• Three months after the earthquake and tsunami that triggered a nuclear disaster in Japan, new radiation "hot spots" may require the evacuation of more areas further from the damaged Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power facility. (greenleft.org.au)
  • The man in charge of cleaning up the wrecked Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant has admitted there is little cause for optimism while thousands of workers continue their battle to contain huge quantities of radioactive water. (opednews.com)
  • This photo shows part of the tsunami-wrecked Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in Okuma town, northeastern Japan, on Jan. 19, 2023. (pix11.com)
  • It also destroyed the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station and released radioactive materials over a large area. (popsci.com)
  • A major earthquake and subsequent tsunami damaged the reactor cooling and back-up power systems at the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station in Japan in 2011. (songscommunity.com)
  • The Independent Investigation Commission on the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Accident (2014) The Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station Disaster: Investigating the Myth and Reality . (thebulletin.org)
  • It also describes what did Tokyo electrical and the government does in such a situation and how they will improve the safety in the company wich caused the disaster.Introduction:20110311-221224586176159.jpg04d7dff2a83265.jpgThis report tells an overview and a timeline for the earthquake, tsunami, and the nuclear accident at Tokyo Electric Power Company's Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station. (essaymonster.net)
  • It was a severe earthquake measuring 9.0 on the Richter scale occurred 112 miles off the coast of the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station. (essaymonster.net)
  • Thirty-five fixed dose-rate monitors were used to record dose rates at 1 mo intervals from the time of installation in Fukushima Prefecture in April 2012 until December 2018 and were used to estimate the effective half-life for radiocesium contamination based on external radiation dose rates. (cdc.gov)
  • Editor's Note: This article is going to have to be an ongoing, work-in-progress, as it takes a lot of time to research, review, and rebut the 'tsunami' of BS and disinformation assembled by a growing phalanx of Fukushima radiation fear promoters. (educate-yourself.org)
  • For now, I'll start with an introduction to the main protagonists and fold in the writings of other critics and debunkers of the Fukushima Radiation Scare Corps. (educate-yourself.org)
  • I posted my first article on Fukushima radiation alarmism (which currently floods the Internet) just 8 days after the March 11, 2011 attack on Japan . (educate-yourself.org)
  • And I've yet to hear or see one of these Youtube Fukushima radiation fear fest (or radio interviews) include an opportunity for someone from the other side of the fence to counter or challenge the statements from these nuclear energy critics. (educate-yourself.org)
  • Within a few days of the 3/11 attack on Japan, it became clear that rense.com was destined to become Command Central for the Fukushima radiation fear promotion campaign. (educate-yourself.org)
  • I can't get over how many the-sky-is-falling , Fukushima radiation 'catastrophy' aticles (and radio interviews) are posted to that web site on a daily basis. (educate-yourself.org)
  • Another web site that leads the pack in pounding away at the Fukushima radiation party line is enenews.com . (educate-yourself.org)
  • A magnitude 9.0 earthquake and tsunami destroyed key cooling functions at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant in March 2011, causing three reactors to melt and contaminating the region with massive radiation that still keeps some areas uninhabitable. (ktar.com)
  • In early June, a robot sent into the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power facility detected the highest levels of radiation since the onset of the crisis. (greenleft.org.au)
  • He's the radiological health safety risk management adviser for the prefecture and always says there's absolutely no concern with the levels of radiation in Fukushima. (greenleft.org.au)
  • The radiation released into the atmosphere peaked between March 15 and 16, and subsequently declined. (idsa.in)
  • Exposure to ionizing radiation can also be by direct radiation from the plants and fuels themselves, though not released to the environment. (world-nuclear.org)
  • The escalating groundwater radiation on the site increases the hazards for workers, as well as increasing the nuclear pollution of the Pacific every day. (opednews.com)
  • According to an estimate performed by the ministry, annual radiation levels near the release point after a release would be between 0.052 and 0.62 microsievert at sea, and 1.3 microsieverts in the atmosphere, compared with the 2,100 microsieverts that humans come into contact with each year in daily life. (uchicago.edu)
  • Officials in Japan have claimed that water exposed to radiation in the Fukushima nuclear disaster is now safe to dump into the Pacific. (rachelcarsoncouncil.org)
  • This entry was posted in *English and tagged East Japan Earthquake + Fukushima , health , London art fair , Radiation exposure , TEPCO , UK , United Brothers . (uchicago.edu)
  • Fukushima Nuclear Radiation Cause Massive Killing In U.S.A, UK, And CANADA. (mydailyinformer.com)
  • New research now suggests that the radiation released by the nuclear disaster may have lingering effects on fish-but that the risk posed to human beings from consumption, thanks in part to strong regulation, is maxim. (mydailyinformer.com)
  • The highest level of radiation detected previously at the Fukushima reactor was 73 sieverts per hour. (mydailyinformer.com)
  • Not only is there no Plan B for what to do if and when a Fukushima-style disaster happens in the US, there is no Plan A to prevent one either, said Cindy Folkers, radiation and health speaker at Beyond Nuclear. (rabble.ca)
  • A country already savaged by a 9.0-magnitude earthquake and 24-foot-high tsunamis is now facing the prospect of meltdowns at multiple reactors, with a handful of technicians risking their lives to avert further radiation leaks. (newrepublic.com)
  • Already in the 1930s, movies like The Invisible Ray -in which a scientist played by Boris Karloff encounters a radioactive meteorite and, from then on, kills anyone he touches-depicted radiation as an uncanny force that could bring gruesome death or birth new life. (newrepublic.com)
  • These flames were stoked by a large segment of the media, which sparked mass hysteria across Japan in regards to radiation levels and psychological torment in Fukushima Prefecture. (rpic.jp)
  • Terrorist activities in the United States, Japan, Europe, and Asia and the fear of contamination from radiation from the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in Japan (see image below) stemming from the March 2011 massive earthquake highlight the need for hospital preparedness. (medscape.com)
  • Third, I turn to Sen's impor-tant work on famines in authoritarian regimes to consider, by analogy, exposure to radiation in order to reflect on the ongoing nuclear disaster in Fukushima. (apjjf.org)
  • Those reviews and many others concluded that Fukushima was a man-made accident , triggered by natural hazards, that could and should have been avoided . (popsci.com)
  • A variety of natural hazards, including earthquakes and subsequent tsunamis, pose risks to reactors throughout Japan. (newscientist.com)
  • In the area of external natural hazards, the effects to be considered according to the state of the art in science and technology in connection with occurrence frequencies of approx. (bmuv.de)
  • Also settlements, town and even cities have been built in estuaries and deltas whose natural defense mechanisms, that once protected the regions against such severe natural hazards, have been weakened or totally removed. (essaymonster.net)
  • With little or no warning, nuclear installations around the world could be exposed to natural hazards, from floods and earthquakes to volcanic eruptions, wildfires and more. (iaea.org)
  • Risks posed by natural hazards are increasing in frequency and intensity because of climate change," said Paolo Contri, Head of the External Events Section at the IAEA. (iaea.org)
  • Our new External Events Notification System will help countries prevent, mitigate and manage risks related to natural hazards," Contri added. (iaea.org)
  • PDC's technologies and methodologies originated to help protect the Hawaiian Islands and vulnerable communities throughout the Pacific from natural hazards and have expanded over time to cover the world. (iaea.org)
  • We understand the importance of monitoring, alerting and assessing risk, especially as we observe climate change phenomena and increased frequency and severity of natural hazards," said PDC's Deputy Executive Director Chris Chiesa. (iaea.org)
  • Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida made a brief visit to the power plant on Sunday, Aug. 20, to highlight the safety of an impending release of treated radioactive wastewater into the Pacific Ocean, a divisive plan that his government wants to start soon despite protests at home and abroad. (pix11.com)
  • TOKYO (AP) - Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida on Monday promised his government's full support for fishing communities during the decades-long process to release treated radioactive wastewater from the wrecked Fukushima nuclear plant into the sea. (pix11.com)
  • Onogawa, which was owned and operated by the Tohoku Electric Power Company, was closer to the earthquake's epicenter and was hit by an even larger tsunami. (popsci.com)
  • On 11 March 2011, a 9.0 magnitude earthquake struck the Tohoku region of Japan. (cdc.gov)
  • Before Tohoku, the Japanese government's seismic hazard map assumed that earthquakes off that coast would not exceed magnitude 7.5 to 8.0. (newscientist.com)
  • Geophysicists David Jackson and Yan Kagan of the University of California, Los Angeles, estimate that we can expect one magnitude-10 earthquake in the Tohoku region over the next 10,000 years. (newscientist.com)
  • Manned aerial surveys are an essential element of the planned consequence management operation, as demonstrated by the recovery work following the 2011 Tohoku earthquake and tsunami and their effects in Fukushima, Japan. (gc.ca)
  • A full year has passed since the devastating Tohoku earthquake hit the Northeastern coast of Japan. (brandeisinternational.com)
  • SSCs important to safety shall be designed to withstand the effects of natural phenomena such as earthquakes, tornadoes, hurricanes, floods, tsunami, and seiches without loss of capability to perform their safety functions. (powershow.com)
  • Backup generators have been rendered useless by tsunami floods. (scientificamerican.com)
  • 10 -4 /a for earthquakes and 10 -5 /a for floods are taken into account throughout in the designs of German nuclear power plants. (bmuv.de)
  • While such a re-evaluation had been discussed for years, the issue accelerated after a 2011 earthquake and tsunami crippled reactors at the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant in Japan, leading to multiple meltdowns and radioactive releases. (manufacturing.net)
  • Kiyoshi Kurokawa chaired an independent national commission , known as the NAIIC, created by the Diet of Japan to investigate the root causes of the Fukushima Daiichi accident. (popsci.com)
  • The March/April print and online editions of PA TIMES featured several articles on the aftermath of the devastating earthquake and subsequent tsunami in Japan. (patimes.org)
  • The March 11, 2011, earthquake and tsunami devastated the island nation of Japan claiming over 10,000 lives and leaving over 17,000 missing. (patimes.org)
  • Updating the U.S. survey of past seismic activity became urgent after a 9.0-magnitude earthquake and tsunami devastated northeastern Japan last March. (sanonofre.com)
  • Anti-nuclear sentiment and safety concerns rose sharply in Japan after the 2011 Fukushima nuclear plant disaster, but the government has been pushing for a return to nuclear energy amid worries of power shortages following Russia's invasion of Ukraine and a global push to reduce greenhouse gases. (ktar.com)
  • Northeast Japan hit with flooding-Contaminated Fukushima soil stored in flood zones- Construction begins at Fukushima plant for water release! (netzfrauen.org)
  • Noch immer fließt radioaktives Wasser ins Meer, noch immer bekommt Japan das Desaster von Fukushima nicht in den Griff. (netzfrauen.org)
  • Nachdem im Dezember 2021, Japan seine Pläne vorstellte, wie das Land schrittweise mehr als 1 Million Tonnen kontaminiertes Wasser des Atomkraftwerks Fukushima ins Meer einleiten will, ist es jetzt amtlich. (netzfrauen.org)
  • Obwohl Südkorea vor einem Welttribunal gegen die Wasserfreisetzung von Fukushima vorgehen will, hat in Japan die zuständige Aufsichtsbehörde ihre Zusage für den umstrittenen Plan gegeben, mehr als eine Million Tonnen aufbereitetes Wasser aus der havarierten Atomanlage von Fukushima ins Meer zu leiten. (netzfrauen.org)
  • There is an incredible concern [in Japan], especially among parents in Fukushima prefecture. (greenleft.org.au)
  • The Fukushima nuclear facility was crippled by the 9-magnitude earthquake and devastating tsunami that hit Japan on March 11. (idsa.in)
  • The earthquake fault system that generated the devastating earthquake near Honshu, Japan, in 2011, originated in a subduction zone. (songscommunity.com)
  • Much attention has been focused on the Richter scale measurements of the Japan earthquake - a 9.0 - and the implications of such a quake in California. (songscommunity.com)
  • Disaster and Change in Japan takes a historical approach to Fukushima. (thebulletin.org)
  • If this petition gains momentum, the pressure on Japan to withdraw as Olympic host will force the international spotlight onto the ongoing Fukushima catastrophe. (opednews.com)
  • http://enenews.com/fukushima-student-documentary-japan-going-insane-like-about-killed-gotten-better-government-abandoned-anyone-please-please-save-lives-fukushima-people-children-video "Nothing has gotten better" The government was incapable to deal with issues, covered up information we needed and even put pressure on us. (opednews.com)
  • Is the Japanese government and the IAEA protecting the nuclear industry and not the people of Japan by claiming that Fukushima is stable when it is not? (sanonofre.com)
  • Dynamic versus static equilibrium, escalated dose exposures to the Japanese children and nuclear workers, and the blending of radioactive materials with non-contaminated material and spreading this contaminated ash throughout Japan are only a small part of this ongoing nuclear tragedy. (sanonofre.com)
  • via NY Times / June 3rd, 2013 / The operator of the stricken Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant said Tuesday that it would ask regulators to allow it to restart two reactors at a separate site in eastern Japan, even as problems with the company's cleanup in Fukushima continue to multiply. (energy-net.org)
  • Global Research News Hour Episode 31: via Global Research.ca / June 24, 2013 / One of the most severe industrial accidents in history occurred two and a half years ago when the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear facility in Japan was crippled in the wake of an earthquake and tsunami that struck the island country. (energy-net.org)
  • The earthquake, tsunami, and nuclear meltdown were a devastating series of blows, even to such a highly developed country as Japan. (brandeisinternational.com)
  • Nearly six years have passed since an earthquake and tsunami in Japan killed 16,000 people and caused nuclear meltdown at the Fukushima Daiichi plant. (mydailyinformer.com)
  • The cleanup after the catastrophic nuclear accident two years ago at the Fukushima nuclear plant in Japan is not going well. (climatecentral.org)
  • As a result of the nuclear disaster in Fukushima, caused by the earthquake and subsequent tsunami that stuck Japan on 11 March 2011, the Federal Environment Ministry commissioned the Reactor Safety Commission (RSK) on 17 March 2011 with a safety review of the 17 German nuclear power plants. (bmuv.de)
  • In Japan, it took an earthquake of apocalyptic force to cause serious problems at the Fukushima reactor. (newrepublic.com)
  • It was the largest earthquake Japan has ever experienced and it caused all of the operating units to automatically clear out on seismic reactor protection system trips. (essaymonster.net)
  • 3 minutes after the earthquake, the Japan Meteorological Association issued a major tsunami warning, indicating the potential for a tsunami at least 3 meters high. (essaymonster.net)
  • Earthquake and tsunami damage to the Fukushima I nuclear power plant in Japan. (medscape.com)
  • After the triple melt down of reactors in Fukushima Japan in March 2011, the American Nuclear Regulatory Commission did two things: they assured the public "it can't happen here" - and they promised a flurry of action to make reactors safer in the United States. (blogspot.com)
  • It is inexcusable & disgusting that Tepco took advantage of the Japanese people that were already suffering from the earthquake, tsunami & the meltdowns. (fukushima-diary.com)
  • Arnie Gundersen of Fairwinds Associates (a leading nuclear expert) and Warren Pollock ( http://www.wepollock.com ) redefine the Fukushima nuclear incidents (meltdowns and explosions) in terms of human and total cost. (sanonofre.com)
  • We've heard now about three complete meltdowns that are occurring at the afflicted power plant at Fukushima - but we've never heard about the fact that there are actually 6 reactors at the site! (mydailyinformer.com)
  • Effective half-life of 134Cs and 137Cs in Fukushima Prefecture when compared to theoretical decay models. (cdc.gov)
  • And a new study is being done by the Fukushima prefecture? (greenleft.org.au)
  • The fair, which is known for its eccentric conceptual art, will see a new project in which brothers Tomoo and Ei Arakawa, who go under the performance name "United Brothers", make a soup using vegetables grown in Fukushima, the Japanese prefecture hit in march 2011 by one of the worst nuclear disasters in history. (uchicago.edu)
  • Subsequently, hydrogen explosions outside the containment vessels caused the release of mainly radioactive gases, which contaminated Fukushima Prefecture and neighboring regions. (rpic.jp)
  • TEPCO officials are worried that highly radioactive water believed to be leaking from deep inside the troubled reactors has flooded the basements of the turbine building, particularly the basement floor of reactor two. (idsa.in)
  • The water problem is so severe that the plant's operator, Tokyo Electric Power [Tepco], and its myriad partner firms have enlisted almost all of their 6,000 workers in the 2tn yen ( 11bn) mission to bring it under control, almost four years after a deadly tsunami sparked a triple meltdown at the plant. (opednews.com)
  • Fairewinds' chief engineer Arnie Gundersen outlines major inconsistencies and double-speak by the IAEA, Japanese Government, and TEPCO claiming that the Fukushima accident is over. (sanonofre.com)
  • TEPCO operates the crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant. (energy-net.org)
  • The company had recently released an error-prone assessment of tsunami hazards at Fukushima that significantly underestimated the risks . (popsci.com)
  • which hazards can nuclear plants withstand, and can society as a whole live with the risks posed by hazards that plants cannot withstand? (newscientist.com)
  • Risks include casualties and health risks due to radioactive exposure, security threats such as terrorist attacks, and environmental contamination. (neimagazine.com)
  • This article focuses on the risks that earthquakes pose to the chemical, pharmaceutical, petrochemical and manufacturing facilities, and how to address them. (fauske.com)
  • Another key difference is that the Chernobyl reactor used carbon to slow down neutrons, a key part of the fission reaction, while Fukushima's reactor cores are cooled by light-water, which greatly reduces the amount of radioactive soot in the wind . (scientificamerican.com)
  • According to the deputy director general of Japan's Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency (NISA), Hidehiko Nishiyama, the rating was scaled up from 5 (applied to "an accident with wider consequences) to 7 (a "major accident" as per the International Atomic Energy Agency) because of the amount of radioactive material released from the plant. (idsa.in)
  • But it is the massive amount of radioactive water that is becoming part of the problem, because it cannot be discharged into the sea without breaching international law and risking contamination of fish stocks. (climatecentral.org)
  • Most of Japan's nuclear power plants were taken off line following the Fukushima accident for safety checks under tightened standards. (ktar.com)
  • The extent of the damage at Japan's Fukushima nuclear facility is still unknown, but comparisons to Chernobyl were inevitable as soon as fuel rods became exposed and an explosion rocked the site . (scientificamerican.com)
  • While it takes longer for the spent fuel rods to become as hazardous as a reactor core meltdown, the ongoing nature of Japan's crisis presents a unique hazard. (scientificamerican.com)
  • On 16 March, Japan's Nuclear Safety Commission recommended local authorities to instruct evacuees under 40 years of age leaving the 20 km zone to ingest stable iodine as a precaution against ingestion ( e.g. via milk) of radioactive iodine-131. (world-nuclear.org)
  • More than three years into the massive cleanup of Japan's tsunami-damaged nuclear power plant, only a tiny fraction of the workers are focused on key tasks such as preparing for the dismantling of the broken reactors and removing radioactive fuel rods. (opednews.com)
  • Stress tests on European nuclear plants prompted by the 2011 disaster at Japan's Fukushima nuclear plant showed that almost all of them needed safety improvements. (energy-net.org)
  • And while Japan's disaster-proof security systems are among the best in the world, as fate would have it, all safety mechanisms failed to work as powers cut off, exposing radioactive fuel rods into the open air and ultimately causing the full meltdown of three nuclear reactors. (brandeisinternational.com)
  • Comments by Shunichi Tanaka, chairman of Japan's Nuclear Regulation Authority , summed up the current situation: "The Fukushima Daiichi plant remains in an unstable condition, and there is concern that we cannot prevent another accident. (climatecentral.org)
  • Later that year, the North Anna nuclear plant in Virgina was struck by an earthquake that caused peak ground movement at twice the level at which the plant was designed. (manufacturing.net)
  • Cianjur in West Java was struck by a shallow 5.6 magnitude earthquake in late November. (singaporeupdate.com)
  • Measuring at a Richter scale of 8.9, the earthquake struck just 70km away from land, creating a ripple of massive tsunamis, obliterating thousands of homes, and causing the death of over 15,000 people in just the matter of a single day. (brandeisinternational.com)
  • This is a satellite image showing damage at 9:35am on March 16, 2011, 5 days after the earthquake struck. (medscape.com)
  • Specifically, they are worried about the fact that U.S. spent fuel pools are loaded with a large quantity of fuel assemblies that have been used to generate power and thus contain radioactive isotopes, including cesium-137, a gamma emitting isotope with a 30-year half life. (atomicinsights.com)
  • Like the fuel rods in the reactor core, spent fuel rods must be kept cool or the release of cesium-137 and strontium-90, among other deadly radioisotopes, could result. (scientificamerican.com)
  • The releases contained many dangerous radioactive chemicals, including cesium 137, cobalt 60, iodine 131 and strontium 90. (sanonofre.com)
  • Cesium 137 has a radioactive life of over 300 years, cobalt 60′s over 50 years, and strontium 90′s almost 300. (sanonofre.com)
  • Newspapers were still fomenting fear even five months after the earthquake by using meaningless numbers, such as reporting that the cesium in Fukushima was 168 times that of the bomb dropped on Hiroshima. (rpic.jp)
  • The difference between Chernobyl and Fukushima is that the reactor itself exploded at Chernobyl, while at Fukushima though some radioactivity leaked from the reactor most of the radioactive material was contained within it. (idsa.in)
  • Results has shown the loss of electric power at the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant (FD-NPP) developed into a disaster causing huge release of radioactivity into the atmosphere. (essaymonster.net)
  • An International Atomic Energy Agency investigator examines Reactor Unit 3 at the damaged Fukushima Daiichi plant, May 27, 2011. (popsci.com)
  • The 2011 disaster delivered a devastating one-two punch to the Fukushima plant. (popsci.com)
  • Despite heroic efforts by plant workers, three reactors sustained severe damage to their radioactive cores and three reactor buildings were damaged by hydrogen explosions. (popsci.com)
  • Their premise is that the public will be better protected if the NRC requires nuclear plant operators to reduce the density of their spent fuel pools and limit the amount of material that could potentially be released. (atomicinsights.com)
  • This catastrophic event severely damaged the Fukushima Nuclear Power Plant resulting in the release of radioactive material. (patimes.org)
  • The Onagawa plant, about 100 kilometres north of Fukushima Daiichi on Honshu's Pacific coast, was hit by a roughly comparable tsunami, but a combination of a more stringent tsunami design standard, good engineering practice and a bit of good luck meant that there was no significant damage. (newscientist.com)
  • Tokyo Electric Power Company Holdings, the operator of the Fukushima Daiichi plant, has come under fire over lax safeguards at another plant, Kashiwazaki-Kariwa, where it is seeking to restart two reactors. (ktar.com)
  • There have been media reports that the harsh economic conditions are driving labourers to Fukushima for work at the plant despite the dangers. (greenleft.org.au)
  • But in the wake of the authorities upgrading the threat level for the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant from 5 to 7, a classification reserved for the most severe nuclear crises such as the 1986 Chernobyl disaster, Prime Minister Kan's claims are being received with a degree of scepticism. (idsa.in)
  • He added that the radioactive contaminants released from the plant amounted to 10 per cent of those released at Chernobyl. (idsa.in)
  • According to him, the level of radioactive substances released from the damaged Fukushima plant is nowhere near the Chernobyl levels. (idsa.in)
  • Though they cover the same ground-the disaster at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant that began three years ago after a massive earthquake and tsunami-and largely draw upon the same or similar sources, there are distinct differences among them. (thebulletin.org)
  • The review by the Japanese Diet commission (which I call the Diet report) turns up the volume even further and has important quotes from Fukushima workers and especially those working for subcontractors at the plant. (thebulletin.org)
  • He digs carefully into the warnings of possible disaster, noting, for example, that more than half of the members of the committee that set the size of predicted tsunamis, which affected design of the Fukushima plant, came from the nuclear industry. (thebulletin.org)
  • The operation of a nuclear power plant is associated with several hazards that can have serious consequences for public health and the environment. (neimagazine.com)
  • Based on the identified hazards and potential consequences, a qualitative bowtie diagram, Figure 1, provides a visual representation of the potential treats to a nuclear power plant, the potential consequences, and the suggested barriers to prevent or mitigate those consequences. (neimagazine.com)
  • This is only a hazard for those on the plant site, and the level diminishes with distance from the radioactive source. (world-nuclear.org)
  • It is the chief hazard for the plant workers, who wear film badges so that the dose can be monitored. (world-nuclear.org)
  • After the hydrogen explosion in unit 1 on 12 March, some radioactive caesium and iodine were detected in the vicinity of the plant, having been released via the venting. (world-nuclear.org)
  • Dear Friends, Fukushima Daiichi, the nuclear plant wrecked by the earthquake/tsunami of March 2011, is out of control, and getting worse. (opednews.com)
  • Instead, nearly all the workers at the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant are devoted to an enormously distracting problem: a still-growing amount of contaminated water used to keep the damaged reactors from overheating. (opednews.com)
  • Water used to cool the melted-down cores and groundwater from close to the damaged plant contain some radioactive materials, and are currently being collected and stored in tanks on the plant grounds. (uchicago.edu)
  • The tanks storing the water are expected to become full by the summer of 2022, according to Tokyo Electric Power Company Holdings Inc., the operator of the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power plant. (uchicago.edu)
  • The plant was damaged by a magnitude 9.0 earthquake and ensuing tsunami on March 11, 2011. (uchicago.edu)
  • Kanesaki, a Fukushima resident, had worked as a tour guide for the nuclear power plant before the disaster. (brandeisinternational.com)
  • The Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant was constructed in 1971 under government authorization, in spite of fervent protests by local residents. (brandeisinternational.com)
  • Radioactive cooling water is leaking into the ground from at least three vast storage tanks, and the vulnerability of the plant to further accidents was revealed when a rat chewed through an electric cable, cutting off vital cooling. (climatecentral.org)
  • Even without the leaks and the rats, just keeping the plant safe following the damage inflicted by the earthquake and tsunami two years ago is keeping 3,000 laborers busy. (climatecentral.org)
  • Taking existing knowledge regarding Fukushima into account, the RSK focussed particularly on the safety margins (degree of robustness) of each individual plant in the case of impacts beyond the design basis and beyond assumptions thus far. (bmuv.de)
  • Describe the industrial process and operation of the fukushima nuclear planetThe plant take in 6 separate boiling water reactors originally designed by General Electric which maintained by the Tokyo Electric Power Company. (essaymonster.net)
  • Since the tsunami and ensuing reactor accidents at Fukushima Dai-Ichi Nuclear Power Plant in March last year, the author has freely conducted, as a scientist in the discipline of radiological protection science, on-site radiological hygiene surveys in an autonomous format apart from any organization. (rpic.jp)
  • Flooded by the large tsunami of 3.11, the Fukushima Dai-Ichi Nuclear Power Plant lost its cooling function, which caused its nuclear fuel to melt partially. (rpic.jp)
  • The nuclear plant fire hazard is not speculative. (blogspot.com)
  • In March, the NRC instructed power companies to re-evaluate the seismic and flooding hazards that their power plants face. (manufacturing.net)
  • The earthquake exceeded the level for which the reactors had been designed, calling into question earlier seismic assessments. (sanonofre.com)
  • While the Richter scale is one common way to measure the magnitude of earthquakes at their epicenters, when assessing the seismic safety at nuclear facilities, "peak ground acceleration" at the facility's location is a more meaningful way to measure an earthquake's potential impact, especially when the epicenter is miles away. (songscommunity.com)
  • Had last Friday's 7.1 earthquake and other ongoing seismic shocks hit less than 200 miles northwest of Ridgecrest/China Lake, ten million people in Los Angeles would now be under an apocalyptic cloud. (rachelcarsoncouncil.org)
  • Unlike at Chernobyl, however, no deaths have thus far been linked to the accident at Fukushima. (idsa.in)
  • Murray Jennex, a nuclear industry specialist at San Diego State University in California, has refuted the comparison between Fukushima and Chernobyl. (idsa.in)
  • Regarding releases to air and water leakage from Fukushima, the main radionuclide from among the many kinds of fission products in the fuel was volatile iodine-131, which has a half-life of 8 days. (world-nuclear.org)
  • By law, nuclear plants must be able to withstand earthquakes "without functional impairment of those features necessary to shut down the reactor, maintain the station in safe condition and prevent undue risk to the health and safety of the public. (sanonofre.com)
  • San Onofre's Independent Spent Fuel Storage Installation is designed to withstand the maximum credible earthquake for its location without releasing radioactive materials. (songscommunity.com)
  • So it is not accurate to simply say that San Onofre was only built to withstand a 7.0 earthquake. (songscommunity.com)
  • For comparison, the current California Building Code design requires any buildings built in the vicinity of San Onofre to be designed to withstand an earthquake motion that has peak ground acceleration of 0.38g. (songscommunity.com)
  • Fukushima nuclear disaster aloof of the 2011 T?hoku earthquake and tsunami The four damaged reactor buildings (from left: Units 4, 3, 2, and 1) on 16 March 2011. (sahmy.com)
  • The buildup of hydrogen gas from the venting led to explosions in two of the reactor buildings, damaging their structures and allowing radioactive materials to escape. (songscommunity.com)
  • In assessing the significance of atmospheric releases, the Cs-137 figure is multiplied by 40 and added to the I-131 number to give an 'iodine-131 equivalent' figure. (world-nuclear.org)
  • Iodine 131′s radioactive life is only a few months, but during that time it is intensely radioactive. (sanonofre.com)
  • The event overwhelmed the defenses of reactors at the Fukushima Daiichi site, causing widespread damage and radioactive releases. (sanonofre.com)
  • According to the International Atomic Energy Agency, a level 7 incident entails "a major release of radioactive material with widespread health and environmental effects requiring implementation of planned and extended countermeasueres. (idsa.in)
  • Yet the incident provoked widespread alarm about nuclear power-no doubt aided by the release, just 12 days earlier, of The China Syndrome , a Jane Fonda film about a potential reactor meltdown. (newrepublic.com)
  • They assert that the potential radioactive contamination problem associated with the material in the spent fuel pools could be reduced by moving assemblies that have been out of reactors for more than five years into licensed dry storage containers. (atomicinsights.com)
  • Without the water the spent fuel inside the reactors could overheat, causing another potential radioactive release. (climatecentral.org)
  • Viele der temporären Lagerstätten für Boden und Abfall, die durch die Strahlung des stillgelegten Kernkraftwerks Fukushima Nr. 1 kontaminiert wurden, befinden sich in Gebieten, die für Naturkatastrophen anfällig sind, wie eine staatliche Prüfung 2021 ergab. (netzfrauen.org)
  • The region faced a devastating earthquake and tsunami which caused the reactors to melt and nuclear material to seep out. (uchicago.edu)
  • In the aftermath of both the earthquake and tsunami, this radioactive contamination has added to the public health concerns of the island nation. (patimes.org)
  • In particular, citizens should be cognizant of environmental concerns, community health concerns, general public health concerns and personal health concerns as they relate to the hazards caused by the earthquake, tsunami and radioactive contamination. (patimes.org)
  • In addition, there are legitimate as well as media-driven fears of radioactive contamination of food, water, dairy products (such as milk, cheese, and eggs), and freshly grown vegetables (i.e., spinach). (patimes.org)
  • And after they find high levels [of radioactive contamination], they demand local authorities and the government look at those contaminated areas. (greenleft.org.au)
  • This imposes very high hazardous threats to workers and the as nuclear chemicals may be released into either the air or surrounding water ways. (wikipedia.org)
  • Moreover, a UAV can enter an area which is too hazardous for humans, due not only to the radiological threat which is its target, but also to other anticipated hazards such as a potentially explosive environment, an environment with airborne chemical hazards, or open water. (gc.ca)
  • It pumped 10,400 tonnes of low-level radioactive water into the ocean to free storage capacity for the highly contaminated water from the reactors. (idsa.in)
  • The waste water is currently being treated using an advanced liquid processing system referred to as ALPS, though the system does not remove tritium and has been found to leave small amounts of other radioactive materials. (uchicago.edu)
  • In the draft report, released on Thursday, the agency outlines the many ways in which fracking threatens surface and ground water supplies, including chemical spills, waste water disposal, and gases seeping from wells. (stuarthsmith.com)
  • Considerable hazard to humans - Officials: Molten fuel now 'particle-like', contains 'special' nuclear materials. (mydailyinformer.com)
  • This study identifies to us a lot of things about fukushima whether the disaster was neutrally or made by humans and it describes the industrial process and operation of fukushima. (essaymonster.net)
  • So Cal Edison is now burying 136 Chernobyl's of radioactive waste 100 feet from the ocean in thin cans. (sanonofre.com)
  • Critics say the true cost of nuclear energy would be much higher if the expense of radioactive waste management and final storage facilities are included, and that there are long-term environmental hazards of another Fukushima-like accident. (ktar.com)
  • He argues that since the existing residual heat removal system (RHRS) has been severely damaged by the tsunami, it is better to set up a brand new RHRS outside the turbine building in addition to an external cooling system. (idsa.in)
  • The exposure of radioactive material if present would be classified as minimal and therefore does not pose any health hazards. (wikipedia.org)
  • A decade later, the nuclear industry has yet to fully to address safety concerns that Fukushima exposed. (popsci.com)
  • As long as commercial nuclear power plants operate anywhere in the world, we believe it is critical for all nations to learn from what happened at Fukushima and continue doubling down on nuclear safety. (popsci.com)
  • A two-page Policy Forum opinion piece titled Nuclear safety regulation in the post-Fukushima era: Flawed analyses underlie lax U.S. regulation of spent fuel by Edwin Lyman, Michael Schoeppner and Frank von Hippel appeared in the May 26, 2017 issue of Science Magazine , an outlet that has a public reputation as a reliable source of technical information. (atomicinsights.com)
  • Significant enhancements to the safety and security of nuclear power plants, including spent fuel pools, were made following the terrorist events of September 11, 2001, and the Fukushima accident in 2011. (atomicinsights.com)
  • By being aware of such hazards and taking the requisite safety precautions for personal protection, many post-disaster deaths and injuries can be avoided. (patimes.org)
  • Intellectually honest discussions of nuclear safety with regard to earthquakes must start by acknowledging this. (newscientist.com)
  • If we ratchet up the definition of worst case to magnitude 9.1, and ensure plants exceed the standards of Onagawa, will earthquake and tsunami safety be assured? (newscientist.com)
  • The commonly known Richter scale is not used to determine earthquake building safety for any building. (songscommunity.com)
  • Instead, building safety relies on a more accurate value known as "peak ground acceleration," which is based on the anticipated ground movement at the site during the largest potential earthquake, estimated by geologists. (songscommunity.com)
  • The safety objectives are the prevention of chain reactions, the cooling of the reactor core and fuel elements and confinement of radioactive substances. (bmuv.de)
  • EENS will provide the IAEA access to hazard and impact information for timely reaction to events that could threaten the safety of nuclear facilities. (iaea.org)
  • There's less heat in the spent fuel rods than in the reactor core's fuel rods, so the danger posed is less intense, but in an encompassing crisis such as a magnitude 9.0 earthquake affecting multiple sites at once, the ability to cool storage pools can be greatly impaired. (scientificamerican.com)
  • After five years of research, the EPA's less than adequate fracking assessment has been released. (stuarthsmith.com)
  • The EENS will provide timely assessment of impacts and allow the IAEA to organize and provide a timely response to hazards threatening nuclear installations," Contri said. (iaea.org)
  • These can be gases, liquids, or solids and include radioactive and chemical materials. (medscape.com)
  • On the 11th march 2011 an earthquake occurred about 130 km off the Pacific coast of Japans main island Honshu, which caused a tsunami. (essaymonster.net)
  • Recent earthquakes demonstrate the need for the nation's nuclear industry to re-evaluate the geologic hazards facing power plants, a process that has already started, the new chair of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission said this week. (manufacturing.net)
  • About one quarter of all American reactors in geologic danger zones are not protected against earth quake hazards . (blogspot.com)
  • Next, the tsunami breached the plant's protective sea wall and swamped portions of the site. (popsci.com)
  • According to the plant's 2007 Radioactive Effluent Release Report to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, there were 202 liquid effluent "batch" releases that year. (sanonofre.com)
  • About 9000 releases of hazardous substances occur annually, with 75% occurring at chemical facilities and 25% occurring during transportation. (medscape.com)
  • The containment dome may have been damaged in the earthquake and batteries with an eight-hour life span are being flown in to augment those on site. (scientificamerican.com)
  • The attempted cover up of the severity of the Fukushima disaster is nothing new. (mydailyinformer.com)
  • That reactor exploded, spilling radioactive dust over a vast area of Europe. (climatecentral.org)
  • The movie was inspired by a hydrogen-bomb test at Bikini Atoll that ended up blanketing a faraway Japanese tuna ship in radioactive dust (crew members suffered from nausea, burns, and bleeding gums, while newspapers in Tokyo fanned concerns about radioactive tuna). (newrepublic.com)
  • Nevertheless, the power grid at the Fukushima site, 150 miles from Tokyo, has been knocked out. (scientificamerican.com)
  • But concern is now spreading among parents in Tokyo, which is quite a far from Fukushima. (greenleft.org.au)
  • With a historical perspective, Samuels is able to explore an issue barely mentioned by the other books: The motivation to build so many nuclear plants on an earthquake-prone island was based not just on the island's lack of oil and coal. (thebulletin.org)
  • The eruption on Java's eastern coast comes after a series of earthquakes on the island's west, including one last month that killed more than 300 people. (singaporeupdate.com)
  • During the aftermath of a catastrophe, many survivors of the initial disaster are either killed, maimed, or severely injured due to environmental and/or public health hazards. (patimes.org)
  • First, the magnitude 9.0 earthquake knocked out off-site electric power. (popsci.com)
  • Events at the Onagawa Nuclear Power Station, located 39 miles (64 kilometers) from Fukushima, told a contrasting story . (popsci.com)
  • Among the losses was the damage to the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear reactor that lost onsite power and was unable to cool the reactor cores. (cdc.gov)
  • Many environmental hazards impact citizens such as gas leaks, floodwaters, downed power lines, wet electrical outlets, gasoline/oil spills, and hazardous debris. (patimes.org)
  • Fukushima underscored the inadequacies in the existing oversight of the nuclear industry, and the DPJ government established a new Nuclear Regulation Authority three months before it fell from power in the December 2012 elections. (newscientist.com)
  • Like nuclear power, which has 'peaceful' and 'wartime' uses, radioisotopes can be deadly when released unexpectedly into the environment in large doses but can also be used for medicinal purposes . (scientificamerican.com)
  • The organizations plan, train and perform practice drills on all aspects of the emergency program, including scenarios such as earthquakes, terrorist attacks and loss of offsite power. (songscommunity.com)
  • The electricity supply of the German nuclear power plants is more robust throughout than at Fukushima I. All German plants have at least one additional assured incoming supply and more emergency power generators, with at least two of them protected against external impacts. (bmuv.de)
  • The earthquake damaged breakers and distribution towers which caused a loss of all off-site electrical power sources to the site. (essaymonster.net)
  • Following the act he soon fell ill and was diagnosed with acute leukemia, providing audiences a living testimony to the ruthless nature of radioactive pollution. (brandeisinternational.com)