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Another quake-hit Japan reactor in trouble: operator

Australia wants briefings on Japan nuclear threat
Sydney (AFP) March 13, 2011 - Australia said Sunday it wanted urgent information from Japan on the threat posed by an explosion at a nuclear plant and said it had offered Tokyo atomic expertise. Foreign Minister Kevin Rudd said he spoke to his Japanese counterpart Takeaki Matsumoto late Saturday after the explosion at the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power plant, which was damaged in Friday's 8.9 earthquake, sparked fears of a meltdown. While the Japanese government says there is no immediate threat outside the 20-kilometre (12-mile) exclusion zone around the plant, Rudd said Australia and the world was awaiting further information.

"We and the rest of the international community need urgent briefings on the precise status of these reactors," he told public broadcaster ABC on Sunday. "We are seeking further co-operation on the technical and safety aspects of these from the Japanese government." Rudd said that while he wanted to avoid being "alarmist", he had urged the updates when he spoke to Matsumoto and also offered Japan any nuclear expertise Australia could provide.

Smoke billowed from the Fukushima No. 1 atomic plant about 250 kilometres northeast of Tokyo, after an explosion blew off the roof and walls of the structure around one of its reactors. Radiation leaked from the plant, but the government moved to calm fears of a meltdown, saying that the blast did not rupture the container surrounding the reactor and that radiation levels had fallen afterwards. Rudd said Australia also offered Japan self-contained field hospitals and disaster victim identification teams to help in the grisly process of rescuing survivors and recovering bodies from the quake and the huge tsunami that it triggered. In the small port town of Minamisanriku alone, some 10,000 people are unaccounted for -- more than half the population -- after it was hammered by tsunami waves, according to Japanese public broadcaster NHK.
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) March 13, 2011
The operator of a quake-hit Japanese nuclear plant said Sunday that the cooling system of another reactor was not working and risked a possible explosion.

"All the functions to keep cooling water levels in No. 3 reactor have failed at the Fukushima No. 1 plant," said a spokesman of Tokyo Electric Power (Tepco).

"As of 5:30 am (2030 GMT Saturday), water injection stopped and inside pressure is rising slightly," he said, adding the operator filed an emergency report on the plant's condition with the government.

The fresh risk arose after a huge explosion ripped through the plant's No. 1 reactor Saturday afternoon despite the operator's efforts to control high temperatures and growing inside pressure.

Tepco, however, said it was the structure encasing the reactor that had collapsed, adding that it happened at the time of an earthquake aftershock, and that the steel reactor inside it was not ruptured.

Japan had Friday declared an atomic emergency amid growing international concern over its reactors after an 8.9 magnitude earthquake, the biggest in Japan's history, unleashed massive tsunamis.

An evacuation order for local residents was expanded to 20 kilometres (12 miles) around the plant in fear that evaporating cooling liquid would expose the fuel rods to air and trigger a nuclear meltdown and major radiation leak.

The UN atomic watchdog said Japan reported that an estimated 200,000 people had been evacuated so far from the areas around the Fukushima No.1 and No. 2 nuclear plants.

The two Fukushima nuclear plants, some 200 kilometres (124 miles) north of Tokyo, are located close to each other, with six reactors at the No.1 plant and four reactors at the No.2.

earlier related report
US experts fear 'Chernobyl-like' crisis for Japan
Washington (AFP) March 12, 2011 - US nuclear experts warned Saturday that pumping sea water to cool a quake-hit Japanese nuclear reactor was an "act of desperation" that may foreshadow a Chernobyl-like disaster.

Several experts, in a conference call with reporters, also predicted that regardless of the outcome at the Fukushima No. 1 atomic plant crisis, the accident will seriously damage the nuclear power renaissance.

"The situation has become desperate enough that they apparently don't have the capability to deliver fresh water or plain water to cool the reactor and stabilize it, and now, in an act of desperation, are having to resort to diverting and using sea water," said Robert Alvarez, who works on nuclear disarmament at the Institute for Policy Studies.

"I would describe this measure as a 'Hail Mary' pass," added Alvarez, using American football slang for a final effort to win the game as time expires.

An 8.9 magnitude earthquake that struck Japan on Friday set off the emergency at the plant, which was then hit by an explosion Saturday that prompted an evacuation of the surrounding area.

Workers doused the stricken reactor with sea water to try to avert catastrophe, after the quake knocked out power to the cooling system.

What occurred at the plant was a "station blackout," which is the loss of offsite air-conditioning power combined with the failure of onsite power, in this case diesel generators.

"It is considered to be extremely unlikely but the station blackout has been one of the great concerns for decades," said Ken Bergeron, a physicist who has worked on nuclear reactor accident simulation.

"We're in uncharted territory," he said.

The reactor has been shut down but the concern is the heat in the core, which can melt if it's not cooled. If the core melts through the reactor vessel, Bergeron explained, it could flow onto the floor of the containment building. If that happens, the structure likely will fail, the experts said.

"The containment building at this plant is certainly stronger than that at Chernobyl but a lot less strong than at Three Mile Island, so time will tell," he said.

Peter Bradford, former head of the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission, said that if the cooling attempts fail, "at that point it's a Chernobyl-like situation where you start dumping in sand and cement."

The two worst nuclear accidents on record are the 1986 Chernobyl disaster in Ukraine and the partial core meltdown of the Three Mile Island reactor in the US state of Pennsylvania in 1979.

Another expert said the Japanese accident will rank as one of the three worst in history.

"If it continues, if they don't get control of this and... we go from a partial meltdown of the core to a full meltdown, this will be a complete disaster," Joseph Cirincione, the head of the Ploughshares Fund, said in an interview on CNN.

Cirincione faulted Japanese authorities for providing partial and conflicting information about what was happening at the plant.

Cirincione said the presence of radioactive cesium in the atmosphere after the plant was vented indicated that a partial meltdown was underway.

"That told the operators that the fuel rods had been exposed, that the water level had dropped below the fuel rods and the fuel rods were starting to burn, releasing cesium," he said.

Japan's nuclear safety agency rated the Fukushima accident at four on the International Nuclear Event Scale from 0 to 7, meaning an accident "with local consequences," an official said Sunday.

The Three Mile Island accident was rated five while Chernobyl was a seven.

The government declared an atomic emergency and said tens of thousands of people living within 12 miles (20 kilometers) of the plant should leave after an explosion at the nuclear plant Saturday.

"This is obviously a significant setback for the so-called nuclear renaissance," said Bradford, the former NRC commissioner.

"The image of a nuclear power plant blowing up before your eyes on the television screen is a first."

But a spokesman for the World Nuclear Association said in an interview with CBS News that the threat of a full meltdown is minimal.

"I think that possibility is remote at the best of times and is diminishing by the hour as the fuel gets cooler and generates less heat," said Ian Hore-Lacy, spokesman for the industry organization.



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CIVIL NUCLEAR
Japan scrambles to stop quake-hit nuke plant accidents
Tokyo (AFP) March 12, 2011
Japan scrambled Saturday to prevent nuclear accidents at two atomic plants where reactor cooling systems failed after a massive earthquake, as it evacuated tens of thousands of residents. Radiation 1,000 times above normal was detected in the control room of one plant, although authorities said levels outside the facility's gates were only eight times above normal, spelling "no immediate hea ... read more







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