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April 4th, 1975

May 27th, 1981
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Japan No 2 core melted through reactor vessel - Markey
8 hours 33 mins ago
The core at Japan's Fukushima nuclear reactor has melted through the reactor pressure vessel, Democratic Congressman Edward Markey told a hearing on the nuclear disaster on Wednesday. Skip related content
"I have been informed by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission that the core of Unit Two has gotten so hot that part of it has probably melted through the reactor pressure vessel," said Markey, a prominent nuclear critic in the House of Representatives.
(Reporting by Roberta Rampton and Ayesha Rascoe)
NRC says not clear that Japan reactor has melted vessel
Edited on Wed Apr-06-11 08:59 AM by dipsydoodle
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A top official from the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission said on Wednesday it was not clear that Japan's Fukushima No. 2 nuclear reactor has melted through the reactor pressure vessel.
Earlier, Democratic lawmaker Edward Markey told a House of Representatives hearing on the nuclear disaster that the NRC had told him the core had melted through the vessel.
"That's not clear to us, nor is it clear to us that the reactor has penetrated the vessel," said Martin Virgilio, deputy executive director for reactor and preparedness programs at the NRC.
StarmanSkye wrote:BTW: From what I've read and heard, yes these workers were missing since the tsunami hit and were presumed drowned -- not the result of hydrogen explosion -- which in any case didn't affect unit 4 -- its damage was apparently the result of a spent-fuel cooling pool fire occurring several days later thru the fuel rods being exposed to air and overheating.
Japan's Radioactive Ocean
By Julia Whitty
Tue Apr. 5, 2011 2:29 PM PDT
It's spring in Japan's ocean waters, the time of highest primary productivity, when lengthening days reawaken the hibernating marine foodweb.
The satellite image above is from the area about 160 kilometers/100 miles north of the Fukushima I Nuclear Power Plant. It was shot on 21 May 2009 and shows where Japan's two mighty ocean currents—the Kuroshio and the Oyashio—collide.
The convergence zone is awesomely rich. The Oyashio flows down form the Arctic, the Kuroshio up from the subtropics. Where they meet you get all kinds of fascinating expressions of fluid dynamics—highlighted in the image above by eddies colored aquamarine by the presence of intensely blooming phytoplankton.
Fluid dynamics drive biological dynamics too, and the phytoplankton are busting their tiny chlorophyll guts, so to speak, feasting in the collision zone—where nutrients are getting churned up from the seafloor to deliver nature's own signature blend of Miracle-Gro.
According to the engineering specs for Earth, without phytoplankton making life from nonlife, there would be little life in the ocean, perhaps none in Japan or just about anywhere else.
But this year the phytoplankton that feed everything else in the sea, one or four trophic levels removed, are likely to be sporting a couple of far-out new ingredients: iodine-131 and cesium-137.
...
NRC: Japan no reason to de-license NJ nuke plant
By WAYNE PARRY
TRENTON, N.J.
The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission says nothing it has learned from the Japanese nuclear disaster warrants revoking the license of the nation's oldest nuclear power plant in New Jersey.
The agency filed its response Tuesday to a federal appeals court that had asked if the Japanese crisis should lead to a re-thinking of the Oyster Creek Nuclear Generating Station's current 20-year license that was awarded two years ago.
The agency says that while it is studying the ongoing crisis in Japan, it remains confident of the safety of U.S. nuclear plants.
"Licensed nuclear power reactors in the United States are currently safe and may continue to operate under NRC's comprehensive scheme of safety regulations and inspections, pending development of any new safety measures that emerge," the agency wrote.
A coalition of anti-nuclear groups is challenging Oyster Creek's 2009 license renewal. It asked the appeals court to reconsider whether Oyster Creek's license should have been renewed, citing concerns about its age and wear and tear on the plant, which went online in 1969.
The New Jersey Sierra Club says the NRC has not learned anything from the Japanese disaster.
"NRC stands for No Regulatory Commission," said Jeff Tittel, the group's director. "The agency is a cheerleader for industry and looks the other way it comes to relicensing, especially around issues of public safety.
"The NRC should be saying license renewals across the country should be on hold while we reevaluate the safety of these facilities," said Tittel. "This brief shows the NRC will not learn any lessons from Japan, just as they did not learn any lessons from Three Mile Island or Chernobyl. Given what we are learning about Japan, it does not make any sense and could be outright dangerous to keep Oyster Creek open."
The NRC noted in its response that it adopted new standards and practices following Three Mile Island, and the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.
"As with the post-TMI and post-9/11 regulatory enhancements, any lessons learned from the Fukushima Daiichi event will be applied generically to all reactors, including Oyster Creek, as appropriate to their location, design, construction, and operation," the agency wrote. "No safety, technical, or policy justification exists to single out particular reactors for different treatment just because of their place in the licensing queue or status on judicial review."
Oyster Creek's license allows it to operate until 2029. But its owners, Chicago-based Exelon Corp., struck a deal with New Jersey in December to shut Oyster Creek 10 years early, in 2019. In return, the state dropped its insistence that Oyster Creek build costly cooling towers to drastically reduce the number of fish and small aquatic creatures the plan's operations kill each year.
http://www.businessweek.com/ap/financia ... E84H00.htm
Four people have died and over 100 are injured from the aftershock of 7.1 point magnitude on the Richter scale earthquake that rocked northeastern Japan Thursday evening.
The victims are listed as two women, 63 and 83, and two men, 79 and 85.
The earthquake also damaged the Onagawa Nuclear Power Plant, where a leak of radioactive water is reported by Japanese TV, citing the NPP operator Tokyo Electric Power. The leak comes from the pools where the used fuel of reactors one and two is stored, but no elevated levels of radiation have been recorded.
The shock was registered at 11:32 pm local time (5:32 pm Bulgarian time) and has an epicenter in the Pacific, 49-meters deep, according to the US Geological Survey.
Eyewitnesses say many buildings have been damaged; there are also reported fires and damage in the gas supply system; over 3.6 million households are without electric power.
There is no new damage discovered at the Fukushima NPP, which was badly struck by the devastating March 11 9-point magnitude on the Richter scale quake and following 10-meter tsunami.
Jeff wrote:Driving towards Fukushima:
One killed in HMS Astute nuclear submarine shooting
One person has been killed and another is in a life-threatening condition after a shooting on board the nuclear submarine HMS Astute.
A man was arrested after police were called at 1212 BST to Southampton docks where the vessel has been berthed since Wednesday as part of a five-day visit.
The BBC's Jonathan Beale understands that a crew member shot two of his crew mates before being overpowered.
A police spokeswoman said the incident is not linked to terrorism.
She said there is no public safety risk and the area is sealed off.
BBC News understands the arrested man was handed over to Hampshire police by Ministry of Defence police.
Brian Cedar, who lives in Hythe marina, said: "I saw at least six people carry a stretcher off the gangway into a waiting ambulance.
"There were a couple of forensic people who have now left.
"If you can have a shooting like this on a nuclear submarine it is worrying."
The area around the docks has been sealed off by officers from Hampshire police.
The 97m-long (318ft) HMS Astute, the UK's newest and largest nuclear submarine, is based at the Faslane Naval Base on the Clyde.
HMS Astute berthed in Southampton HMS Astute is currently berthed in Southampton as part of a five-day visit
It ran aground on a shingle bank between the Scottish mainland and the Isle of Skye in October last year and remained marooned for several hours.
HMS Astute was named and launched by the Duchess of Cornwall in June 2007 before being welcomed into the Royal Navy in August last year at a commissioning ceremony at Faslane Naval Base on the Clyde.
The submarine weighs 7,800 tonnes, equivalent to nearly 1,000 double-decker buses, and is almost 100 metres (328ft) long.
Its Spearfish torpedoes and Tomahawk cruise missiles are capable of delivering pinpoint strikes from 2,000km (1,240 miles) with conventional weapons.
The submarine's nuclear reactor means it does not need refuelling and it makes its own air and water, enabling it to circumnavigate the globe without needing to surface.
A Royal Navy crewman has been killed and another is in a life-threatening condition after a shooting on board nuclear submarine HMS Astute.
A third Royal Navy serviceman was arrested after police were called to Southampton docks where the vessel has been berthed since Wednesday.
The BBC's Jonathan Beale understands that a crew member shot two of his crew mates before being overpowered.
Stephen Morgan wrote:One killed in HMS Astute nuclear submarine shooting
One person has been killed and another is in a life-threatening condition after a shooting on board the nuclear submarine HMS Astute.
A man was arrested after police were called at 1212 BST to Southampton docks where the vessel has been berthed since Wednesday as part of a five-day visit.
The BBC's Jonathan Beale understands that a crew member shot two of his crew mates before being overpowered.
A police spokeswoman said the incident is not linked to terrorism.
She said there is no public safety risk and the area is sealed off.
BBC News understands the arrested man was handed over to Hampshire police by Ministry of Defence police.
Brian Cedar, who lives in Hythe marina, said: "I saw at least six people carry a stretcher off the gangway into a waiting ambulance.
"There were a couple of forensic people who have now left.
"If you can have a shooting like this on a nuclear submarine it is worrying."
The area around the docks has been sealed off by officers from Hampshire police.
The 97m-long (318ft) HMS Astute, the UK's newest and largest nuclear submarine, is based at the Faslane Naval Base on the Clyde.
HMS Astute berthed in Southampton HMS Astute is currently berthed in Southampton as part of a five-day visit
It ran aground on a shingle bank between the Scottish mainland and the Isle of Skye in October last year and remained marooned for several hours.
HMS Astute was named and launched by the Duchess of Cornwall in June 2007 before being welcomed into the Royal Navy in August last year at a commissioning ceremony at Faslane Naval Base on the Clyde.
The submarine weighs 7,800 tonnes, equivalent to nearly 1,000 double-decker buses, and is almost 100 metres (328ft) long.
Its Spearfish torpedoes and Tomahawk cruise missiles are capable of delivering pinpoint strikes from 2,000km (1,240 miles) with conventional weapons.
The submarine's nuclear reactor means it does not need refuelling and it makes its own air and water, enabling it to circumnavigate the globe without needing to surface.
Securing the Cities planning has culminated this week in an ongoing
five-day drill testing the line of defense — the largest exercise yet.
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