the cooling functions of the reactors lost since the March 11 earthquake and ensuing tsunami." Yet the most troubling news once again comes from the plutonium containing Reactor 3 where the temperature rose suddenly. Not to worry though: "TEPCO officials said the data were likely due to a glitch in a measuring instrument." And with that we have another data reader which indicates unpleasant information being thrown away (this follows the halt of readings from the Drywell radiation counter in Reactor 1 following a reported surge).


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Friday, April 15, 2011 4:25 PM

HARDWARE


Iodine is not a huge worry in the long term. Iodine 131 has a half life of 8 days. 2 months will reduce its radioactivity to barely perceptible levels. Caesium 134 is more of a worry, half life of 2 years. Of course, earth is the best filter there is. I'd like to know where and how they extracted samples of groundwater.

I had said in another thread that I was concerned about radioactive contamination in the turbine building. I'd hate to be right.

The more I get to know people the more I like my dogs.

...and he that has no sword, let him sell his garment, and buy one. Luke 22:36

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Saturday, April 16, 2011 5:26 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


W, this is what I know or can reliably surmise from the data:

All fuel rods in all operating reactors (1-3) were without cooling for at least 10 days as were the fuel rods in pond No 4 (staged there "temporarily" for refueling).

Since it took only about 10 hours for the fuel rods at TMI to melt down 25%, it is a virtual certainty that the fuel rods at Fukushima...ALL of them... are destroyed at least that much. Either they (1) lost their cladding and spilled fuel pellets into the bottom of the reactor where the fuel pellets melted or they (2) melted at the tops of the reactors and puddled at the bottom. There is strong evidence that Reactor No 2 is breached, and that recriticality was reached in No. 1. The containment vessel in No 2 is broken.

They have been pouring tons of water per day over the reactors, water which is quite obviously flowing over raw naked uranium fuel (obvious due to the amount and type of radionuclides in the water) and... where HAS that water been going, anyway???

Well, it's pretty damn obvious it's been going into the groundwater.

The turbine buildings and reactor basements of No 5 and 6 have been collecting radioactive water.

Why???

Because the buildings are cracked, and sunk as they are into the groundwater table, they are acting like giant wells and leaking groundwater into the structure. Groundwater which is as contaminated as anything they found in any of the other reactor/ turbine buildings.

Now, as you know, groundwater isn't still. It flows in underground "rivers"; we have had significant problems here in CA (and I would imagine elsewhere) with groundwater contamination which flows in "plumes" from the contaminant source. I will say that I don't know whether the groundwater flows seaward or inland from Fukushima, but it is hubris to pretend to know for sure that it won't be a problem.

It is very difficult to get the news. They are talking about stem cell treatment for the Fukushima workers. Why? Officials are saying that the radiation coming from pond No 4 must have been blown there from a elsewhere. From where? At some point, the site may become SO radiologically hot that it will be impossible maintain the pumps, or even send in robots.Then what? The rods and/ or corium would go white-hot again, and THIS time when it hit the water there would a steam explosion that would blow nuclear material all over kingdom come.

The advice I gave my friend in Tokyo still stands: Keep money with you at all times. IF the wind is blowing from Fukushima, find reasons to spend your spare time out of the city. Plan three or four routes out of the city which do NOT involve buying a ticket. If you see workers packing up and leaving the site, don't go back for anything- just leave.
Quote:

The head of the Atomic Energy Society of Japan, Takashi Sawada, said yesterday (APRIL 14... No shit, Sherlock) that fuel rods in reactors 1 and 3 have melted and settled at the bottom of their containment vessels, confirming fears that the plant suffered a partial meltdown after last month’s huge earthquake and tsunami... Mr Sawada warned the condition of the plant could worsen if another strong quake knocks out power to its cooling systems.
“That would destabilise pressure and temperatures inside the reactors and the situation would become extremely unpredictable again,” he said..


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Saturday, April 16, 2011 5:34 AM

ANTHONYT

Freedom is Important because People are Important


Hello,

Thank you for this informed summation of the nuclear trouble. I have not seen the information about it collected so effectively or succinctly before.

--Anthony


Assured by friends that the signal-to-noise ratio has improved on this forum, I have disabled web filtering.

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Saturday, April 16, 2011 6:41 AM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


There are a lot of 'ifs' at Fukushima that ALL have to go right for this to end --- at least not worse than it already is. And there is a lot of room for it to get worse.

They have to keep nitrogen going into unit 1 to prevent a hydrogen explosion. If they can't keep nitrogen flooding unit 1, oxygen will come in and explode the unit. As a historical example, it was a series of hydrogen explosions and ONLY hydrogen explosions that took Chernobyl apart, and set the graphite on fire.


They have to be able to keep pumping water into units 1, 2 and 3, and spent fuel pool 4. For that they have to have a continuous supply of fresh water as salt water was evaporating, leaving salt to plug the inlets, outlets and everything in between. Salt water was necessary to keep the reactors from going critical, but not something they could do indefinitely. (It was the government that insisted on using salt water to prevent total meltdown, over the objections of TEPCO officials who were more worried about the equipment and electronics being ruined than about metldown.)
The water itself is thought to not be circulating through the core because the core structure is so damaged there are no longer passageways through and around it, just sagged partial rods and (still) molten blobs at the bottom, some of which are also plugging holes. That means that they have to pump more water faster since heat transfer is inefficient. If they can't keep water pumping, decay heat will build up, causing even more melting, re-criticality, burning through to the water table and - all hell breaks loose.

To keep the water going they have to keep reactors 5 and 6 going for power. Keeping reactors 5 and 6 going is problematic, however, as highly radioactive groundwater is seeping into the turbine area and reactor room of unit 5, and reactor room (or turbine, I forget which) of unit 6.

They have to contain the radioactive water, otherwise they are doing what a steam explosion would do - heavily contaminating the environment - just more slowly. And eventually they have to treat and dispose of it.

And they have to have enough workers on the scene to keep individual exposures low(er) so workers don't die of radiation poisoning in short order. Though it seems they are willing to burn through (so to speak) their workers.

There are two competing clocks - the timetable of human action which is more prone to disaster the longer the clock runs, and the timetable of cooldown which is less prone to disaster the longer the clock runs.




This is the kind of situation where I would have expected Japan to throw its doors wide open to all the manpower, expertise and equipment the world has to offer. Instead they created a barrier of official silence, shut out the world (except late, and in very limited ways), and reacted in a myopic, underpowered, and self-serving way. The ONLY information that is released is information that other people have come to - or will come to - independently. The information that does come out is late, incomplete at best and misleading at worst, and independent observers and scientists are being kept away.
THESE are the people the Japanese are trusting to do the right thing? The safe thing? Are trusting with their lives?
THIS is how the nuclear industry is allowed to operate? Presiding in secret over a catastrophe with global impact?


Anthony, every time I think of Fukushima, I am struck with how little of it seems rational. How much seems to be self-serving, secretive, and above all, completely incapable of grasping the importance of swiftly and expertly bringing the catastrophe to a close.

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Saturday, April 16, 2011 7:02 AM

ANTHONYT

Freedom is Important because People are Important


Hello,

I think that the priority for any business in this situation is in limiting liability. Often, the route to limiting liability is limiting *perception* of liability by limiting information about problems. Even if this causes more harm in the long run, they hope they can control perceptions in order to protect their interests.

I should mention that the same is true of governments. This exact behavior was prevalent during the Chernobyl incident, with the Soviet Politburo denying the extent of harm in order to protect the reputation of the Soviet state. They even allowed open air parades and celebrations to take place within the radioactive plume, exposing tens of thousands of their own citizens to unnecessary risk rather than admit the extent of the problem.

In Japan, we have double trouble. We have a business looking out for its interests, and a nation looking to preserve its image and honor.

It's akin to the danger of self-serving Capitalism added to the propaganda needs of a self-serving state. (Which is not to say the Japanese government is like the Soviet government, but rather that they have similar desires to preserve their image on the basis of retaining honor on the world stage.)

I wonder if any suicides will result from this, or whether the Japanese have moved past such things.

--Anthony

Assured by friends that the signal-to-noise ratio has improved on this forum, I have disabled web filtering.

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Saturday, April 16, 2011 7:10 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

completely incapable of grasping the importance of swiftly and expertly bringing the catastrophe to a close.
Too many competing priorities (money, "face", politics, denial) leads to lack of clarity of purpose.

TONY: It is very very difficult to get news on Fukushima. The most reliable sources of information are Arnie Gunderson, who was a nuclear engineer who now works at Fairewinds, and Michio Kaku who is an internationally-renowned physicist at NYU and NYCC.

Also, thankfully, my hubby is willing to bird-dog the internet. Unless you google a very specific topic which already pre-supposes some knowledge of the issues (Fukushima + corium, Fukushima + groundwater, Fukushima + recriticality) or you happen across a news release in a foreign news outlet (like the video of the TEPCO official crying on-air as he explained that units Nos 5 & 6 were being contaminated by radioactive groundwater) you will not see much. To CNN, BBC, FOX etc this is all "old news".

I expected better from agencies like the IAEA. But their website is a list of happy-talk, pumps installed here, power going there, progress made everywhere... not a hint of the widespread contamination or the fragile nature of the core stability. But then I looked at the IAEA's charter, which is to promote the peaceful use of nuclear energy, the NRC's reliance on the nuclear industry at home, and the mutual embrace of TEPCO and the Japanese government and I realized that there really IS a conspiracy to withhold information. Not a conscious one, just one of mutual outlook and purpose. Nearly all nuclear engineers everywhere feel the same way.

It is a conspiracy which crosses class, politics and nations, it is a conspiracy of hubris. There is still no humility in the face of power which ... five large accidents later... we still have not yet realized we can't control.

/rant

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Saturday, April 16, 2011 7:14 AM

KWICKO

"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." -- William Casey, Reagan's presidential campaign manager & CIA Director (from first staff meeting in 1981)


Quote:


This is the kind of situation where I would have expected Japan to throw its doors wide open to all the manpower, expertise and equipment the world has to offer. Instead they created a barrier of official silence, shut out the world (except late, and in very limited ways), and reacted in a myopic, underpowered, and self-serving way. The ONLY information that is released is information that other people have come to - or will come to - independently. The information that does come out is late, incomplete at best and misleading at worst, and independent observers and scientists are being kept away.
THESE are the people the Japanese are trusting to do the right thing? The safe thing? Are trusting with their lives?
THIS is how the nuclear industry is allowed to operate? Presiding in secret over a catastrophe with global impact?



This kind of behavior is hardly uncommon, though. Remember Katrina, when pretty much the whole world was offering help, and the Bush administration's response was basically, "Nah - we got this."? It's seen as "weak" to want or need outside help, especially at a national level. Plus there are "shame" elements involved, in that you don't want "outsiders" to see how badly your company or country has mismanaged things or how many corners they've cut.

It's somewhat exacerbated by Japanese culture, in that it's almost unheard of for Japanese to even admit a problem openly to outsiders, much less ask for outside help with it. It's a culture that's at times both very proud and very humble, which creates its own conflicts.

The trick is to convince the Japanese that WE need THEIR help in training our nuclear response teams in real-world conditions, and that they'd be helping us out immensely by letting our people come in to learn from them. It's a load of bollocks, of course, but it's an "official" face-saving measure that shows humility on our part and deference to their ways.

"Although it is not true that all conservatives are stupid people, it is true that most stupid people are conservatives." - John Stuart Mill

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Saturday, April 16, 2011 7:23 AM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


"I think that the priority for any business in this situation is in limiting liability. Often, the route to limiting liability is limiting *perception* of liability by limiting information about problems. Even if this causes more harm in the long run, they hope they can control perceptions in order to protect their interests.

I should mention that the same is true of governments. This exact behavior was prevalent during the Chernobyl incident, with the Soviet Politburo denying the extent of harm in order to protect the reputation of the Soviet state. They even allowed open air parades and celebrations to take place within the radioactive plume, exposing tens of thousands of their own citizens to unnecessary risk rather than admit the extent of the problem.

In Japan, we have double trouble. We have a business looking out for its interests, and a nation looking to preserve its image and honor.

It's akin to the danger of self-serving Capitalism added to the propaganda needs of a self-serving state. (Which is not to say the Japanese government is like the Soviet government, but rather that they have similar desires to preserve their image on the basis of retaining honor on the world stage.)"




Oh, I understand that AnthonyT.

But this is the conundrum I come to:

Nuclear power is an awesome force.

Given the tendency of capitalism and government to be self-serving to the point of being a threat to people, and the inability of individuals to exert enough immediate control over either business or government to keep themselves safe - do we want control of nuclear power in the hands of either business or government?

(And parenthetically, isn't nuclear power overkill for the purpose of simply boiling water? I mean really, can't we find a better way to boil water?)

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Saturday, April 16, 2011 7:28 AM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


"Remember Katrina, when pretty much the whole world was offering help, and the Bush administration's response was basically, "Nah - we got this."?"

Interesting idea. There is a common thread, but I sense there is a subtle difference to tease out ... I will need to think about this longer.

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Saturday, April 16, 2011 7:33 AM

KWICKO

"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." -- William Casey, Reagan's presidential campaign manager & CIA Director (from first staff meeting in 1981)


Quote:

Originally posted by 1kiki:

(And parenthetically, isn't nuclear power overkill for the purpose of simply boiling water? I mean really, can't we find a better way to boil water?)




Bear in mind that a big part of selling people on the idea of nuclear energy was that whole spiel your parents and mine were sold, about having all this abundant energy, electricity that would literally be "too cheap to meter", all so that the defense industry would have a "reason" to have to keep refining nuclear materials...

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Saturday, April 16, 2011 7:51 AM

BYTEMITE


Quote:

But then I looked at the IAEA's charter, which is to promote the peaceful use of nuclear energy, the NRC's reliance on the nuclear industry at home, and the mutual embrace of TEPCO and the Japanese government and I realized that there really IS a conspiracy to withhold information. Not a conscious one, just one of mutual outlook and purpose. Nearly all nuclear engineers everywhere feel the same way.

It is a conspiracy which crosses class, politics and nations, it is a conspiracy of hubris. There is still no humility in the face of power which ... five large accidents later... we still have not yet realized we can't control.



Yes.

Also, thanks for the assessment. Looks like you did a lot of work piecing that together.

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Saturday, April 16, 2011 7:55 AM

ANTHONYT

Freedom is Important because People are Important


Hello,

I do not consider nuclear power the most ideal form of power, but I do consider it the *easiest solution for energy production in the short term, and the **least polluting of the solutions available to us in the short term.

*It may take us several decades to get solar, wind, wave, etc. power available to every citizen. What do we do for power in the meanwhile?

**Nuclear pollution is very dramatic, but the constant stream of tons of crap into our atmosphere and environment from conventional power stations should not be ignored. Nor the veritable rape of the environment to feed these conventional power schemes. I am in the camp that believes that these horrid nuclear disasters are less bad for everyone than natural gas/oil/coal plants in the long run. Compare, if you will, the environmental impact from 50 years of traditional power vs. 50 years of nuclear power.

That having been said, I am looking forward to the sunset of nuclear power, at least using radioactive materials. What do we do until that era comes? I have no better solution for the masses than nuclear. Oil, Gas, and Coal are not better, just different. Wind, Solar, and Wave power aren't ready yet.

I am gradually coming to the conclusion that nuclear power stations need to be designed by an international commission of safety experts with no eye towards profitability. The main three questions in the design process should be 1) How do we avoid a failure? 2) How do we cope with a failure when it happens despite our best efforts? 3) What do we do with the waste product?

Once the design satisfies these questions, then power companies can decide whether or not it is profitable for them to build a nuclear plant according to internationally accepted standards.

Why international standards? Because a nuclear accident does not confine its problems to the source nation. Everyone deserves input if a failure becomes a global concern.

--Anthony


Assured by friends that the signal-to-noise ratio has improved on this forum, I have disabled web filtering.

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Saturday, April 16, 2011 8:13 AM

KWICKO

"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." -- William Casey, Reagan's presidential campaign manager & CIA Director (from first staff meeting in 1981)


Quote:

Originally posted by AnthonyT:
Hello,

I do not consider nuclear power the most ideal form of power, but I do consider it the *easiest solution for energy production in the short term, and the **least polluting of the solutions available to us in the short term.

*It may take us several decades to get solar, wind, wave, etc. power available to every citizen. What do we do for power in the meanwhile?

**Nuclear pollution is very dramatic, but the constant stream of tons of crap into our atmosphere and environment from conventional power stations should not be ignored. Nor the veritable rape of the environment to feed these conventional power schemes. I am in the camp that believes that these horrid nuclear disasters are less bad for everyone than natural gas/oil/coal plants in the long run. Compare, if you will, the environmental impact from 50 years of traditional power vs. 50 years of nuclear power.

That having been said, I am looking forward to the sunset of nuclear power, at least using radioactive materials. What do we do until that era comes? I have no better solution for the masses than nuclear. Oil, Gas, and Coal are not better, just different. Wind, Solar, and Wave power aren't ready yet.

I am gradually coming to the conclusion that nuclear power stations need to be designed by an international commission of safety experts with no eye towards profitability. The main three questions in the design process should be 1) How do we avoid a failure? 2) How do we cope with a failure when it happens despite our best efforts? 3) What do we do with the waste product?

Once the design satisfies these questions, then power companies can decide whether or not it is profitable for them to build a nuclear plant according to internationally accepted standards.

Why international standards? Because a nuclear accident does not confine its problems to the source nation. Everyone deserves input if a failure becomes a global concern.

--Anthony


Assured by friends that the signal-to-noise ratio has improved on this forum, I have disabled web filtering.




Quite so. And there need to be backup plans, and backups for the backups. One of the big lessons here (aside from "Don't store your spent fuel rods in the roof above the reactor" and other seemingly-simple lessons) is, (a) make sure you have MORE - FAR MORE - than merely "adequate" backup battery and generator power, and (b) make goddamned sure that the plugs on your backup generators are of the compatible design to fit the goddamned machines they're supposed to plug into and run!

It seems that the plant actually survived the earthquake better than expected, and even weathered the tsunami better than might have been hoped. But in the aftermath, everything just went completely to hell. More and more, it looks more like a failure to plan than a failure of equipment. Brings up the old adage, "If you fail to plan, you plan to fail." If you're going to assume anything when it comes to disasters like this, assume everything you know is wrong. Question it all. "And what if that doesn't work?" "And then what happens?"

"Although it is not true that all conservatives are stupid people, it is true that most stupid people are conservatives." - John Stuart Mill

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Saturday, April 16, 2011 8:19 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Mike, in every major accident at least two safety systems fail, quite often three. Could be plane crashes, train crashes, nuclear meltdowns etc... SHIT HAPPENS. There is NO safety system adequate to ensure that shit WON'T happen. Assume the worst WILL happen.

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Saturday, April 16, 2011 8:23 AM

KWICKO

"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." -- William Casey, Reagan's presidential campaign manager & CIA Director (from first staff meeting in 1981)


Exactly, Sig - Assume your best-case scenario WILL NOT work out. Plan for the absolute worst. Have a backup plan, and assume it will fail, and have a backup for that as well, and assume that will fail.

For all the support nuclear gets from the right, it certainly can't stand on its own in a free market. Nuclear power is heavily subsidized (SOCIALISM!) by your tax dollars and mine, and even then, they can't get the safety right.

"Although it is not true that all conservatives are stupid people, it is true that most stupid people are conservatives." - John Stuart Mill

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Saturday, April 16, 2011 4:16 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Mike the worst-case scenario is that ALL of your safety measures will fail. Because, at some point, some place, they all will.

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Saturday, April 16, 2011 5:41 PM

ANTHONYT

Freedom is Important because People are Important


Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
Mike the worst-case scenario is that ALL of your safety measures will fail. Because, at some point, some place, they all will.



Hello,

Having a plan for when God reaches into your reactor, shakes out the radioactives, and distributes them on your lawn is ALSO a good idea.

--Anthony



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Sunday, April 17, 2011 2:27 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Pretty much, Tony.

My hubby, who's worked with scientists and engineers his whole life, says they have one fatal flaw: The can only ask themselves questions they have imagined, and their imagination tends to run rather small. Case in point: Nuclear engineers will tell you there is NO scenario in the playbook where three reactors and four spent pools have been compromised at the same time, with 75% loss of fuel. It just never occurred to them.

We are constantly skewered, in large ways and small, by our lack of imagination. From "Were do you want to eat tonight?" to "Where should we be in 10 years?" to "Isn't there a better way to do tis?" to "what do we do if this all goes wrong?

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Sunday, April 17, 2011 3:30 AM

HARDWARE


Kiki,
I'm interested in where you got your information about 5 & 6 being used to power the facility. All my information indicated that those units were in cold shutdown.

Also,
http://www.iaea.org/newscenter/news/tsunamiupdate01.html

The more I get to know people the more I like my dogs.

...and he that has no sword, let him sell his garment, and buy one. Luke 22:36

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Sunday, April 17, 2011 3:47 AM

HARDWARE


Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
Mike, in every major accident at least two safety systems fail, quite often three. Could be plane crashes, train crashes, nuclear meltdowns etc... SHIT HAPPENS. There is NO safety system adequate to ensure that shit WON'T happen. Assume the worst WILL happen.


^This.

And that's not even taking into account humans misinterpreting what they are seeing.

The more I get to know people the more I like my dogs.

...and he that has no sword, let him sell his garment, and buy one. Luke 22:36

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Sunday, April 17, 2011 9:28 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


HW, I saw what Kiki saw: It was a video originally in Japanese w/ english translation in which a TEPCO official... struggling not to cry while on-air... describes how the radioactive water collecting in Unit No 5 is threatening the entire site's emergency power.

Like all things TEPCO, the announcement was incomplete and unclear. I don't think Nos 5-6 nuclear reactors have been started back up to supply site power, but it's possible they have emergency diesel generators in the basements which are threatened by the water.

I can't find the link again... part of the problem with the news being fragmentary, parsed out in small bits to various newsgroups- when at all. (This particular link was to a Chinese website, I believe). If I find it again, I will post it, and maybe you can read the tea leaves better.

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Sunday, April 17, 2011 9:40 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Here it is...


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Sunday, April 17, 2011 10:51 AM

FREMDFIRMA


My issue on this is more of a human one.

Fifteen kids, only one of em even out of the equivalent of high school, suddenly thrust into a position of responsibility far beyond anything they've ever been equipped mentally, emotionally, or socially to deal with - thankfully the town/village isn't in the "hot zone" proper, but every building save the temple was flooded and effectively wrecked, leaving THEM in charge of trying to sort things out, while most of the efforts of their government are of course quite properly focused on the more dangerous situation at hand...

And while I find Yurikos obsessive beliefs irritating, I cannot in good conscience screw with her faith when it happens to be one of the few things keeping her and hers going, and despite that it will reinforce her misguided faith, I've been using various contacts to get them supplies, despite communications of any kind being very sporadic.

The situation as it stands *has* forced me to re-evaluate faith in general, even when I feel it is completely errant and misguided, for if they believe, and the assistance comes, no matter the mechanisms of exactly how that happens - does that not make their faith justified ?

I feel for them, to the point where even the small amount of assistance I can render makes me feel so damn helpless, and if I *had* any faith, I'd be prayin for em.

-Frem
Quote:

Ain't about you, Jayne. It's about what they need.

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Sunday, April 17, 2011 12:03 PM

ANTHONYT

Freedom is Important because People are Important


"and if I *had* any faith, I'd be prayin for em."

Hello,

I'll fill in on this one.

--Anthony



_______________________________________________

“If you are not free to choose wrongly and irresponsibly, you are not free at all”

Jacob Hornberger

“Freedom is not worth having if it does not connote freedom to err. It passes my comprehension how human beings, be they ever so experienced and able, can delight in depriving other human beings of that precious right.”

Mahatma Gandhi

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Sunday, April 17, 2011 8:45 PM

RIONAEIRE

Beir bua agus beannacht


Frem, I'll fill in for ya there too. How do you know Euriko et al? Are their parents not around? You mentioned them in conjunction with the sister's potential future arranged marriage.

Anyways I'm very opposed to nuclear power now, period, it is a force that we have no business dabbling with, we're in over our heads, it is too sinister for us to wrangle.

Con about Japanese culture: They have a really hard time admitting there is a problem, but they have an even harder time asking for help with a problem, as stated above.
Pro about Japanese culture: I haven't seen or heard of any looting whatsoever. If this happened in America our society would have fallen apart, or at least the state where it occurred, we are so ill behaved culturally. So I have to give them credit for holding it together.

"A completely coherant River means writers don't deliver" KatTaya

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Sunday, April 17, 2011 9:03 PM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


So, I was thinking about the whole idea of intl. plans ... I think there's a flaw in it.

Here's the specific example: One of the problems at Fukushima Daichi is that about 20 years worth of spent fuel is being stored on site - not in the spent fuel pools next to the reactor cores but in tanks. That's roughly half the spent fuel generated over the lifetime of the facility. This is an example of poor operation. No matter how good your plans, your operation has to be good as well.

The problem with people running nuclear power plants in the general sense is the interaction of three factors.

One is that nuclear power is implacable. You have to be perfect in your plan and operation because every time you are not, you risk catastrophe.

The second is that while our technology requires flawlessly meeting long-term demands, our brains are focused on the short-term rewards. So we tend to do what is more rewarding or easier - even when we KNOW otherwise.

The third is that the regulators tend to come to resemble the regulated sector, and regulation gets slack.

I'm not sure that putting human minds in control of such demanding technology is a good match of job and tools.

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Monday, April 18, 2011 4:23 AM

FREMDFIRMA



Riona, Yuriko actually hunted me down through multiple levels of obfuscation after reading some of my editorials and realizing there was a single person behind them, apparently the "theme" of them resonated with what they believe - and the girl is scary smart and a damn slick investigator on top of knowing a fistful of languages, even if she is a mite on the creepy-crazy side.
She actually kind of started out blackmailing me to talk to her, but it didn't take long before she understood enough about the situation to jump on board as an ally - her folks are okay but slightly estranged from her, although she was the apple of her uncles eye and he doted on her (spoiled her rotten, more like!), but unfortunately his workplace was smack dab in the impact zone and the entire building was more or less reduced to powder, alas - he did live a pretty full life, and being a corporate loyalist one could say he did the equivalent of dying with his boots on, but such losses are never easy to take.

She is as far as I understand it the one in charge of their little temple/shrine/whatever, and Maltquake is next in line, although they're not actually related - I suppose the rest of them would be considered "Miko", I think, I don't know all that much about Shinto cause there's language/culture translation issues, not to mention my lack of patience with religious issues as a whole to begin with, but for reasons which seem mostly to revolve around them having the only non-flooded building, they're stuck with trying to sort out, salvage and rebuild, if this is even possible cause that area might be flooded permanently, I don't know.

There's also that she has a VERY forceful personality (especially for a female in that society, due in part to her uncles endless indulgence of her whims), and isn't one to sit by the wayside in a crisis, whereas most of the folk from that area are so flaming conservative it takes them forever to make any kind of a decision, so she probably just ran them over with a plan and handed it off as a fait accompli - they won't be the first nor the last folk she's done THAT to.

I know in the face of such an epic disaster and crisis, their situation is by comparison so minor a thing it doesn't even register - but knowing them personally, even at a distance, makes it more real, more heart wrenching, than it'd otherwise be, cause you care about them specifically.

On the bright side, I rather doubt any of those people will ever be so dismissive of them due to age and gender in the future, saving peoples ass tends to have that effect, yes ?

Also: Regarding regulation of reactors and whatnot - all you really need is one hardass, ruthless bastard who cares about nothing else but the quality of the personnel and safe operations, and be damned to anything else.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyman_G._Rickover
Rickover didn't care very much for the *idea* of nuclear powered subs, but we were GOING to have them, regardless of how he felt about it, and so he did everything in his power, and then some, in order to ensure their safety.

If THAT man, or someone like him, was in charge of a nuclear power plant, I would never worry for it.

-Frem

I do not serve the Blind God.

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Monday, April 18, 2011 4:56 AM

HARDWARE


Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
HW, I saw what Kiki saw: It was a video originally in Japanese w/ english translation in which a TEPCO official... struggling not to cry while on-air... describes how the radioactive water collecting in Unit No 5 is threatening the entire site's emergency power.

Like all things TEPCO, the announcement was incomplete and unclear. I don't think Nos 5-6 nuclear reactors have been started back up to supply site power, but it's possible they have emergency diesel generators in the basements which are threatened by the water.

I can't find the link again... part of the problem with the news being fragmentary, parsed out in small bits to various newsgroups- when at all. (This particular link was to a Chinese website, I believe). If I find it again, I will post it, and maybe you can read the tea leaves better.


No problems. I saw on the IAEA's website that they are reporting that backup generators in units 5&6 are supplying power to those units to keep the pumps for the spent fuel pools working. Temps are 57 C in those pools.

Grid power is restored, but not operable in units 1-4 yet. Temps are averaging 97 C in units 1-3 and the fuel pools of 1-4. That's close to boiling.

CNN reported that they are estimating 6-9 months before the crisis is resolved. After reading the IAEA's site status updates and seeing how things went from bad to worse on an almost daily basis, I'm not going to hold them to that timetable.

The more I get to know people the more I like my dogs.

...and he that has no sword, let him sell his garment, and buy one. Luke 22:36

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Monday, April 18, 2011 5:01 AM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


That makes more sense. I had read a press release (now far buried in the i-net) where the infamous 'they' mentioned that if reactors 5 and 6 were out of commission, they would not be able to pump water. Since they said reactor, I assumed they meant reactor. Apparently they meant generator.

***** Thank you for clearing that up. *****

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Monday, April 18, 2011 9:28 AM

HARDWARE


Quote:

Changes to Fukushima Daiichi Plant Status

The IAEA receives information updates from a variety of official Japanese sources, through the national competent authorities: the Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency (NISA) and the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT).

Based on the information received by 18th April 2011 02:00 UTC the following update related to the reactor units at the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant (NPP), and related environmental conditions, is provided.

As a countermeasure against a possible tsunami, the distribution boards for the pumps injecting water to the reactor pressure vessels of Units 1, 2 and 3 were transferred to higher ground on 15th April. In order to minimize the liberation of radioactive material into the ocean, two sandbags filled with Zeolite were placed between the Inlet Screen Pump Room of Unit 1 and Unit 2. Further, five sandbags filled with Zeolite were placed between the Inlet Screen Pump Room of Unit 2 and Unit 3 on 17th April. The Zeolite material is designed to capture specific radioactive elements. It is intended to sample and analyze the Zeolite material periodically to determine the effectiveness of this procedure.

The removal of debris (amount equivalent to 8 containers) using remote-control heavy machinery continued on 16th April.

Nitrogen gas is being injected into the Unit 1 containment vessel to reduce the possibility of hydrogen combustion within the containment vessel. The pressure in this containment vessel has stabilised. The pressure in the RPV is stable.

In Unit 1, fresh water is being continuously injected into the RPV through the feed-water line at an indicated flow rate of 6 m3/h using a temporary electric pump with off-site power. In Units 2 and 3, fresh water is being continuously injected through the fire extinguisher lines at an indicated rate of 7 m3/h using temporary electric pumps with off-site power.

RPV temperatures remain above cold shutdown conditions in all Units, (typically less than 95°C). In Unit 1 the temperature at the feed water nozzle of the RPV is 180°C and at the bottom of the RPV is 117°C. In Unit 2, the temperature at the feed water nozzle of the RPV is 141°C. In Unit 3 the temperature at the feed water nozzle of the RPV is 91°C and at the bottom of the RPV is 122°C.

In accordance with the report of the Nuclear Emergency Response HQs (Prime Minister's Office) from 15th April, thermography temperatures of the Containment Vessel and Spent Fuel Pool in Unit 1 were 33 °C and 36°C respectively. In Unit 3 the temperatures were 68°C and 59°C at the same positions. Also on the 15th April, thermography temperature of the Unit 2 reactor building roof was 31°C

As of 16th April, no white smoke was seen to be coming from Unit 1 although white smoke was still observed coming from Units 2 and 3. As of 16th April white smoke was also visible in Unit 4.

Fresh water injection (around 45 tonnes) to the spent fuel pool was carried out via the spent fuel pool cooling line of Unit 2 and completed by 16th April. Due to the occurrence of an earthquake on 16th April, the motor-driven pump was stopped. The spent fuel pool was confirmed to be filled with water.

In accordance with NISA Release 94, TEPCO took water samples from the spent fuel pool of Unit 4 on 12th April, in order to examine the conditions. The sample was taken by using the arm of the concrete pump vehicle. At the same time, the temperature of water in the spent fuel pool of Unit 4 was measured with a thermistor attached to the arm of the concrete pump vehicle. The activities for I-131, Cs-134 and Cs-137 were 220 Bq/cm3, 88 Bq/cm3 and 93 Bq/cm3 respectively.

There has been no change in the status in Units 5 and 6.

The power supply to the Common Spent Fuel Pool was temporarily interrupted due to a short-circuit on 17th April.



IAEA website, updated daily.

http://www.iaea.org/newscenter/news/tsunamiupdate01.html

The more I get to know people the more I like my dogs.

...and he that has no sword, let him sell his garment, and buy one. Luke 22:36

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Monday, April 18, 2011 10:43 AM

JAMERON4EVA


What i cant seem to get over, is this. They're dealing with NUCLEAR power/energy. In Japan. If anyone should know the risks, and danagers, it's the Japanese. I mean, they did have two bombs dropped on there heads, and they STILL have not fully recovered from that, and its been over 50 years.

"Mom, he has her chip. He has her."
John Connor,"Born To Run", TSCC EP 2x22

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Monday, April 18, 2011 10:51 AM

BYTEMITE


Depends on what you mean. If you mean an increased incidence of leukemia then yes, but Hiroshima and Nagasaki as cities are doing okay and their areas are fairly liveable radiation wise. Atomic bomb radiation is a generally short lived species compared to other types.

I can't say I'm a fan of nuclear power, but the issue here was mostly the earthquake and the tsunami. ...Some issue as well on the part of the Japanese government and TEPCO. The reactors in question were old, and from reports appear to have had safety cuts and poor maintenance.

I guess I just find it a little unfair to ask "why haven't the Japanese learned better" when it was really only maybe 100 or so people in any position of say over the matter. I mostly feel sorry for the Japanese, they're good people. No one would've deserved something like this.

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Monday, April 18, 2011 11:14 AM

AURAPTOR

America loves a winner!


Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
HW, I saw what Kiki saw: It was a video originally in Japanese w/ english translation in which a TEPCO official... struggling not to cry while on-air...



A suggestion... that in addition to the realization that this is a colossal, far reaching disaster, what you're also seeing is a cultural display of having to effectively admit some culpability for this ? It's ingrained in some that to fail, in such a public manner and for something on such an enormous scale, reflects poorly on the company, the plant, and all who work there, to the very last man.

We might see this sort of emotion from a front line worker, those doing the heavy lifting, but not from a company suit.

Think Tony Hayward, of BP, and that's probably more of what you'd expect from many Western execs.


" I do not love the bright sword for its sharpness, nor the arrow for its swiftness, nor the warrior for his glory. I love only that which they defend. "

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Tuesday, April 19, 2011 5:39 AM

JAMERON4EVA


Quote:

Originally posted by Bytemite:
Depends on what you mean. If you mean an increased incidence of leukemia then yes, but Hiroshima and Nagasaki as cities are doing okay and their areas are fairly liveable radiation wise. Atomic bomb radiation is a generally short lived species compared to other types.

I can't say I'm a fan of nuclear power, but the issue here was mostly the earthquake and the tsunami. ...Some issue as well on the part of the Japanese government and TEPCO. The reactors in question were old, and from reports appear to have had safety cuts and poor maintenance.

I guess I just find it a little unfair to ask "why haven't the Japanese learned better" when it was really only maybe 100 or so people in any position of say over the matter. I mostly feel sorry for the Japanese, they're good people. No one would've deserved something like this.




I agree on that, im just saying the people in CHARGE of ensuring protocals are met, workers and civilians are safe, and that the most destructive, powerful, and while still very, VERY deadly, beautiful, thing that we've ever discovered, and still know very little about, is keept protected, didn't do there job. Because THEY chose to put a nuclear facility, on an ACTIVE fault line. That to me, is the biggest mistake.


"Mom, he has her chip. He has her."
John Connor,"Born To Run", TSCC EP 2x22

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Tuesday, April 19, 2011 6:54 AM

HARDWARE


Quote:

Originally posted by jameron4eva:

I agree on that, im just saying the people in CHARGE of ensuring protocals are met, workers and civilians are safe, and that the most destructive, powerful, and while still very, VERY deadly, beautiful, thing that we've ever discovered, and still know very little about, is keept protected, didn't do there job. Because THEY chose to put a nuclear facility, on an ACTIVE fault line. That to me, is the biggest mistake.


Which would pretty much preclude putting a nuclear reactor anywhere in Japan. The reactors survived the earthquake with minimal damage. They scrammed as designed and it wasn't until the tsunami took out their generators (Why they were in the basement is another story. Next time, generators and diesel fuel on the roof, spent fuel pool in the basement. Not the other way around)

Another question is why they were not using Thorium reactors. When a Thorium reactor loses power it shuts down. Thorium is the most prevalent nuclear fuel on the planet. It also produces less nuclear waste than Uranium reactors and it doesn't have to be shut down to refuel it.

The conventional Uranium reactors are an outgrowth of nuclear weapon technology. At one time we wanted lots of reactors that could be used to breed nuclear fuel for bombs and that is why the Uranium reactor is the most prevalent fuel on the planet.

The more I get to know people the more I like my dogs.

...and he that has no sword, let him sell his garment, and buy one. Luke 22:36

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Tuesday, April 19, 2011 8:25 AM

ANTHONYT

Freedom is Important because People are Important


Hello,

My Dad used to call it a 'Dead Man's Switch' and I am surprised that there are any reactors built without it.

In essence, in order for a reactor to work at all, everything should be working. If anything fails, the reactor should shut off. Safely.

On my Dad's lawnmower, the switch is represented thusly: If you release the handle, the lawnmower shuts off. Reduces the chance of cutting yourself or someone else because you lost control of the device.

Dead Man? Dead Power? Dead whatever? It should shut itself off. Safely. Automatically. Inevitably. Unavoidably.

--Anthony

_______________________________________________

“If you are not free to choose wrongly and irresponsibly, you are not free at all”

Jacob Hornberger

“Freedom is not worth having if it does not connote freedom to err. It passes my comprehension how human beings, be they ever so experienced and able, can delight in depriving other human beings of that precious right.”

Mahatma Gandhi

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Tuesday, April 19, 2011 9:14 AM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


Hardware has the liquefaction thing right. It’s what caused so much destruction in our Marina District during the Loma Prieta ‘quake. It’s what happens, as he said, anywhere land has been filled in, and the Marina was built on fill from the Bay.

It’s weird to me, too, that people would go right up to it...human curiosity is funny, isn’t it? To me that’s not as unusual as on the monster movies where people stand there staring up at the monster for like 30 seconds before they even start to run, but I think Hollywood CAN be blamed for that one!

The water thing is interesting. I’d guess it’s the same as the crevasses, in that groundwater is being shoved UP by the movement. It’s not necessarily coming from any body of water (we had no such thing in the Marina), it could be just an upwelling of groundwater...after all, if the area is built on fill, it’s essentially like it was built on sand...and water wells up through sand...

As usual, Sig gives us some real good understanding, and I, too, thank you for that. Thank you Kiki, too. It’s hard to get info from the media, there are so many different “versions” and so many different opinions. I’ll tell you tho’, Sig, MY advice to anyone living anywhere in Japan would be “get out”! Earthquakes, tsunamis, radioactivity, volcanoes in the South, and before all that crowding, pollution...it’s not a place I’d have wanted to visit even before all this. Now? I think we should open up for refugees!!

Mostly I just find it all terribly depressing, a little scary even from this far away, and most of all angering. People wanting profit are just far too willing to ignore some obvious dangers and not have plans in effect for correcting them, and I’m off the fence now; I don’t support nuclear. If you have an electrical plant blow up, it only hurts those near it. A quake that breaks a dam that provides water energy could kill many, but again only locally. As far as I know, only nuclear can cause damage to an entire country, other countries outside its border, the entire world. Oil is bad, period, for so many reasons, including how much damage it might do on a large scale. I’m for renewables. Used to be I only cared about nuclear insofar as what we’re doing with the waste, but this has kicked me off the fence. There will ALWAYS be human error; there will ALWAYS be people whose greed outweighs their common sense or desire for safety, and nuclear to me has the biggest potential for harm.
Quote:

I think that the priority for any business in this situation is in limiting liability. Often, the route to limiting liability is limiting *perception* of liability by limiting information about problems. Even if this causes more harm in the long run, they hope they can control perceptions in order to protect their interests.

I should mention that the same is true of governments.

Damned straight, Anthony! Add that to the above, and it’s just bad news all around.

As Sig said,
Quote:

But then I looked at the IAEA's charter, which is to promote the peaceful use of nuclear energy, the NRC's reliance on the nuclear industry at home, and the mutual embrace of TEPCO and the Japanese government and I realized that there really IS a conspiracy to withhold information. Not a conscious one, just one of mutual outlook and purpose. Nearly all nuclear engineers everywhere feel the same way.
Sig, if that’s true, why aren’t more of them hollering? Why aren’t they DEMANDING to be heard? I kinda know the answer to that one, too, but it pisses me off. If the guys trained and educated on this stuff don’t speak up loudly, none of us can know any better.
Quote:

It is a conspiracy which crosses class, politics and nations, it is a conspiracy of hubris . There is still no humility in the face of power which ... five large accidents later... we still have not yet realized we can't control.
It’s not a rant, love, it’s the truth!

Gawd, Mike, you really think it was shame and weakness where Katrina was concerned...OR the Deepwater Horizon? That really pisses me off...in so many ways we ARE a global community, to the point where things that happen in one place, especially large disasters, DO affect the rest of the world...yet we haven’t gotten past this shit? We sure have a long ways to evolve in that way too, I guess. No, it didn’t surprise me where Japan is concerned...nor Russia...but I guess I deluded myself that WE would be different, given we’re more open in other ways. Shit.

I see Kiki has the same concerns:
Quote:

Given the tendency of capitalism and government to be self-serving to the point of being a threat to people, and the inability of individuals to exert enough immediate control over either business or government to keep themselves safe - do we want control of nuclear power in the hands of either business or government?
Absofrigginlootely!

Anthony, I don’t know (about the relative damage of nuclear v. other forms). Enough of these disasters and radiation flying around...at least we can know about pollution and hopefully minimize it to a degree; what can we do to minimize a major nuclear disaster? I have no solution, but damn, I wish we could reduce our DEMAND---which we could do easily and quickly---so that other forms have a chance to grow. I know, “Silly gel”...I can dream...

I agree with Mike:
Quote:

For all the support nuclear gets from the right, it certainly can't stand on its own in a free market. Nuclear power is heavily subsidized (SOCIALISM!) by your tax dollars and mine, and even then, they can't get the safety right.
But they won’t tell it that way, of course, which is why I think those in the know—-the engineers, have a responsibility to SCREAM it out until enough people listen.

Several of us have said the same thing in different ways, but I think Kiki summed it up best:
Quote:

I'm not sure that putting human minds in control of such demanding technology is a good match of job and tools.
Jame, yes, they had Hiroshima. But that was decades ago, and generations ago. Remember the thing about “short term”...humans have always pretty much thought in terms that are too short, and we continue to do so.


Hippie Operative Nikovich Nikita Nicovna Talibani,
Contracted Agent of Veritas Oilspillus, code name “Nike”,
signing off



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Tuesday, April 19, 2011 9:49 AM

PIRATENEWS

John Lee, conspiracy therapist at Hollywood award-winner History Channel-mocked SNL-spoofed PirateNew.org wooHOO!!!!!!


Quote:

Originally posted by Hardware:
Quote:

Originally posted by jameron4eva:

I agree on that, im just saying the people in CHARGE of ensuring protocals are met, workers and civilians are safe, and that the most destructive, powerful, and while still very, VERY deadly, beautiful, thing that we've ever discovered, and still know very little about, is keept protected, didn't do there job. Because THEY chose to put a nuclear facility, on an ACTIVE fault line. That to me, is the biggest mistake.


Which would pretty much preclude putting a nuclear reactor anywhere in Japan. The reactors survived the earthquake with minimal damage. They scrammed as designed and it wasn't until the tsunami took out their generators (Why they were in the basement is another story. Next time, generators and diesel fuel on the roof, spent fuel pool in the basement. Not the other way around)



Our local nuke plant shut down last week, for "routine" maintence. Didn't make any difference to our power supply...

That nuke plant is located on a river, literally a stone's throw from a hydro dam.

That same hydro dam caught on fire a couple years ago, and "could not be extinguished". Repairs took 1 year costing $100-million. When it caught fire, it caused an "emergency" at the nuke plant, which requires hydro electricity to operate the nuke plant cooling pumps...

This same power company, TVA, caused "the world's worst environmental disaster" 25 miles upstream, when a dirt dam failed at a coal power plant. A massive wall of coal ash slurry hit the lake/river, causing a "tidal wave" that would have killed 1,000 people if it had happened on a summer day. Instead it wiped out all the boat docks and filled the river with poison.

My local nuke plant is thus located downstream of THREE dams on 3 giant lakes, and one of these dams is DIRT. This nuke plant would thus be UNDERWATER if any of those dams failed, and the nuke plant was hit by a "tidal wave" 1,000 miles from the nearest ocean. This nuke plant is actually designed for being underwater, with painted lines on the walls showing where the water level would be depending on how many dams failed... The piping is designed to EXPLODE depending on where the water level is on the walls of the nuke plant...

In 2010, this TVA nuke plant building contractor was an IRANIAN CITIZEN... The nearby Oak Ridge nuke bomb factories were also run by an illegal alien, who could not travel outside USA because the border police would not allow him to re-enter USA. 4,000 other foreign citizens also work at the ORNL nuke bomb factories... 1,000s of TONS of uranium were accidentally AND INTENTIONALLY released from ORNL in the air and water, or STOLEN BY ISRAEL.

Read the Top Secret Govt Report:

Quote:

"Conservative estimates indicated that 35,000 pounds of uranium were released into the air from all sources. 4,300 pounds of uranium a month was unaccounted for or released to the environment. ETTP operates an incinerator which handles radioactive, hazardous and uranium-contaminated PCB wastes. ETTP generated transuranic elements (isotopes with atomic numbers greater than uranium) such as neptunium-237 and plutonium-239; fission products such as techneitum-99; PCBs; toxic metals; and volatile organic compunds such as trichloroethene (TCE) and present risk to the public. Some contaminants migrated outside the Plant boundary. Waste disposal practices included direct discharge of radioactive materials, toxics and caustics to holding ponds and storm drains, and incineration and burial. Reports reflected a number of spills of nitric and hydrochloric acids, in one case 200 gallons. Numerous large fires and explosions were reported. It is impossible to characterize exposure because of inadequate surveys and incomplete records. Records indicate that as contamination levels increased, exposure controls were reduced. Contamination above limits was commonly detected. Operations have released a variety of contaminants into the environment, such as burial of low-level and hazardous waste in landfills and dumping directly into the Clinch River. Large amounts of contaminated equipment and scrap material were sold at public auction. Tens of thousands of pounds of flourine and hydrogen flouride were emitted annually. The investigation team identified over 600 releases of uranium hexaflouride, and a large, visible cloud was released outside a building. Exposure to 'intense clouds' of uranium powder dusts was prevalent and resulted in intense beta radiation fields. Each month dozens or workers were identified as having exposures exceeding plant control guides. Extensive contamination was prevalent. Recordsindicate many air samples in excess of Plant Allowable Limits. Both chemical and radiological materials have routinely been discharged from the Plant, from both sanitary sewage and storm water systems and materials were directly discharged in Mitchell Branch and Poplar Creek. One million pounds of blowdown water was discharged a day. The hexavalent chromium concentration in Poplar Creek is equal to the level regulated by the site's permit. Contents of 500 uranium hexafloride and other gas cylinders were emptied into the unlined holding pond by shooting the cylinders with high-powered rifles, and this pond discharged into Poplar Creek. Records confirm that radiation exceeded drinking water standards. Over 80,000 drums of pond sludge with low concentrations of uranium were generated in 1988. Ventilation was modified to discharge mercury fumes above the roof. Elevated levels of mercury were found in urinalyses. Records refer to the recovery of tons of mercury. Traps would blow out spilling mercury on the floor. Air sampling in the 1990s identified mercury levels several times the Threshold Limit Value. Continual and volumnous process leaks (blowoffs) were vented to the atmosphere. 4,300 pounds of uranium hexaflouride were released per month. Losses were excessive. 10,000 union grievances were filed and management disputed grievances concerning safety in favor of economic considerations. Many storm drains were not moitored before 1992, and routine and accidental wastes have adversely impacted the environment and the aquatic habitat. Weaknesses in the sampling and monitoring of air pollutant emissions raise concerns regarding the accuracy of public dose and exposure calculations. Environmental radiological protection and surveillance are not compliant with DOE Order. Few records reflect involvement by the Atomic Energy Commission in investigations of serious events. Levels of airborne radioactivity were as high as 35,800 dpm/ft3, and far exceeded the PAL of 2 dpm/ft3. [That's radiation levels over 17,000 times the maximum limit.] Airborne radioactivity far in excess of normal background levels was measured off-site as far as five miles away. A number of criticality and sub-criticality accident experiments were performed and posed a severe radiation hazard. Bladder cancer rates were seven times higher than for the general population, and stomach ulcers were 6.5 times greater. Inhalation of airborn radiation can increase the risk of future cancer." [verbatum from the Report]

NOTE: This report only covered the K-25 plant, not the DOE National Nuclear Security Administration's Y-12 nuclear bombs factory, not the thousands of contaminated lab rats from ORNL's Y-12 nuclear bombs factory Mouse House that are incinerated at the University of Tennessee Medical Center in downtown Knoxville, and did not cover Top Secret "criticality" pollution, "referred to as 'special hazards'" (ie, "small" explosions due to accidental nuclear reactions), and "are discussed in a separate classifed document." The GOPS government of Tennessee previously gave ETTP/ORNL a clean bill of health in 1999.

www.archive.org/details/IndependentInvestigationOfTheEastTennesseeTech
nologyPark

www.piratenews.org/knoxville-tn-epa-ornl-air-pollution.html



Bottom line, ALL these power plants are designed to FAIL by the New World Order, and cause maximum destruction and loss of life. This will help reduce world population by 90%, and the survivors will beg for the NWO to save them...

Fukushima Nuclear Reactor Status
http://fireflyfans.net/mthread.asp?b=11&t=47831

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Tuesday, April 19, 2011 1:26 PM

HARDWARE


Wow, PN, how do you sleep at night with all the paranoia in your head yelling at you?

If that much uranium had been release by that plant you would be dead.

The more I get to know people the more I like my dogs.

...and he that has no sword, let him sell his garment, and buy one. Luke 22:36

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Tuesday, April 19, 2011 1:33 PM

ANTHONYT

Freedom is Important because People are Important


"Wow, PN, how do you sleep at night with all the paranoia in your head yelling at you?"

Hello,

He doesn't sleep. He's kept awake by the blood-curdling screams of women in his back yard.

--Anthony



_______________________________________________

“If you are not free to choose wrongly and irresponsibly, you are not free at all”

Jacob Hornberger

“Freedom is not worth having if it does not connote freedom to err. It passes my comprehension how human beings, be they ever so experienced and able, can delight in depriving other human beings of that precious right.”

Mahatma Gandhi

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Tuesday, April 19, 2011 2:24 PM

RIONAEIRE

Beir bua agus beannacht


Well PN we've found something that we agree on, we are both anti-nuclear power. I hope you're mannaging okay down there, you talk a lot about things that are unpleasant and scary, I want you to be okay and safe.

"A completely coherant River means writers don't deliver" KatTaya

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Wednesday, April 20, 2011 7:39 PM

PIRATENEWS

John Lee, conspiracy therapist at Hollywood award-winner History Channel-mocked SNL-spoofed PirateNew.org wooHOO!!!!!!


Quote:

Originally posted by RionaEire:

Well PN we've found something that we agree on, we are both anti-nuclear power. I hope you're mannaging okay down there, you talk a lot about things that are unpleasant and scary, I want you to be okay and safe.



The nuke plant is still shut down for the past 3 weeks for "fuel reloading". Radioactive spent fuel rods are stored on site...forever...just like Fukushima.


Black Rain - The rainwater from this drain pipe has the highest level of radiation among all sites checked by our team of journalists in their three week-long visits to the Fukushima hot zone
http://rense.com/general93/deadz.htm

Robot Finds 270 Millisieverts An Hour In Reactor Building #1
http://www.asahi.com/english/TKY201104190193.html

US Marines To Be Moved From Japan To Guam
http://www3.nhk.or.jp/daily/english/20_13.html

FDA Won't Test Alaska Fish For Radiation - Don't Worry, Be Happy
http://rense.com/general93/curr.htm



Due to the extremely high radiation levels near the Fukushima 1 nuclear plant, the seaside area of South Soma is the last site for these local police officers to search for bodies of tsunami victims. Police officers told the journalist team that if radiation levels had not been so high, many more residents would have been rescued.


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Thursday, April 21, 2011 5:25 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Hardware, you seem to be the kind of person who likes to get the facts, but when you go after them be sure to get ALL of the facts. As useful as the IAEA website is, they DON'T mention about 95% of the critical events and findings at the site. (That's not an exaggeration.) They DON'T mention that the front wall of reactor No 4 has to be shored up, or that highly contaminated water is seeping in to reactor building basements and turbine buildings from god-knows-where, that it appears that uncontrolled fission occurred in SFP No 4 and that bits of fuel rods were found 4 miles away. This isn't according to crackpot conspiracists but according to TEPCO officials and nuclear engineers.


Start here, with Arnie Gunderson, a former nuclear power executive and engineer who discusses the state of the reactors and explains why (1) either there was a Chernobyl-level radiation release at Fukushima or (2) uncontrolled fisison uccurred in SFP No. 4



The IAEA's stated mission is to promote the peaceful use of nuclear energy. What that kind of mission, they're going to say -and keep saying no matter what -We've got this under control. We can handle it. Everything's going to be OK.

In any case, my biggest objection to nuclear power isn't explosion or accidents, its the problem of long-term nuclear waste. Those wastes will far outlast ANY civilization which created them, and therefore ANY civilization's ability to monitor and control them. And storing them on-site until... ??? or putting them in a tin can and burying them in a mountain is NOT my idea of proper handling! Until someone comes up with an idea better than "kicking the can down the road" of how to handle these isotopes, we are doing our children and their children for many generations a vast disservice.

The reason why these isotopes are so long-lived is because they don't decay very quickly. Therefore, the radiation they emit is low and inconsequential UNTIL you ingest them. There is a difference between being "irradiated" and "contaminated". Of the two "contaminated" will ultimately cost more lives.

Here are the relevant half-lives
Quote:



Iodine 129 (I-129)- 15.7 million years

Plutonium (Pu) - has at least 15 different isotopes, all of which are radioactive.
Plutonium 238 - 87.7 years.
Plutonium 239 - 24,100 years
plutonium 240 - 6,560 years.

External exposure to plutonium poses very little health risk. Internal exposure to plutonium is an extremely serious health hazard. It generally stays in the body for decades, exposing organs and tissues to radiation and increasing the risk of cancer and kidney damage.

Uranium (U)
Uranium 238- 4.47 billion years
uranium 235 - 700 million years
Uranium 234 - 246,000 years.

... toxic damage to the kidneys and risk of cancer due to its radioactivity. Since uranium tends to concentrate in specific locations in the body, risk of cancer of the bone, liver cancer and blood diseases (such as leukemia) are increased.



The former Soviet Union distributed small plutonium heaters... tea-kettles, almost... to its outlying settlements as cheap sources of power. Once the Soviet Union fell, tracking ceased and knowledge disappeared. It wasn't until hunters began showing up with significant radiation burns (because they had warmed themselves at night with a mysterious metal container found in the woods) that knowledge of the program was revived. It sounds like a scifi story but it's not; I'll do my best to find a link to that. This is a very rapid progression to the kind of "lost knowledge" that will make our nuclear waste such a hazard for the future.

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Thursday, April 21, 2011 12:29 PM

RIONAEIRE

Beir bua agus beannacht


Scary stuff Signe,

Remember that Star Trek episode where Data gets amnesia and is carrying around that suitcase full of nuclear waste and those villagers who are looking after him all start getting sick?

"A completely coherant River means writers don't deliver" KatTaya

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Thursday, April 21, 2011 4:52 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Ah yes, here is its...

Quote:

In addition to spacecraft, the Soviet Union constructed many unmanned lighthouses and navigation beacons powered by RTGs.[1] Powered by Strontium 90 (90Sr), they are very reliable and provide a steady source of power. Critics argue that they could cause environmental and security problems, as leakage or theft of the radioactive material could pass unnoticed for years (or possibly forever: some of these lighthouses cannot be found because of poor record keeping). In one instance, the radioactive compartments were opened by a thief.[2] In another case, three woodcutters in Georgia came across one of the units and slept close to it as a heat source during a cold night. Two of the three were later hospitalized with severe radiation burns. The unit was eventually recovered and isolated.

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

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