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Breaking, Urgent: Japan Issues State Of Emergency As Two Nuke Plants On Verge Of Meltdown, Panicked Thousands Flee



Mar 14, 2011 15 Comments ›› Pat Dollard

TOKYO (AP) – Japan declared states of emergency for five nuclear reactors at two power plants after the units lost cooling ability in the aftermath of Friday’s powerful earthquake. Thousands of residents were evacuated as workers struggled to get the reactors under control to prevent meltdowns.

A single reactor in northeastern Japan had been the focus of much of the concern in the initial hours after the 8.9 magnitude quake, but the government declared new states of emergency at three other plants in the area Saturday morning.

The earthquake knocked out power at the Fukushima Daiichi plant, and because a backup generator failed, the cooling system was unable to supply water to cool the 460-megawatt No. 1 reactor. Although a backup cooling system is being used, Japan’s nuclear safety agency said pressure inside the reactor had risen to 1.5 times the level considered normal.

Authorities said radiation levels had jumped 1,000 times normal inside Unit 1 and were measured at eight times normal outside the plant. They expanded an earlier evacuation zone more than threefold, from 3 to 10 kilometers (2 miles to 6.2 miles). Some 3,000 people had been urged to leave their homes in the first announcement.

The government declared a state of emergency, its first ever at a nuclear plant. And plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Co. warned of power shortages and an “extremely challenging situation in power supply for a while.”

The utility, which also operates reactors at ety,” he said at a televised news conference early Saturday.

The agency said plant workers are scrambling to restore cooling water supply at the plant but there is no prospect for immediate success.

Another official at the nuclear safety agency, Yuji Kakizaki, said that plant workers were cooling the reactor with a secondary cooling system, which is not as effective as the regular cooling method.

Kakizaki said officials have confirmed that the emergency cooling system — the last-ditch cooling measure to prevent the reactor from the meltdown — is intact and could kick in if needed.

“That’s as a last resort, and we have not reached that stage yet,” Kakizaki added.

Edano said both the state of emergency and evacuation order around the Fukushima Daiichi plant are precautionary measures.

“We launched the measure so we can be fully prepared for the worst scenario,” he said. “We are using all our might to deal with the situation.”

Defense Ministry official Ippo Maeyama said the ministry has dispatched dozens of troops trained for chemical disasters to the Fukushima plant in case of a radiation leak, along with four vehicles designed for use in atomic, biological and chemical warfare.

Pineville, La., resident Janie Eudy said her husband, Danny, was working at Fukushima No. 1 when the earthquake struck. After a harrowing evacuation, he called her several hours later from the parking lot of his quake-ravaged hotel.

He and other American plant workers are “waiting to be rescued, and they’re in bad shape,” she said in a telephone interview.

Danny Eudy, 52, a technician employed by Pasadena, Texas-based Atlantic Plant Maintenance, told his wife that the quake violently shook the plant building he was in. “Everything was falling from the ceiling,” she said.

Eudy told his wife that he s can temporarily cool a reactor in this state with battery power, even when electricity is down, according to Arnold Gundersen, a nuclear engineer who used to work in the U.S. nuclear industry. Batteries would go dead within hours but could be replaced.

The nuclear reactor was among 10 in Japan shut down because of the earthquake.

The Fukushima plant is just south of the worst-hit Miyagi prefecture, where a fire broke out at another nuclear plant. The blaze was in a turbine building at one of the Onagawa power plants. Smoke could be seen coming out of the building, which is separate from the plant’s reactor, Tohoku Electric Power Co. said. The fire has since been extinguished.

Another reactor at Onagawa was experiencing a water leak.

The U.S. Geological Survey said the 2:46 p.m. quake was a magnitude 8.9, the biggest earthquake to hit Japan since officials began keeping records in the late 1800s.

A tsunami warning was issued for a number of Pacific, Southeast Asian and Latin American nations.

At the two-reactor Diablo Canyon plant at Avila Beach, Calif., an “unusual event” — the lowest level of alert — was declared in connection with a West Coast tsunami warning. The plant remained stable, though, and kept running, according to the NRC.


  • http://thecaptiansquarters.blogspot.com/ Capt-Dax

    I have been blocked from your site for two weeks!…

    I Think Harp may have had somthing to do with this,, just a gut feeling.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t90vlR3ugAY

  • Tom in CO

    Glad to have you back, Pat. Hope Japan gets the relief it desperately needs.

  • CJW

    From the Jawa Report site:

    Just a note, this is a light water reactor. So, even if it was a full meltdown of one of the reactors the damage wouldn’t be anything near as bad as Chernobyl. Chernobyl was graphite moderated, which made it less stable than modern light water reactors and therefore much more prone to meltdown. Since regular water is used to cool down the reactor at the Japanese site, it should be much easier to contain.

    Contrast Three Mile Island, which was a light water reactor, with Chernobyl which was graphite moderated. In Chernobyl 50 people died immediately with an additional 4,000 dying from exposure to radiation. No one died at Three Mile Island, and 25 years later there has been no statistically significant increase in cancer rates in the exposure area.

    So, not to take away from the real danger of a nuclear power plant run amok, but even in a plausible worst case scenario a meltdown here probably wouldn’t be nearly as bad as Chernobyl.

    http://mypetjawa.mu.nu/archives/206768.php

    • Jerry

      If the design works, as it did at Three Mile Island, they will have a slug of fission melted fuel and fission products at the bottom of the steel reactor pressure vessel. Perhaps even a partial melt through but it will not be the end of the world. In fact this event (heat induce fuel damage, ie melting) has happened already on four occasions in the western world and yes containment structures do the job that they were designed to do. Life will go on, but it will be a long term and costly cleanup operation. There is still much danger for for the onsite personal working on mitigation efforts, but relative the the run time on the units-the longer the runtime between refueling cycle, the more fission products of short half lives will have built up in the fuel and will generate the decay heat that the station personal are working on alleviating. That decay heat represents 5% of rated output when the plants automatically shutdown. It will be a few weeks, but likely no more than 30 days will be needed for all that short term heat to decay away to the point that it will be more manageable. Not to underscore the difficulties that lie ahead, but keep in mind this in not Russia.

  • http://holgerawakens.blogspot.com Holger Awakens

    Ironic isn’t it? At a time when America needs to start drilling for oil all over our country and offshore, we get the Gulf oil spill. Then, just months later as it is apparent that we need to build at least a half a dozen nuclear plants in America, this happens in Japan.

    • Lock and Load

      I am awaiting the screaming, state-run media chorus that will undoubtedly start this weekend, to ban any and all thoughts of nuclear energy because of this… :roll: :evil: :???:

    • Rictavious _Porkchop

      We’ll be back in the stone age if things continue

  • Ohnooo

    Another reason why we need 5 trillion Green job creating windmills and solar panels imported from China and placed in other peoples back yards…

  • Axel

    I was not getting the site either, was kinda having withdrawals. Thought I would try one more time and voila~ it’s back!
    :beer: :beer: :beer:

    All I know is I trust Japan and not Iran. If anyone can pull out of this it will be the Japanese. God Bless them.

  • odin2012

    I read that the Ronald Regan got dosed with a cloud… It shouldn’t affect anyone but it makes you think.

    • Solomonpal

      Makes me think WTF is the navy thinking…sailing into or being in the path of radioactivity. It’s not a minor matter and should have been avoidable. I have to believe they have started radioactive decontamination proceedures. Though it won’t make MSM
      I am begining to doubt the ability of America’s brass.

  • Whathappened to my country

    Man Pat where have you been I mean really I was thinking the Black ops heli’s took you out! But low and behold it was a brief hiatus, thank’s for the return man look forward to having you back on. Anyways, this country would never survive this kind of destruction as much as I love and have defended this country it would be a disgrace. When an eleven yr old child gets raped and no one stops it, we have completely lost our moral compass! What says you Pat! Thanks for returning bro!!!!!!

  • Charlie from New Jersey

    Just to be clear… the building that exploded is not the containment structure. This is an old BWR. The building that was destroyed just keeps the weather off of the containment vessels. The Japanese had to vent the pressure out of the containment to maintain it’s integrity. These guys know the reactor is toast. (the hydrogen came from a chemical reaction with the fuel cladding that releases enough energy to melt the fuel.)
    Now, they are struggling to keep the fission products and the core melt inside the reactor vessel and/or containment. They know their shit, but the earthquake/tsunami was given them a lousy hand to play.
    Our plants need to demonstrate a shut down and cooldown to a safe temperature without any electricity. (Station Blackout) Our batteries would have lasted longer, but until we know what damage was done to trigger the accident, we won’t know.

  • Solomonpal

    We have a string of these klunkers along the new Madrid fault zone. Maybe someday we get to test how reliable and tough they are.
    For the amount of electricity they produce as a whole I like coal and natural gas better which we have in abundance if these morons that run this country would get off their duff and promote. This country is gridlocked and expect no action anytime soon with the likes of the Hag Murkowski so beholden to special intrests.

  • derised1

    Prayers and Good Vibes for our friends in Japan!

    This is a series of tragedies too awful for most of us to comprehend.