Nuclear Meltdown Watch

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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby hanshan » Mon Aug 01, 2011 1:16 pm

crikkett wrote:
hanshan wrote:...

crikkett wrote:
hanshan wrote:...

this is a couple wks old; may not have been posted


http://tinyurl.com/3vxbpo7

Leuren Moret: Nuclear genocide of babies & children in Japan, U.S., Canada grows

...
In her ExopoliticsTV interview, Ms. Moret demonstrated that there has been a spike of 35% in infant mortality in the west coast of the United States and of Canada since the HAARP-triggered Fukushima event that can be reasonably attributed to the ionizing radiation ferried across the Pacific ocean and dumped on west coast U.S. and Canadian cities by HAARP-caused weather warfare.
...


Is Leuren Moret a reliable source?
It was never proven that HAARP triggered the Fukushima meltdown.


It seems Moret taints her radiation expertise by straying into political meta-narratives for which, almost by definition, there can be no proof.


Maybe her nutty professor act is just an act.

...It may reduce her palatibility. :mrgreen:
...


Or increase it. Noone is speaking in a sober way about how we can minimize or ameliorate exposure to radioactive fallout.


y'know, haven't seen her in person, although would like to. Her presentations via youtube, seem incomplete to me -
Something isn't coming across.
& her nutty professor act is just plain weird.

Noone is speaking in a sober way... - in fact, no one is speaking at all,
which has to be the all time first place ostrich head in the sand routine
It's just so bizarre. Have planted a garden & am considering sending samples
to local ag extension service for a radiation analysis. This ought to raise some eyebrows...


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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby hanshan » Mon Aug 01, 2011 4:45 pm

...

there is some interesting info here:


How does Osaka Readings Compare to Nevada?

I recently accepted a job in Osaka, Japan and I've been trying to found out how radiation readings in Osaka compare to Nevada (where I am). I think I've sleuthed all I can sleuth. I was hoping I could get some help from this knowledgeable community at this point.

For radioactivity measures in Nevada, I have used readings found using the links from this forum post section:

http://www.nuc.berkeley.edu/node/2044#others

For radioactivity measures in Osaka, I have followed two leads (there have only been two articles that I have found that report radioactive cesium in Osaka):
http://www.nuc.berkeley.edu/node/4676


( &, oddly enough, apparently the infant mortality figures
were goosed; should have checked this before reproducing):

http://www.nuc.berkeley.edu/node/4550

At least my numbers have now been verified
Submitted by VB (not verified) on Tue, 2011-06-28 15:31.
Well, I can breath a sigh of relief on two fronts:

1. The numbers in this article match what I had posted in the other follow-up thread. I too was confused by not being able to duplicate the results in the article:

http://www.nuc.berkeley.edu/node/4726#comment-12277

2. Much more importantly, there is no evidence of increased infant death.

»


more from Berkeley:

http://www.nuc.berkeley.edu/node/4561

Japanese( w/ translation) air quality testing:

http://www.mext.go.jp/english/incident/1304796.htm

edited to add link

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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby hanshan » Tue Aug 02, 2011 12:48 pm

...

this is 2wks old:


Rainwater radiation linked to Japanese nuclear disaster


SEATTLE - New studies show that exceeding levels of radiation in U.S. rain water are linked to contamination from the Japanese nuclear power plant.

After the earthquake and tsunami in Japan, U.S. health and environmental agencies monitored radiation content reaching the West Coast. The initial tests used air monitoring devices and concluded little to no radiation contamination.

Seattle-based environmental advocacy group the Heart of America Northwest tested rain water and discovered higher than normal levels of radioactive iodine in the water.

Portland, Olympia and Boise all showed signs of having elevated levels of radiation in rain water. Radiation levels were more than 40 times the drinking water limit in Olympia, Wash., and were found to be the highest in Boise, Idaho, according to Gerry Pollet of Heart of America Northwest.

"Our government said no health level standards are being exceeded when in fact the rain water in the Northwest are reaching levels 130 times the drinking water standard," Pollet said.

The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) published the findings of these studies on their web site with details about radiation in rain water. State health agencies also say that they monitor radiation levels frequently, both in the air and water.

(KUSA-TV © 2011 Multimedia Holdings Corporation)

http://www.9news.com/news/article/207689/188/Rainwater-radiation-linked-to-Japanese-nuclear-disaster-



edited for context


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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby hanshan » Tue Aug 02, 2011 1:03 pm

...

counterpunch on same topic:

Radiated Rain

By GERALD POLLET

Radiation levels in rainwater collected in Portland, Oregon on March 25, 2011 were 86.8 pCi/L for Iodine 131 (I131), amongst the highest recorded in the US after Fukushima. Rain in Olympia had even higher levels of radioactive Iodine. The Portland result was not posted by EPA until April 4.

The maximum level of Iodine 131in rain in Olympia, WA was 125 pCi/L on March 24, which was not posted by EPA until April 4.

Highest levels in rainwater in California were collected March 22, 2011 in Richmond, CA with levels of 138 pCi/L.

The Drinking Water Standard is just 3 pCi/L (picoCuries per Liter, which is a very small measurement). Thus, people drinking undiluted rainwater n Portland would have consumed and been exposed to Iodine 131 at levels nearly 30 times the DWS, and 41 times the standard in Olympia. There are no results for Seattle or Bellingham areas. The DWS is set at a level based on drinking 2L/day resulting in a 4 mrem per year dose, which is a 1 in 10,000 lifetime risk of fatal cancer in adults, if consumed daily over 30 years. Children are 3 to 10 times more susceptible to develop cancer from the same does, especially because Iodine concentrates in young thyroids. Of course, Iodine 131 may cause non-cancerous health conditions.


If the rain in Richmond, CA had high levels on March 22, one might expect that EPA would have been testing the same day or as close as possible at Pacific Northwest locations that day. However, locations only test once a week or once a month without apparent coordination related to the event, e.g., without apparent increased testing based on weather patterns from Japan and daily events, such as explosions at Fukushima.

The highest levels of Iodine 131 in rain were collected in Boise, Idaho on March 27 and March 22, 2011 with levels of 390 and 242, respectively.

A high level reported by EPA was 150 pCi/L collected in Jacksonville, FL on March 31. This shows how far and wide the contamination can, and did, spread. It also reveals that claims and news reports were false in presenting that the 8 day half-life of Iodine 131 (half of the radiation remains) meant that contamination would not reach across the US. If levels of 150 were in rain in Jacksonville, the levels were much higher days earlier on the West Coast.

If levels of 390 reached Boise, 130 times the Drinking Water Standard, the same clouds likely dropped precipitation at levels 50% higher in Oregon and Washington before reaching Boise.

There were no samples collected and reported in Oregon and WA in the days immediately prior to the Boise collection of a sample with 242 pCi/L on March 22nd. Portland had only two precipitation samples reported during this entire period, the second on April 20, with all results "non-detects". These results were not posted by EPA until May 24.

While there are numerous results collected at Oak Ridge, home of USDOE's Oak Ridge National Lab, it appears that USDOE's Hanford site and Pacific NW National Lab were not part of EPA's collection program – despite claims of extensive radiological monitoring at Hanford.

EPA refuses to make public who is collecting data samples for its RadNet program, preventing independent review of accuracy and raising concern that the choices as to sampling may be biased, and leaving numerous questions such as why some collection stations were only collecting monthly even at the height of the crisis (e.g., Portland).

EPA's announcement that it was returning to "routine" sampling implied that there was across the board increased sampling from mid-March to May3, 2011. However, a review of the posted sampling results show many locations, such as Portland, OR, did not increase precipitation sampling from once a month during the crisis.

EPA's May 3 Statement:

"After a thorough data review showing declining radiation levels related to the Japanese nuclear incident, EPA has returned to the routine RadNet sampling and analysis process for precipitation, drinking water and milk.

"As always, EPA's RadNet system of more than 100 stationary monitors will continue to provide EPA scientists near-real-time data on the slightest fluctuations in background radiation levels…

"It is important to note that all of the radiation levels detected by RadNet monitors and sampling have been very low, are well below any level of public health concern, and continue to decrease over time. EPA continues to work with federal partners to monitor the situation in Japan and stands prepared to accelerate radiation sampling and analysis if the need arises. Data will continue to be available on EPA's public website."

Heart of America Northwest's review shows that EPA's claim of "near real-time data" is belied by EPA taking a week to post data. In the event of another explosion releasing radioactive particles and gases, the serious week long gap in time between collection of results and posting could prevent a proper public health advisory and response. By taking a week to post results, the public is deprived of the ability to make its own choices in time to make a difference.

All data from EPA: http://www.epa.gov/japan2011/rert/radnet-sampling-data.html

Gerald Pollet is executive director of Heart of America Northwest.

http://www.hoanw.org/

http://www.counterpunch.org/pollet07112011.html




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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby Jeff » Tue Aug 02, 2011 5:03 pm

Tepco Reports Second Deadly Radiation Reading at Fukushima Plant

By Tsuyoshi Inajima and Kari Lundgren
Aug 2, 2011 11:40 AM ET

Tokyo Electric Power Co. reported its second deadly radiation reading in as many days at its wrecked Fukushima nuclear plant north of Tokyo.

The utility known as Tepco said yesterday it detected 5 sieverts of radiation per hour in the No. 1 reactor building. On Aug. 1 in another area it recorded radiation of 10 sieverts per hour, enough to kill a person “within a few weeks” after a single exposure, according to the World Nuclear Association.

Radiation has impeded attempts to replace cooling systems to bring three melted reactors and four damaged spent fuel ponds under control after a tsunami on March 11 crippled the plant. The latest reading was taken on the second floor of the No. 1 reactor building and will stop workers entering the area.

“This does emphasize what care has to be taken,” Richard Wakeford, a visiting professor of epidemiology at the University of Manchester’s Dalton Nuclear Institute in England, said in a telephone interview. “They have to put robots into those areas where they might expect high radiation levels. It’s no real substitute for human access.”

The 10 sieverts of radiation detected on Aug. 1 outside reactor buildings was the highest the Geiger counters used were capable of reading, indicating the level could have been higher, Junichi Matsumoto, a general manager at the utility, said at a press conference.

“In the area surrounding the breach of containment you’d expect high levels of contamination and those high levels would be difficult to predict,” Wakeford said. “You can dig them up if they’re on the soil and contain it or wash it down if it’s on the side of a building.”

...





http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-08-0 ... plant.html
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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby hanshan » Wed Aug 03, 2011 12:43 pm

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Radioactive fish found in Connecticut River — State officials trying to determine source of Strontium-90

August 2nd, 2011 at 08:29 PM


Vermont health regulators said on Tuesday they found a fish containing radioactive material in the Connecticut River near Entergy’s (ETR.N) Vermont Yankee nuclear power plant which could be another setback for Entergy to keep it running.

The state said it needs to do more testing to determine the source of the Strontium-90, which can cause bone cancer and leukemia. [...]


http://enenews.com/radioactive-fish-found-connecticut-river-state-officials-trying-determine-source-strontium-90



Vermont finds contaminated fish as nuclear debate rages

Tue Aug 2, 2011 4:37pm EDT

* Vermont Yankee could close by March 2012
* Entergy fighting for reactor survival


NEW YORK, Aug 2 (Reuters) - Vermont health regulators said
on Tuesday they found a fish containing radioactive material in
the Connecticut River near Entergy's (ETR.N) Vermont Yankee
nuclear power plant which could be another setback for Entergy
to keep it running.
The state said it needs to do more testing to determine the
source of the Strontium-90, which can cause bone cancer and
leukemia.
Vermont Governor Peter Shumlin wants the 620 megawatts
reactor shut in March 2012 when its original operating license
was to expire.
"Today's troubling news from the Vermont Department of
Health is another example of Entergy Louisiana putting their
shareholders' profits above the welfare of Vermonters," Shumlin
said in a statement.
"I am asking my Health Department to keep a close eye on
test results moving forward to determine the extent of any
contamination that has reached the environment."


New Orleans-based Entergy, the second biggest nuclear
power operator in the United States, however wants to keep the
reactor running for another 20 years under a new license.
Entergy filed a complaint in federal court to block the
state from shutting the reactor next year.
Officials at Entergy were not immediately available for
comment.
"One finding of (Strontium-90) just above the lower limit
of detection in one fish sample is notable because it is the
first time Strontium-90 has been detected in the edible portion
of any of our fish samples," the Vermont Department of Health
said on its website.
The Health Department said it did not know how the
Strontium-90, which is both naturally occurring in the
environment and a byproduct of nuclear power production and
nuclear weapons testing, got into the fish.
"We cannot associate low levels of Strontium-90 in fish in
the Connecticut River with Vermont Yankee-related radioactive
materials without other supporting evidence," the report said.

MORE ANALYSIS NEEDED

The Health Department asked for additional analysis on the
fish obtained on June 9, 2010 that contained the strontium-90
and also on other fish samples.
These analyses will take weeks to complete, the Health
Department said, noting it is working to obtain additional fish
for testing much farther upstream in the Connecticut River.
The Connecticut River divides Vermont and New Hampshire
before running through Massachusetts and Connecticut. Vermont
Yankee is located in Vernon, Vermont, near the border between
Vermont, New Hampshire and Massachusetts about 110 miles
northwest of Boston.
Strontium-90 and other human made radioactive materials
come from the fairly constant release of very low quantities
from medical and industrial users of radioactive materials, and
from infrequent releases such as above-ground nuclear weapons
testing in the 1950s, and the nuclear reactor accidents at
Chernobyl in 1986 and Fukushima in 2011.


Radioactive materials are nothing new for Vermont Yankee.
In January 2010, Entergy said it discovered a radioactive
tritium leak at the plant. The company stopped that leak in
March 2010 but not before the state Senate, which was then led
by now Governor Shumlin, voted to block the state from allowing
the plant to run beyond March 2012.
Vermont is the only state in the nation with a say on
whether a nuclear plant within its borders can operate. The
state gained that right, which Entergy is now challenging in
federal court, when it agreed to allow Entergy to buy the plant
in 2002.
(Reporting by Scott DiSavino;editing by Sofina Mirza-Reid)



http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/08/02/utilities-entergy-vermontyankee-strontiu-idUSN1E7711HA20110802




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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby hanshan » Thu Aug 04, 2011 12:56 pm

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http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-08-04/japan-s-change-of-energy-chiefs-is-criticized-as-mere-reshuffle.html

Japan’s Change of Energy Chiefs Is Criticized as Mere Reshuffle

By Tsuyoshi Inajima and Yuji Okada - Aug 4, 2011 5:00 AM MT


Japan’s decision to remove three officials in charge of energy policy isn’t enough to tackle failures that contributed to the Fukushima nuclear disaster, said a former Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry official.
Cabinet minister Banri Kaieda, who heads the ministry known as METI, said today he’ll dismiss its top bureaucrat and the heads of agencies in charge of nuclear oversight and energy policy, as part of “sweeping” changes.
“The removal of the officials is cosmetic,” Hiroyuki Kishi, a professor at the Graduate School of Media Design at Keio University and a former METI official, said by phone. “The officials being removed were due to leave the ministry as part of regular reshuffles this summer,” Kishi said.
The disaster at Fukushima capped decades of faked safety reports and fatal accidents in Japan’s atomic industry with the regulator in a conflict of interest as it was under the control of METI, which had a mandate to promote nuclear power. That conflict has been highlighted in the last week by revelations the regulator urged utilities to influence public opinion in favor of nuclear energy.
“To account for the huge mess in Fukushima, they should fire all the director generals in the ministry or dismantle it entirely,” said Kishi.
The officials being dismissed are METI Vice-Minister Kazuo Matsunaga, 59, the director general of the Agency for Natural Resources and Energy, Tetsuhiro Hosono, 58, and the director general of the Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency, Nobuaki Terasaka, 58.
New Personnel
Matsunaga will be replaced by Kenyu Adachi, 52, the director general of the Economic and Industrial Policy Bureau, the ministry announced today in a statement. Hosono will be replaced by Ichiro Takahara, 54, the director general of Small and Medium Enterprise Agency, while Hiroyuki Fukano, 54, the director general of Commerce and Distribution Policy Group, was appointed for the chief of NISA, according to the personnel proposal, which will be endorsed at a cabinet meeting tomorrow.
“This is not a regular reshuffle,” Kaieda said in a meeting with reporters this afternoon. “I asked these three people to step back with heartbreaking grief because we need to move forward as a new METI by refreshing personnel.”
Kaieda said he will resign as METI minister after filing official appointment and mapping out a blueprint of the new METI. The appointment will be officially given on Aug. 12, the statement said.
Emitting Radiation
Tokyo Electric Power Co.’s Fukushima plant has been emitting radiation since an earthquake and tsunami on March 11 knocked out power and cooling, causing three reactor meltdowns and hydrogen explosions.
The accident is rated at the highest level on a severity scale, or the same as the Chernobyl disaster in the former Soviet Union in 1986.
Tokyo Electric ignored warnings about the tsunami risks that caused the crisis at Fukushima, according to Tatsuya Ito, who represented Fukushima prefecture in the national parliament from 1991 to 2003.
Chubu Electric Power Co., one of the country’s regional electricity monopolies, said on July 29 the nuclear regulator asked the utility to prepare questions favoring atomic power for a public hearing in 2007.
Kyushu Electric
Kyushu Electric Power Co. earlier said it asked staffers at affiliates to send e-mails supporting the restart of reactors to an internet-broadcast show run by METI on plant safety.
An official at NISA asked Kyushu Electric, Shikoku Electric Power Co. and Tohoku Electric Power Co. to send employees to symposium on nuclear power to influence public opinion, Kyodo News reported this week.
An independent panel may be set up as early as today to investigate the alleged attempts to sway opinion by the regulator and Japan’s power companies, Kaieda said.
“We will cooperate with the investigation when requested,” Takumi Koyamada, a NISA spokesman, said by phone. He declined to comment on any personnel changes.
NISA, which lists one of its codes of conduct as “neutrality and justice,” will be separated from METI to give it more independence, the government said last month.
“They need to step up oversight of Japan’s nuclear industry,” Tokyo-based independent political analyst Hirotada Asakawa said.
To contact the reporters on this story: Tsuyoshi Inajima in Tokyo at tinajima@bloomberg.net; Yuji Okada in Tokyo at yokada6@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Peter Langan at plangan@bloomberg.net



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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby hanshan » Thu Aug 04, 2011 1:03 pm

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http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2011/aug/04/sellafield-remain-threat-ireland


Sellafield will remain a threat to Ireland

The closure of the Mox nuclear plant is good news, but Ireland is still a long way from escaping the shadow of Sellafield

Peter Geoghegan
guardian.co.uk, Thursday 4 August 2011 14.00 BST
Article history


Sellafield Mox nuclear fuel plant to close. It's a headline that generations of Irish environmental activists, and government ministers in Leinster House, never thought they would see. After just 10 years of operation – and at the cost of a vertiginous £1.4bn to the British taxpayer – the mixed-oxide fuel plant nestled on the edge of bucolic west Cumbria is to be decommissioned.

Sellafield has long been an emotive issue in Ireland. At just 128 miles from Dublin, the plant is within spitting distance of Ireland's densely populated eastern seaboard. The Irish Sea is now the most radioactively contaminated in the world, while in the wake of 9/11 concerns about a terrorist attack on the plant briefly gripped the Irish popular imagination.

Unsurprisingly then, yesterday's announcement that the Mox plant is to cease operation has been welcomed by Irish activists, many of whom have been involved in decades-long campaigns opposing the facility. However, the closure is anything but the end of Sellafield's nuclear story.

Last October, the environment secretary, Chris Huhne – in a volte-face from previous Lib Dem energy policy – announced that eight new nuclear power plants are to be constructed across Britain. Only last month it was confirmed that Sellafield is to be the site of one such new reactor, to be built by 2025. It is widely expected that additional employment at the new facility will at the very least replace the 600 job losses announced yesterday.

The earthquake in Japan – and the crisis at Fukushima – have radically altered nuclear priorities across Europe: Germany is to phase out all its plants by 2022, opposition to nuclear power is increasing in France and Italy. But here the only demonstrable effect is the closing of a reprocessing facility that was, from the off, run on a faulty economic model.

The Mox plant was built to handle plutonium dioxide that was shipped around the world, through the Irish Sea to Cumbria, where it was to be recycled from spent fuel at the Thorp plant at Sellafield. The environmental implications, particularly in the event of a disaster, of shipping highly radioactive cargo around the world are all the obvious; the financial rationale is equally flawed.

Sellafield was designed to process 120 tonnes of Mox a year: in reality it produced barely a fraction of that. In the five years since opening in 2006 just five tonnes were made, and as of yesterday the total output over its lifetime stood at a paltry 13 tonnes . The loss of Japanese contracts in the aftermath of Fukushima sounded the plant's death knell.

As Irish campaigner Brian Greene, who blogs at Shut Sellafield , noted: "From a business perspective the Mox plant has been a total failure so it's no great surprise that they are shutting it down. But the legacy is huge. It'll cost millions to decommission, the land will never be used again."

Mox or no Mox, Sellafield will still pose an environmental threat. When the famous Calder Hall cooling towers were demolished in 2007 it took 12 weeks to remove all the asbestos from the debris. The site's radioactive legacy will last significantly longer.

Meanwhile, in May, British authorities backtracked on a commitment given to Irish environment minister Phil Hogan that Sellafield would be included in European-wide stress tests of nuclear installations following Fukushima. That the plant does not generate nuclear power was adduced, rather dubiously, to explain why an examination of Sellafield's resilience against earthquakes, tsunamis, air crashes and terrorism was unnecessary.

In 1981, the plant's name was changed from Windscale to Sellafield in an attempt to shift attention away from the plant's less than impressive safety record. Thirty years on it seems that, with the closing of the Mox plant, another attempted rebranding of Sellafield is underway.

But unless British government policy changes quickly, future generations on both sides of the Irish Sea still face the disquieting prospect a life lived under a nuclear shadow.


guardian.co.uk © Guardian News and Media Limited 2011



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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby hanshan » Thu Aug 04, 2011 1:12 pm

...


http://www.smartplanet.com/blog/intelligent-energy/japanese-rice-crops-threatened-by-radiation/7830

Japanese rice crops threatened by radiation


By David Worthington | August 1, 2011, 7:01 PM PDT


Local authorities in Japan are working to determine whether the country’s traditional staple crop is contaminated with unsafe levels of radioactive cesium.

At least 18 of the prefectural governments most acutely affected by radioactive fallout from the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster last spring are running tests to gauge the safety of local food supplies. The areas produce nearly half of the nation’s rice crops, Reuters reports.

“Continuous consumption of rice containing cesium above the government-imposed limit of 500 becquerels per kg over a year will result in internal radiation exposure above 5 millisieverts, one of the more conservative standards for radiation exposure set by the International Commission on Radiological Protection,” the Japanese health ministry said in a statement.

Crops will be checked both before and after harvesting. Radiation fears were swelling in June as citizen journalists and scientists created a map alleging widespread contamination throughout eastern and northern Japan - as far as 100 miles away from ground zero.

Levels appear highest near Fukushima and toward its northwest. The vicinity around immediate southwest of the reactors shows elevated radiation, and a large pocket of contamination has settled further south in the outskirts of Tokyo.

Japanese authorities suspended beef shipments from the Fukushima region last month. Rice straw cows absorbed unsafe levels of cesium through their feed stocks. Crops such as rice and grains quickly absorb radiation, potentially making dairy products and produce for human consumption.


there's a grammatical error in the original as: potentially making dairy products and produce for human consumption. makes no sense as it's written.



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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby hanshan » Thu Aug 04, 2011 1:28 pm

...


some repeat info:


http://www.bellona.org/articles/articles_2011/fukushima_radspike


Fukushima Daiichi operator reports highest radiation reading since beginning of crisis


Tokyo Electric Power (TEPCO), the operator of Japan's crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant, has detected the highest radiation levels at the facility since the initial earthquake and tsunami five months ago, a company spokesman said Tuesday morning European time.
Charles Digges, 02/08-2011
Meanwhile, radioactive contamination continues to spread in Japan’s food supply as more beef, vegetables, seafood, milk and tea leaves continue to show excessive traces of caesium 137. The government is scrambling to purchase and incinerate these food products, and directing Japanese food producers to sue TEPCO for compensation.

Rice – Japan’s staple food product – is also at threat, and authorities in 14 prefectures will be testing their rice harvests for possible caesium amid growing food-safety fears triggered by the nuclear accident, the Kyodo News agency reported.

This weekend, thousands turned out in Japan to protest government plans to bring reactors that have been shut down since the March 11 quake back online, and to demand Japan abandon nuclear power altogher. Many in the Japanese government still have faith in thier nuclear system and say that it is needed to make up for power shortfalls.

But the Japanese government is only now beginning to release data withheld since April concerning contamination dangers to technicians who are working to bring the crisis to heel.

Worker exposure increasing

A newly released document obtained by Bellona Web, says the Japanese government estimated in April that some 1600 workers will be exposed to high levels of radiation in the course of handling the reactor meltdowns at the stricken nuclear power plant.

The figure was released in a document from the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI), which is in charge of regulating Japan's nuclear industry, after the Japan Occupational Safety and Health Resource Center requested the information be made public, according an article published on Thursday in the Mainichi Daily News.

The government defines high exposure levels for workers as over 50 millisieverts per year. Under normal Japanese law, it is illegal for nuclear workers to be exposed to more than 100 millisieverts per year, but in the wake of the March 11 crises, the government raised the exposure limit to 250.

The April 25th document expressed concern for workers at other plants in Japan as well: If this many nuclear workers face such high exposure, they may be not be able to legally work at other nuclear plants in the coming year.

The number is currently only a best guess at what is to come. To date, only six workers have been recorded as exposed to more than 250 millisieverts per year, and less than 420 workers have been recorded as having been exposed to 50 – this again, however, according to official figures which have been shown time and again to be lacking, many local environmentalist noted.

The radiation spike at Fukushima Daiichi



The new, ultra-high levels of radiation detected at Fukushima Daiichi were measured Monday afternoon on the grounds of the facility, between reactors Nos 1 and 2, Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO) spokesman Naoki Tsunoda told reporters in a conference call early Tuesday morning European time.

The lethal radiation was found at the bottom of a ventilation tower.

The power company immediately cordoned off the area and is currently investigating the cause of the high radiation and how it will affect the recovery work at the plant, Tsunoda said.

The radiation levels – 10,000 millisieverts per hour – are high enough that a single 60-minute dose would be fatal to humans within weeks, an ex-Japanese government official, who asked to remain anonymous, told Bellona Web.

The Fukushima Daiichi disaster occurred when a 15-meter tsunami inundated the coastal plant after northern Japan's historic March 11 9.0 magnitude earthquake.

The flooding knocked out the cooling systems for the three operating reactors and their associated spent fuel pools, causing the reacttors to overheat and hydrogen gas explosions that blew apart the building housing reactors No. 1 and 3.

Japanese officials – who have drawn growing and more vociferous criticism throughout the crisis for revealing inaccurate figures, withholding information and downplaying radiation threats – finally admitted months after the disaster that reactor Nos 1 and 3 had already gone into full core meltdown within the first three days of the crisis.

Another hydrogen blast is believed to have damaged the inside of reactor No 2, while engineers are struggling to manage an estimated 100,000 tons of highly contaminated water that was used to cool the reactors during the emergency.

Japan’s minister for liquidating nuclear emergencies, Gosi Hosono, said that clean up efforts in the 20 kilometer evacuation zone around the plant – which was imposed by the government with much delay in the days following the tsunami – will begin in September.

Other governments urged that the evacuation zone be extended to 70 kilometres, and both the United States and Norway urged its citizens to follow the 70 kilometre directive.

Contaminated water still a lethal problem

The failure of primary cooling systems when external power to the plant was crippled, and the failure of back up cooling when corroded diesel generators flickered out as water inundated the place necessitated emergency efforts to cool the reactors and spent fuel storage pools by any means necessary.

This meant involved blasting the reactors with water cannons and dropping hundreds of thousands of gallons of seawater from helicopters with questionable accuracy. The introduction of seawater, which is corrosive, was on of several last-ditch other efforts as it destroyed the reactors for further use.

But the water build-up has created other problems, including highly radioactive released into the sea and possible contamination of ground water.

The plant was forced in May to dump several thousands of tons of radioactive water into the Pacific, raising the ire of fishermen and the governments of South Korea and China.

TEPCO projects the situation won't be fully over until sometime between October and January. The disaster has caused Japan to rethink its commitment to nuclear energy, and Germany has since announced plans to abandon atomic power entirely by 2022, folled by Switzerland, which will complete a nuclear phase out by 2035. Italy in June voted overwhelmingly in a popular referendum against beginning a nuclear power program by 95 percent.



...
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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby ninakat » Thu Aug 04, 2011 8:49 pm

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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby crikkett » Thu Aug 04, 2011 9:03 pm

(I'm so glad that it was a different Gunderson who died. )
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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby seemslikeadream » Fri Aug 05, 2011 12:52 pm

unfuckingbelieveable

I listened to Obama three time in the last 2 days....he mentioned Japan - earthquake, Japan - tsunami, NO MENTION OF NUCLEAR MELTDOWN...... NO MENTION OF NUCLEAR ACCIDENT........NOT even a hint of it :wallhead:
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby beeline » Tue Aug 09, 2011 11:39 am

Link

Posted on Tue, Aug. 9, 2011


AP IMPACT: Japan ignored own radiation forecasts
ERIC TALMADGE and MARI YAMAGUCHI

The Associated Press

NAMIE, Japan - Japan's system to forecast radiation threats was working from the moment its nuclear crisis began. As officials planned a venting operation certain to release radioactivity into the air, the system predicted Karino Elementary School would be directly in the path of the plume emerging from the tsunami-hit Fukushima Dai-Ichi nuclear plant.

But the prediction helped no one. Nobody acted on it.

The school, just over six miles (10 kilometers) from the plant, was not immediately cleared out. Quite the opposite. It was turned into a temporary evacuation center.

Reports from the forecast system were sent to Japan's nuclear safety agency, but the flow of data stopped there. Prime Minister Naoto Kan and others involved in declaring evacuation areas never saw the reports, and neither did local authorities. So thousands of people stayed for days in areas that the system had identified as high-risk, an Associated Press investigation has found.

At Karino Elementary in the town of Namie, about 400 students, teachers, parents and others gathered in the playground at the height of the nuclear crisis stemming from the March 11 earthquake and tsunami. Many ate rice balls and cooked in the open air.

They were never informed of the predictions that they were at risk. In an interview with the AP, Namie's mayor said it took more than 24 hours for him to realize , from watching TV , that the evacuees were in danger. He sent buses to move some of them out. But, unaware of the risks, they were taken to another part of town also forecast to be in the plume's path. Most were left to fend for themselves.

"When I think about it now, I am outraged," Principal Hidenori Arakawa said. "Our lives were put at risk."

Documents obtained by the AP, interviews with key officials and a review of other newly released documents and parliamentary transcripts indicate that the government's use of the forecast data was hamstrung by communication breakdowns and a lack of even a basic understanding of the system at the highest levels.

It's unclear how much radiation people might have been exposed to by staying in areas in the path of the radioactive plume, let alone whether any might suffer health problems from the exposure. It could be difficult to ever prove a connection: Health officials say they have no plans to prioritize radiation tests of those who were at the school.

But the breakdown may hold lessons for other countries with nuclear power plants because similar warning systems are used around the world. This was their first test in a major crisis.

The Japanese network , built in 1986 at a cost of $140 million (11 billion yen) , is known as SPEEDI, short for the System for Prediction of Environment Emergency Dose Information. It has radiation monitoring posts nationwide and has been tested in a number of drills, including one the prime minister led for the Hamaoka nuclear facility just last year.

Even so, according to the prime minister's office, Kan and his top advisers never asked for or received the data. Despite taking part in the Hamaoka drill, Kan admitted he didn't understand how SPEEDI worked or how valuable the data was.

"I had no idea what sort of information was available," he told Parliament on June 17. "I didn't know anything about it then, and there was no way I could make a judgment."

In two post-crisis assessments, a report to the International Atomic Energy Agency and an annual white paper on science and technology, his government has said the network "failed to perform its intended function."

A senior member of Kan's crisis team, Nuclear Safety Commission chief Haruki Madarame, went so far as to say the SPEEDI data was no better than "a mere weather report."

He said the predictions were of no value because they lacked accurate radiation readings. Some of the system's monitoring capabilities were compromised by the tsunami and ensuing power outages, and the utility that runs the Fukushima plant, TEPCO, did not provide readings of its own.

But SPEEDI officials say Madarame's position reflects a fundamental misunderstanding of what their system is designed to do.

When the amount of radioactivity that has been leaked is known, that is entered into its system, along with weather and terrain data, and a hazard map is generated. If the amount is not known , as was the case with Fukushima , a standard and relatively low value of one becquerel is used.

While that won't show the actual radiation risk, it will show the general pattern and direction of the plume. Then when the size of the leak becomes known, the map can be updated. If the actual leak turns out to be 100 becquerels, for example, the results would be multiplied by 100.

That technique allowed SPEEDI to produce reports hours before officials began venting disabled reactors , when there would have been less radiation to measure outside the nuclear plant even if the system's monitoring equipment had been working perfectly.

In the Fukushima case, later data proved the forecasts to be highly accurate. Most of Namie, for example, has since been declared too dangerous for habitation.

"We are offended by allegations that SPEEDI failed to function the way it was supposed to," Akira Tsubosaka, a senior official in charge of operations, told the AP. "SPEEDI was not used to determine evacuation zones. It should have been."

SPEEDI, run by the education and science ministry, provides its data to other government agencies such as the nuclear safety agency for passage up the chain and then dissemination to local authorities.

Officials won't say why that didn't happen, sticking to their position that the data was useless anyway.

But the government response has been sharply criticized by one of Kan's top science advisers, who later quit in protest, according to a confidential report to the prime minister that was obtained by the AP.

"The SPEEDI radiation forecasts were not properly utilized and a situation was invited in which residents were made vulnerable to more exposure than necessary," Toshiso Kosako, also a professor at the University of Tokyo, wrote in late April.

Ironically, low-level officials were quick to seek the SPEEDI data.

Bureaucrats familiar with SPEEDI commissioned at least 18 tailor-made forecasts in the first 24 hours, as the government was pushing TEPCO to open vents to avert an explosion.

The venting would release radioactive substances into the air. So, according to documents obtained by the AP, the forecasts included several to gauge that danger.

One issued at 3:53 a.m. , about 13 hours after the crisis began , predicted the plume would drift across Namie and several other towns.

The forecasts were relayed to the Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency but they did not reach decision-makers.

In Japan, the legal responsibility for setting evacuation zones falls on the central government and the prime minister. Local officials then are tasked with implementing the orders.

Instead of following the patterns of radioactive dispersion suggested by SPEEDI, the central government simply set up a six-mile (10-kilometer) evacuation zone around the plant. That did not include a broad swath of land that SPEEDI predicted would be affected.

The mayors of two towns that have since been almost completely evacuated told the AP that the government did not inform them of even that decision , let alone provide SPEEDI data , so they had to act on their own. They said they were unable to assess the risks adequately because they were not privy to the SPEEDI reports.

"We got nothing until more than a week later," said Katsunobu Sakurai, the mayor of Minami-Soma. "People were unnecessarily exposed to possible dangers. We believe the central government must come clean on this."

"The first I heard of the 10-kilometer zone was when I saw the news on TV," said Namie Mayor Tamotsu Baba. Namie's municipal government has since been evacuated to Nihonmatsu, a city 30 miles (50 kilometers) from the plant.

Because Karino Elementary sits just outside the six-mile (10-kilometer) evacuation zone, it was used as a gathering area for evacuees.

Later in the day, at the mayor's order, some evacuees were taken by bus to another part of Namie called Tsushima, which SPEEDI data suggested was also dangerous. Others, including Principal Arakawa and his family, went in the same direction by car.

Masako Mori, a senior opposition member of Parliament from Fukushima, told the AP that two alternative routes would have led away from the areas identified as high-risk by SPEEDI. The third , to Tsushima , led along the plume's expected path.

"We didn't have any information. But it turns out we were taking the most dangerous route," Arakawa said. "None of us knew."

Mori said SPEEDI data should have been used to get people out of the area much faster.

The evacuees at shelters in the Tsushima district , including about 8,000 residents of Namie , were not told to move farther away until March 16, five days into the crisis.

Mori, who also is a trial lawyer, raised the possibility of lawsuits against the government.

"The government unnecessarily exposed people to radiation, failing to observe its legal obligation to protect the citizens," she said. "It could be held responsible for compensation for the possible damage caused by its errors."

Exposure to radiation can lead to a variety of cancers , as it did in Chernobyl. Babies, children and pregnant women are at the highest risk.

Mori, along with Namie's mayor and the school principal, are seeking full-body radiation tests for all children who were at the school. The tests measure internal exposure such as inhaled radioactive particles and could be key to understanding the health impact. But Fukushima health officials say they have no particular plan to test the Karino evacuees, because they don't have the resources and are instead focusing on groups, such as pregnant women, from the general area.

Thousands across the region have requested full-body tests, and only 340 have gotten them so far. None had dangerously high levels of contamination, though that does not rule out future health problems.

The Fukushima health office said it is looking into ways to speed up the process.

,,,

Yamaguchi reported from Tokyo.
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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby seemslikeadream » Tue Aug 09, 2011 2:43 pm

Japan Held Nuclear Data, Leaving Evacuees in Peril
Ko Sasaki for The New York Times

Published: August 8, 2011


FUKUSHIMA, Japan — The day after a giant tsunami set off the continuing disaster at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant, thousands of residents at the nearby town of Namie gathered to evacuate.

PREVENTIVE MEASURES Officials in Koriyama, Japan, removed surface soil from its schools for fear of radiation contamination and imposed tougher inspection standards than those set by the country's education officials.

Given no guidance from Tokyo, town officials led the residents north, believing that winter winds would be blowing south and carrying away any radioactive emissions. For three nights, while hydrogen explosions at four of the reactors spewed radiation into the air, they stayed in a district called Tsushima where the children played outside and some parents used water from a mountain stream to prepare rice.

The winds, in fact, had been blowing directly toward Tsushima — and town officials would learn two months later that a government computer system designed to predict the spread of radioactive releases had been showing just that.

But the forecasts were left unpublicized by bureaucrats in Tokyo, operating in a culture that sought to avoid responsibility and, above all, criticism. Japan’s political leaders at first did not know about the system and later played down the data, apparently fearful of having to significantly enlarge the evacuation zone — and acknowledge the accident’s severity.

“From the 12th to the 15th we were in a location with one of the highest levels of radiation,” said Tamotsu Baba, the mayor of Namie, which is about five miles from the nuclear plant. He and thousands from Namie now live in temporary housing in another town, Nihonmatsu. “We are extremely worried about internal exposure to radiation.”

The withholding of information, he said, was akin to “murder.”

In interviews and public statements, some current and former government officials have admitted that Japanese authorities engaged in a pattern of withholding damaging information and denying facts of the nuclear disaster — in order, some of them said, to limit the size of costly and disruptive evacuations in land-scarce Japan and to avoid public questioning of the politically powerful nuclear industry. As the nuclear plant continues to release radiation, some of which has slipped into the nation’s food supply, public anger is growing at what many here see as an official campaign to play down the scope of the accident and the potential health risks.

Seiki Soramoto, a lawmaker and former nuclear engineer to whom Prime Minister Naoto Kan turned for advice during the crisis, blamed the government for withholding forecasts from the computer system, known as the System for Prediction of Environmental Emergency Dose Information, or Speedi.

“In the end, it was the prime minister’s office that hid the Speedi data,” he said. “Because they didn’t have the knowledge to know what the data meant, and thus they did not know what to say to the public, they thought only of their own safety, and decided it was easier just not to announce it.”

In an interview, Goshi Hosono, the minister in charge of the nuclear crisis, dismissed accusations that political considerations had delayed the release of the early Speedi data. He said that they were not disclosed because they were incomplete and inaccurate, and that he was presented with the data for the first time only on March 23.

“And on that day, we made them public,” said Mr. Hosono, who was one of the prime minister’s closest advisers in the early days of the crisis before being named nuclear disaster minister. “As for before that, I myself am not sure. In the days before that, which were a matter of life and death for Japan as a nation, I wasn’t taking part in what was happening with Speedi.”

The computer forecasts were among many pieces of information the authorities initially withheld from the public.

Meltdowns at three of Fukushima Daiichi’s six reactors went officially unacknowledged for months. In one of the most damning admissions, nuclear regulators said in early June that inspectors had found tellurium 132, which experts call telltale evidence of reactor meltdowns, a day after the tsunami — but did not tell the public for nearly three months. For months after the disaster, the government flip-flopped on the level of radiation permissible on school grounds, causing continuing confusion and anguish about the safety of schoolchildren here in Fukushima.

Too Late

The timing of many admissions — coming around late May and early June, when inspectors from the International Atomic Energy Agency visited Japan and before Japan was scheduled to deliver a report on the accident at an I.A.E.A. conference — suggested to critics that Japan’s nuclear establishment was coming clean only because it could no longer hide the scope of the accident. On July 4, the Atomic Energy Society of Japan, a group of nuclear scholars and industry executives, said, “It is extremely regrettable that this sort of important information was not released to the public until three months after the fact, and only then in materials for a conference overseas.”
Ko Sasaki for The New York Times

PARENTAL INITIATIVE A great deal of anger in Japan has centered on fears that children were being exposed to radiation.

The group added that the authorities had yet to disclose information like the water level and temperature inside reactor pressure vessels that would yield a fuller picture of the damage. Other experts have said the government and Tokyo Electric Power Company, known as Tepco, have yet to reveal plant data that could shed light on whether the reactors’ cooling systems were actually knocked out solely by the 45-foot-tall tsunami, as officials have maintained, or whether damage from the earthquake also played a role, a finding that could raise doubts about the safety of other nuclear plants in a nation as seismically active as Japan.

Government officials insist that they did not knowingly imperil the public.

“As a principle, the government has never acted in such a way as to sacrifice the public’s health or safety,” said Mr. Hosono, the nuclear disaster minister.

Here in the prefecture’s capital and elsewhere, workers are removing the surface soil from schoolyards contaminated with radioactive particles from the nuclear plant. Tens of thousands of children are being kept inside school buildings this hot summer, where some wear masks even though the windows are kept shut. Many will soon be wearing individual dosimeters to track their exposure to radiation.

At Elementary School No. 4 here, sixth graders were recently playing shogi and go, traditional board games, inside. Nao Miyabashi, 11, whose family fled here from Namie, said she was afraid of radiation. She tried not to get caught in the rain. She gargled and washed her hands as soon as she got home.

“I want to play outside,” she said.

About 45 percent of 1,080 children in three Fukushima communities surveyed in late March tested positive for thyroid exposure to radiation, according to a recent announcement by the government, which added that the levels were too low to warrant further examination. Many experts both in and outside Japan are questioning the government’s assessment, pointing out that in Chernobyl, most of those who went on to suffer from thyroid cancer were children living near that plant at the time of the accident.

Critics inside and outside the Kan administration argue that some of the exposure could have been prevented if officials had released the data sooner.

On the evening of March 15, Mr. Kan called Mr. Soramoto, who used to design nuclear plants for Toshiba, to ask for his help in managing the escalating crisis. Mr. Soramoto formed an impromptu advisory group, which included his former professor at the University of Tokyo, Toshiso Kosako, a top Japanese expert on radiation measurement.

Mr. Kosako, who studied the Soviet response to the Chernobyl crisis, said he was stunned at how little the leaders in the prime minister’s office knew about the resources available to them. He quickly advised the chief cabinet secretary, Yukio Edano, to use Speedi, which used measurements of radioactive releases, as well as weather and topographical data, to predict where radioactive materials could travel after being released into the atmosphere.

Speedi had been designed in the 1980s to make forecasts of radiation dispersal that, according to the prime minister’s office’s own nuclear disaster manuals, were supposed to be made available at least to local officials and rescue workers in order to guide evacuees away from radioactive plumes.

And indeed, Speedi had been churning out maps and other data hourly since the first hours after the catastrophic earthquake and tsunami. But the Education Ministry had not provided the data to the prime minister’s office because, it said, the information was incomplete. The tsunami had knocked out sensors at the plant: without measurements of how much radiation was actually being released by the plant, they said, it was impossible to measure how far the radioactive plume was stretching.

“Without knowing the strength of the releases, there was no way we could take responsibility if evacuations were ordered,” said Keiji Miyamoto of the Education Ministry’s nuclear safety division, which administers Speedi.

The government had initially resorted to drawing rings around the plant, evacuating everyone within a radius of first 1.9 miles, then 6.2 miles and then 12.4 miles, widening the rings as the scale of the disaster became clearer.

But even with incomplete data, Mr. Kosako said he urged the government to use Speedi by making educated guesses as to the levels of radiation release, which would have still yielded usable maps to guide evacuation plans. In fact, the ministry had done precisely that, running simulations on Speedi’s computers of radiation releases. Some of the maps clearly showed a plume of nuclear contamination extending to the northwest of the plant, beyond the areas that were initially evacuated.

However, Mr. Kosako said, the prime minister’s office refused to release the results even after it was made aware of Speedi, because officials there did not want to take responsibility for costly evacuations if their estimates were later called into question.

A wider evacuation zone would have meant uprooting hundreds of thousands of people and finding places for them to live in an already crowded country. Particularly in the early days after the earthquake, roads were blocked and trains were not running. These considerations made the government desperate to limit evacuations beyond the 80,000 people already moved from areas around the plant, as well as to avoid compensation payments to still more evacuees, according to current and former officials interviewed.

Mr. Kosako said the top advisers to the prime minister repeatedly ignored his frantic requests to make the Speedi maps public, and he resigned in April over fears that children were being exposed to dangerous radiation levels.

Some advisers to the prime minister argue that the system was not that useful in predicting the radiation plume’s direction. Shunsuke Kondo, who heads the Atomic Energy Commission, an advisory body in the Cabinet Office, said that the maps Speedi produced in the first days were inconsistent, and changed several times a day depending on wind direction.

“Why release something if it was not useful?” said Mr. Kondo, also a retired professor of nuclear engineering at the University of Tokyo. “Someone on the ground in Fukushima, looking at which way the wind was blowing, would have known just as much.”

Mr. Kosako and others, however, say the Speedi maps would have been extremely useful in the hands of someone who knew how to sort through the system’s reams of data. He said the Speedi readings were so complex, and some of the predictions of the spread of radiation contamination so alarming, that three separate government agencies — the Education Ministry and the two nuclear regulators, the Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency and Nuclear Safety Commission — passed the data to one another like a hot potato, with none of them wanting to accept responsibility for its results.

In interviews, officials at the ministry and the agency each pointed fingers, saying that the other agency was responsible for Speedi. The head of the commission declined to be interviewed.

Mr. Baba, the mayor of Namie, said that if the Speedi data had been made available sooner, townspeople would have naturally chosen to flee to safer areas. “But we didn’t have the information,” he said. “That’s frustrating.”

Evacuees now staying in temporary prefabricated homes in Nihonmatsu said that, believing they were safe in Tsushima, they took few precautions. Yoko Nozawa, 70, said that because of the lack of toilets, they resorted to pits in the ground, where doses of radiation were most likely higher.

“We were in the worst place, but didn’t know it,” Ms. Nozawa said. “Children were playing outside.”

A neighbor, Hiroyuki Oto, 31, said he was working at the plant for a Tepco subcontractor at the time of the earthquake and was now in temporary lodging with his wife and three young children, after also staying in Tsushima. “The effects might emerge only years from now,” he said of the exposure to radiation. “I’m worried about my kids.”

Seeds of Mistrust

Mr. Hosono, the minister charged with dealing with the nuclear crisis, has said that certain information, including the Speedi data, had been withheld for fear of “creating a panic.” In an interview, Mr. Hosono — who now holds nearly daily news conferences with Tepco officials and nuclear regulators — said that the government had “changed its thinking” and was trying to release information as fast as possible.

Critics, as well as the increasingly skeptical public, seem unconvinced. They compare the response to the Minamata case in the 1950s, a national scandal in which bureaucrats and industry officials colluded to protect economic growth by hiding the fact that a chemical factory was releasing mercury into Minamata Bay in western Japan. The mercury led to neurological illnesses in thousands of people living in the region and was captured in wrenching photographs of stricken victims.

“If they wanted to protect people, they had to release information immediately,” said Reiko Seki, a sociologist at Rikkyo University in Tokyo and an expert on the cover-up of the Minamata case. “Despite the experience with Minamata, they didn’t release Speedi.”

In Koriyama, a city about 40 miles west of the nuclear plant, a group of parents said they had stopped believing in government reassurances and recently did something unthinkable in a conservative, rural area: they sued. Though their suit seeks to force Koriyama to relocate their children to a safer area, their real aim is to challenge the nation’s handling of evacuations and the public health crisis.

After the nuclear disaster, the government raised the legal exposure limit to radiation from one to 20 millisieverts a year for people, including children — effectively allowing them to continue living in communities from which they would have been barred under the old standard. The limit was later scaled back to one millisievert per year, but applied only to children while they were inside school buildings.

The plaintiffs’ lawyer, Toshio Yanagihara, said the authorities were withholding information to deflect attention from the nuclear accident’s health consequences, which will become clear only years later.

“Because the effects don’t emerge immediately, they can claim later on that cigarettes or coffee caused the cancer,” he said.

The Japanese government is considering monitoring the long-term health of Fukushima residents and taking appropriate measures in the future, said Yasuhiro Sonoda, a lawmaker and parliamentary secretary of the Cabinet Office. The mayor of Koriyama, Masao Hara, said he did not believe that the government’s radiation standards were unsafe. He said it was “unrealistic” to evacuate the city’s 33,000 elementary and junior high school students.

But Koriyama went further than the government’s mandates, removing the surface soil from its schools before national directives and imposing tougher inspection standards than those set by the country’s education officials.

“The Japanese people, after all, have a high level of knowledge,” the mayor said, “so I think information should be disclosed correctly and quickly so that the people can make judgments, especially the people here in Fukushima.”
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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