Nuclear Meltdown Watch

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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby Nordic » Sat Feb 25, 2012 4:20 am

h/t to Cryptogon. (how many times have I typed that here?)

http://fukushima-diary.com/2012/02/city ... ound-dead/


City councilor to measure radiation in Mizumoto park the first was found dead

Following up this article ..Tokyo is contaminated as the worst place in Chernobyl

Mr. Kabayama, a Tokyo city councilor of Liberal Democratic Party died after measuring radiation in Mizumoto Park.

He was measuring radiation in various areas in Tokyo and posted it on his blog.

On 6/30/2011, he measured 0.25 microSv/h in Mizumoto Park.


The next day, 7/1/2011 3AM, he was found dead with his head covered by a plastic bag.

Police thought it to be suicide for some reason. However, none of the posts on the blog suggested potential suicide, he sounded motivated to measure around in Tokyo.

He was found dead by his family.



"He who wounds the ecosphere literally wounds God" -- Philip K. Dick
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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby eyeno » Tue Feb 28, 2012 4:16 am

These poor people are getting fried.


Saturday, February 25th, 2012 | Posted by Bob Nichols

Evacuate Tokyo and All US Forces From Japan

Mochizuki Feb 2012 fukushima diary

Mochizuki, Publisher of the highly respected Fukushima Diary

Tokyo Radiation Level 25 Times the Fukushima Mandatory Evacuation Zone


… by Bob Nichols



(San Francisco) Widely known Physicist Dr Paolo Scampa, the publisher of the EU AIPRI Blog and an eminent chemical physicist, announced today his latest calculations of deadly radioactivity in Tokyo itself. Both the nuclear regulatory and media responses have been missing in action.

However, the outrageous statement of a Japanese politician pretty well sums up the level of understanding of the parasitic political class “Smile, and the radiation won’t hurt you.”

The Tokyo suburbs are about 100 miles or 160 km South of the six destroyed, deteriorating and badly leaking nuclear reactors at the Fukushima Daiichi Station for Nuclear Reactors.

Dr Scampa stated:

“An absorbed dose of 2,94 microSievert/hour at 1 meter of soil means an average deposit of 9,065E5 Bq/m2 of Cs137 -0,661 MeV-. This amount for 1 meter is in fact situated between a maximum deposit of 5,439E6 Bq/m2 for low energy gamma rays from radioactive elements such as U238 (0,0495 MeV) and a minimum deposit of 2,176E5 Bq/m2 of very energetic gamma rays from radioactive elements such as Co60 (2,55 MeV). This dose corresponds to 25 times the maximum permissible “artificial” hour dose (0,114 microSievert/h-1) and 5 times the maximum permissible total – natural and artificial – hour dose (0,571 microSievert/h-1). [1]” Dr. Scampa. [End Quote]

This is a tragedy of huge proportions. There are 30 Plus Million People in Greater Tokyo. It is brought home personally to each person who sees the work of Fukushima Diary by Mochizuki.

There are thousands of US troops stationed with their families in Japan. American politicians must remove all US Troops and dependents from Japan immediately. This must happen forthwith. We will remember.

Mochizuki is sticking by his reporting post at Fukushima Diary on the InterNet as long as he is capable. Everyone at Veterans Today and around the world honors your work, Morchizuki, clear sailing to you on this, your last mission. Keep transmitting as long as you are able.
[End]

Copyright 2012 by Bob Nichols, All Rights Reserved. Republishing allowed with all Sources and Notes included.

Sources and Notes.

1. Communication from Dr Paolo Scampa to Veterans Today Columnists Bob Nichols, Feb 25, 2012. Original in Metric Units. The Maximum Permissible units were rounded down for editing purposes.

- Feb 25, 2012, Dr Paolo Scampa. AIPRI, http://www.aipri.blogspot.com/

“Tokyo station is contaminated as mandatory evacuating zone in Fukushima,” http://fukushima-diary.com/2012/02/toky ... fukushima/ http://tinyurl.com/6scvuqt


http://www.veteranstoday.com/2012/02/25 ... rom-japan/
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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby eyeno » Tue Feb 28, 2012 4:41 am

flashback to the future "west coast U.S. residents fleeing coast"

Nordic I think about you often. I hope you have you and your family on some herbs. IT WILL HELP PROTECT YOU AND YOURS.


HSBC is evacuating Japan
Posted by Mochizuki on February 27th, 2012 · No Comments

Following up this article..4 major Japanese corporations are evacuating to Osaka

The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation is going to withdraw from Japan.

On 2/22/2012, they announced they will close their retail banking service called HSBC premier, which they have been serving in Japan since 2008.

The customers were informed by email, sent at 20:30 2/2/2012 all of a sudden though HSBC has been denying the possibility of their withdrawal from the premier service for people who have the assets of more than 10 million yen.

They are going to close the Nagoya branch on 4/27.

Hiroo, Yokohama, Akasaka, Marunouchi, Oosaka branches will be closed on 7/31.

Marunouchi alpha, Akasaka alpha, ATMs of each branch, ATM at Narita airport, ATM at Nihonbashi HSBC building will be closed on 7/31 as well.

They already stopped opening new account on 2/23/2012.

HSBC has been involved in Japanese financial industry since over 140 years ago.

Japanese retail banking market is assumed to be 1471 trillion yen scale. HSBC has been competing with Citi group, Standard Chartered, Mizuho Bank or Mitsubishi UFJ financial group.

http://fukushima-diary.com/2012/02/hsbc ... ing-japan/
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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby crikkett » Tue Feb 28, 2012 11:53 am

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-17192215
28 February 2012 Last updated at 09:13 ET

Japan's damaged Fukushima nuclear plant one year on

By Roland Buerk BBC News, inside the Fukushima nuclear plant


For almost a year, it had been the focus of the fears of the Japanese people.

Now the Fukushima Daiichi plant was right up ahead, glimpsed between the pine trees that surround it through the windscreen of our bus.

We were being driven right to the plant, the first group of foreign journalists allowed in since the nuclear crisis began.

The journey had begun as it does for the 3,000 men who work there each day - those who do not sleep at the plant itself.

At J-Village - once Japan's national football training centre - we got dressed in protective gear, ready to face the radiation.

No man's land

First, a white plastic boiler suit, then plastic booties over our shoes - two layers. Two pairs of gloves and a paper surgical mask. We were also given full face respirators; we would have to put them on later.

The entrance to the exclusion zone is guarded by a police roadblock. We were waved through and out into a no-man's-land.

Fields were overgrown, pavements taken over by weeds. Cars and homes stood deserted. A recent study has suggested even the birds have abandoned the area. Shops were still full of stock, the magazines in the windows of the convenience shop faded by the sun.

And every kilometre we went, the radiation levels steadily rose, the numbers announced over a loudhailer by staff from the plant's operator, Tepco.

When we reached the power station, we were ushered quickly inside the main control room building, noisy with the droning of air filters keeping the radiation out.

Inside, the walls are decorated with good-luck messages from around the world. Thousands of origami cranes festoon the stairs, a symbol of peace more usually associated with Hiroshima.


In the control room itself, someone had written the Japanese character for hope on a Rising Sun flag.

There, perhaps 100 men or more were sitting around tables working at laptops, monitoring the reactors minute by minute.

Cold shutdown

They are now in cold shutdown, the water inside below boiling point. Recently, a thermometer showed the temperature rising inside one, apparently uncontrollably, to the alarm of the Japanese people. It was tracked down to faulty instruments.

The atmosphere was calm, but intense. How different from the panic and fear described by the few who have spoken out among the workers who were there in the first days of the disaster, when in the darkness of a blackout they had to rig car batteries to the instruments to try to find out what was happening. When they heard the explosions and waited and wondered, was this death?

At the time, the people of Japan did not know quite what a razor's edge their nation was on as the reactors melted down. The prime minister at the time, Naoto Kan, has since admitted he feared he would have to order the evacuation of Tokyo.

The men became known as the Fukushima 50 - those who had saved Japan.

In a room with bunk beds set up in it, we were introduced to the plant supervisor. Takeshi Takahashi is hollow-eyed and looks and sounds exhausted.

He told us one of the big concerns is another earthquake or tsunami. Perhaps that could tip the disaster into a crisis once again.

"What we have in mind is to prevent the release of radioactive gases, the leakage outside the power station which happened before," he said.

"We want the local people to be able to return to their homes as soon as possible."

Then we were told to put on our respirators. The hoods of our boiler suits were checked to make sure there were no gaps.

We were being taken to see the reactors themselves. The journey was by bus again, a guide pointing out the giant water tanks that are being built, fields of them, to store contaminated water.

There are water pipes and power cables snaking along the sides of the roads, the cooling system keeping the reactors under control.

About 100m (330ft) or so from the reactors, the bus stopped and we were allowed to get out.

"Don't touch this handrail," said the guide. "It is very radioactive."

The reactor buildings are still skeletal, testament to the power of the explosions that shook the plant nearly a year ago.

But now giant red and white cranes loom over them. Men in white boiler suits could be seen working high up amid the wreckage.

The goal is to eventually dismantle the plant, removing the nuclear fuel. But Japan's government has warned it could take up to 40 years.

Our route away, back in the bus, took us right past the reactor buildings themselves, scarred by the power of the sea.

Letter to the children

In places, there were wrecked trucks on their roofs and sides where they were left by the tsunami.

Between the reactors and the sea, a very short distance, a new sea wall of stones in big mesh bags had been built as protection in case the giant fault off Japan's coast ruptures again, triggering more waves.

And, all around the site there were men at work, directing traffic, operating mechanical diggers, driving trucks, controlling the traffic. All wearing full protective gear against the radiation all around.

Back at the J-Village, on the edge of the exclusion zone, we found out what may motivate some of these men to risk their lives in what must surely be one of the most hostile working environments on earth.

"I worked here before the disaster, so since my plant is in this condition, I think this is my mission to stay here," said Tetsushi Tarumi who had been selected to meet us.

"As for my health, my dose exposure is within the legal limit. I have no concerns about health."

Then, as I left J-Village, a worker discreetly pressed a note into my hand. When I read it later, I saw it was addressed "To all child in the world".
"Dear our friend," it said. "First, we would greatly appreciate that you gave us much encouragement, and then we could overcome this trial with the encourage you gave.

"Fortunately, we could get the stabilisation of the plants, and the radiation level of the environment is decreasing.

"But this is not the end of our jobs.

"We shall transfer Fukushima Daiichi NPS [nuclear power station] to you after we shall rebuild here more magnificently than that existed before, that will be the true goal of our works.

"Thanks. From your friends, the Fukushima 50 and colleagues."


The Fukushima 50 and colleagues have it right: it's all about the kids.
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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby StarmanSkye » Wed Feb 29, 2012 3:07 pm

Latest (Feb 20, 2012) Arnie Gunderson of Fairewind Associates at the National Japan Press Talk with discussion, overview & analysis of the major factors, ie design & policy decisions, that led to the complete failure of the Daichi reactors & overwhelmed the safety systems, as well as some discussion of implications of the widespread radiation contamination with health & clean-up cost projections. Gunderson estimates eventual clean-up costs will run about 125 billion dollars US over the next 20 years.

Gunderson predicts one million cancer deaths resulting from the Fukushima disaster, based on studies from Chernobyl. He also criticizes the policy of diluting the radiation-debris by mixing radiation-contaminated waste with non-radiated waste in incineration, which is a short-term 'cheap-fix' solution to the problem of disposal that protects TEPCO but will cause much worse problems in the future when waste-pits eventually leak.

Includes discussion of lessons learned, alternative energy-production options, and Question-answer segment. Good overview, but little here that most people who are reasonably informed about this incident aren't already aware of. One thing I learned was that the water-pumps at Daini were of a different design that survived tsunami inundation; They were much more robust than those at Fukushima. Even if the Fukushima diesels had survived, the severely damaged pumps would still have been unable to prevent meltdown.

His 1 1/2 hour talk has been condensed to 3 15-minute approx. segments by having the Japanese translations helpfully eliminated.







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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby Ben D » Wed Feb 29, 2012 8:15 pm

Btw, perhaps this has been mentioned already but going back to the beginning when Tesco employees were being suited up and sent in on shifts to work on those damaged highly radioactive reactors, I remember thinking at the time that those workers were most likely on a death sentence, but it could not be helped, someone had to it as the alternative was unthinkable. Has the media ever did a follow up as to how they all fared and current prognosis? Not that I would expect the public to be told the truth anyway if it was bad news, t'was jut a thought.
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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby seemslikeadream » Wed Feb 29, 2012 9:13 pm


Greenpeace: Fukushima Disaster Caused by Japan's Nuclear Authorities, Not Tsunami
- Common Dreams staff
A new report released today by Greenpeace argues it was neither the 7.1 magnitude earthquake nor the raging tsunami that followed which deserve the real blame for the nuclear disaster at Japan's Fukushima Diachi power plant last year. Rather, according to 'The Lessons of Fukushima', the real disaster was caused by hubris, greed, and the fact that repeated warnings over the unsafe nature of the nuclear plant were 'downplayed and ignored'.


Litate village, 40km northwest of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant. Radiation levels found by the Greenpeace monitoring team are far above internationally recommended limits. (Christian Aslund / Greenpeace)
“While triggered by the tragic March 11th earthquake and tsunami, the Fukushima disaster was ultimately caused by the Japanese authorities choosing to ignore risks, and make business a higher priority than safety,” said Jan Vande Putte, Greenpeace International nuclear campaigner. “This report shows that nuclear energy is inherently unsafe, and that governments are quick to approve reactors, but remain ill-equipped to deal with problems and protect people from nuclear disasters. This has not changed since the Fukushima disaster, and that is why millions of people continue to be exposed to nuclear risks.”

The report was written by Dr. David Boilley, a nuclear physicist with the French independent radiation laboratory ACRO; Dr. David McNeill, Japan correspondent for The Chronicle of Higher Education; and Arnie Gundersen, a nuclear engineer with Fairewinds Associates. It was peer reviewed by Dr. Helmut Hirsch, an expert in nuclear safety.

“This disaster was predictable and predicted, but happened because of the age-old story of cutting corners to protect profits over people,” said Kazue Suzuki Greenpeace Japan Nuclear Campaigner. “The authorities are already recklessly pushing to restart reactors without learning anything from the Fukushima disaster and the people will once again be forced to pay the price of their government’s mistakes.”

“People should not be forced to live with the myth of nuclear safety and under the shadow of a nuclear disaster waiting to happen,” said Vande Putte. “Nuclear power must be phased out and replaced with smart investments in energy efficiency and renewable power. This approach will create millions of sustainable jobs, improve energy independence, reduce greenhouse gas emissions, and will also ensure people will never again suffer radioactive fallout from a preventable disaster.“

Jan Baranek, writing at the Greenpeace blog, says:

... The first crucial lesson [of the report] is that “nuclear safety” cannot be created. While the nuclear industry wants us to believe that the chance of a major reactor accident is one in million, the real frequency has been one meltdown every decade, on average. Fukushima also showed how quickly the multiple barriers that we were assured would prevent a large release of radioactivity failed. In Japan, all the barriers collapsed during the first day, and a hydrogen blast allowed radiation to directly escape to open air.

The second lesson is that the institutions that we have trusted to protect people from nuclear risks also failed completely.
***

You can view the full Greenpeace report here:


Open publication - Free publishing - More fukushima

***

Another Fukushima report is being released this week by the Rebuild Japan Initiative Foundation. The report reveals the fears confronted by the Japanese government immediately following the tsunami devastation at the nuclear power plant. Officials were aware of the inevitable "devil's chain reaction" while telling the public that it was under control.

LA Times reports:

The six-month investigation was conducted by a private policy group called the Rebuild Japan Initiative Foundation. It involved 30 independent researchers, academics, lawyers and journalists.[...]

Then-Prime Minister Naoto Kan's administration as well as nuclear regulators and the Tokyo Electric Power Co., the utility that runs Fukushima, have been chided for what critics say was their haphazard response to the crisis and for failing to keep the public informed of the dangers.

At one point, the Rebuild Japan report claims, advisors to Kan began referring to a worst-case scenario that would not only force the evacuation of tens of millions of Tokyo residents, but could cause widespread environmental damage across Japan. But at the same time Kan's staff continued to assure the Japanese public and the international community that the situation was under control.

When the nuclear plant was struck by a wall of water after an earthquake hit northeastern Japan on the afternoon of March 11, Kan ordered workers to remain at the devastated facility, fearing that thousands of spent fuel rods stored at a damaged reactor would melt and spew radiation following a hydrogen explosion at an adjacent reactor, the report said. [...]
***

Likewise, Europe is ill-prepared for a nuclear incident akin to Fukushima, according to Institut de Radioprotection et de Surete Nucleaire (IRSN) in a report this week, highlighting a systemic danger in nuclear power plants worldwide.

Bloomberg reports:

“If the same accident had occurred in the heart of Europe where there is no ocean, it would have been much, much worse.”

“There are doubts about the ability of some European countries to manage this type of situation,” Jacques Repussard, director of the Institut de Radioprotection et de Surete Nucleaire, or IRSN, said at a press conference in Paris today. “It’s extremely problematic. We need to progress in crisis management in many regions.”

Some European countries lack sufficient atomic crisis centers while health authorities across the region don’t agree on what instructions to give local populations in case of accidents, he said. “There isn’t enough coordination.” [...]

IRSN calculations indicate the amount of radioactive iodine released at Fukushima was one-tenth that at Chernobyl and the amount of cesium was one-third. Most of the contamination at Fukushima was dispersed over the ocean.

“If the same accident had occurred in the heart of Europe where there is no ocean, it would have been much, much worse,” Didier Champion, head of the team that followed the Japanese crisis at the IRSN, said at the press conference.
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 seemslikeadream » Sat Mar 03, 2012 10:46 pm

FOIA Documents Reveal NRC Cover-Up, Deception Over Fukushima Nuclear Disaster

The Intel Hub
By Tony Muga
February 27, 2012

According to several stunning editorials by authors Lucas W. Hixon and Joy Thompson on the website Enformable.com, evidence obtained through an FOIA request reveals a ‘cover-up’ by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission in an effort to conceal the severity of the meltdowns in Fukushima, Japan.

The FOIA request was initiated by the Friends of the Earth (FOE), the Physicians for Social Responsibility (PSR), and the Nuclear Information and Resource Center (NIRS) in March of 2011. Physicians for Social Responsibility explains the purpose of the request on YubaNet.com:

“On March 16, 2011, NRC Commissioner Gregory B Jaczko told Congress that he was recommending the 50-mile evacuation radius.

The scope of the recommended evacuation is highly unusual and suggestive of extraordinarily high radiation levels in excess of those reported to the public in Japan and the U.S., …In the U.S., nuclear reactor licensees and local governments are only asked to provide for evacuation out to 10 miles. As concerns grow about food and water contamination in Japan, the three groups…are seeking to determine the answer to this key question: What made Jaczko exceed the limits of his own agency’s regulations by five times?”

Interestingly enough, and surely by coincidence, the Qur’an burnings in Afghanistan have taken place just as the analysis of these documents, and the documents themselves are being made public.

It should be no surprise that the corporate controlled mainstream media is ignoring this blockbuster revelation instead of exposing it and demanding an investigation.

In a January 18th and February 19th article analysis of NRC emails and transcripts of phone conversations, dated just days after the accident, reveals the nature of the cover-up:

1. Containment: “By Sunday March 13th, Elliot Brenner, sent out an e-mail to upper NRC counterparts clearly narrating the sequence of events. ‘While we know more than what these (press releases) say, we’re sticking to this story for now.’ writes Breener, during the weekend he labled [labeled] ‘very hectic’.”

In regards to not fully utilizing twitter: “The NRC was using their blog and the updates provided by the American Nuclear Society as the main modes of communication with the public.

2. Selective distribution of information: “David McIntyre also works in the NRC on public affairs, and spent much of his time creating carefully crafted e-mails that constantly downplayed the disaster, and any relationship that might be made to the safety status of US nuclear stations.

On March 14th, McIntyre received an email [from] Molly McCrea, a reporter for CBS inquired about the status of a law that Senator Markey had authored that would distribute KI (potassium iodide) to those living within a certain distance from a nuclear power plant, and whether or not it was being followed. She asked whether or not the pills had been distributed, and why the NRC had been reported to be discouraging the distribution.

McIntyre replied vaguely alluding to the fact that the NRC was not solely responsible, but that it was a ‘US Government decision, not just the NRC but HHS [Health and Human services] and others.’ It is true that the NRC has worked hard against the burden of purchasing, storing, and maintaining a fresh supply of KI for those populations closest to nuclear reactors.

In 2009, the NRC actually canceled it’s policy on KI distribution, stating that it was unnecessary, as it did not protect against all radionuclides that could be potentially released, would cause undue stress on the community, and would delay critical response time by adding more duties to local, state and federal staff.”

3. Deception: “It appears that McIntyre used his own personal discretion on which information to release to specific reporters or news services. On March 14th, he received an e-mail from Molly McCrea again, this time asking if the United States was possibly sending KI to Japan, or had sent KI to Japan to help out, if he could confirm, and if not who should she contact.

McIntyre replied ‘We have not been asked to provide KI’. He further explained, ‘We understand the Japanese authorities have included KI as part of their protective action guidelines, which would indicate they have some stockpiles.’

The reply email was sent on Tuesday March 15th, 2011 at 4:07:00 PM. At 4:10:00 PM, only 3 minutes later, McIntyre rushed a quick note to Matthew Wald, a long-time reporter for the New York Times who has written on nuclear energy for years, with the subject line-’KI Info’ stating, ‘Matt-I’m told we distributed approximately 11 million pills. Dave.’”

4. Hiding knowledge of a radioactive plume bound for the West Coast, USA: Referring to a series of e-mails from David Lew as ‘documents 3,4 and 5′ : Thompson writes:

“Yet another caution to limit information given to the public and a heads-up to ‘Expect the public/media focus to turn toward domestic in the next day or so.’ IOW, by the afternoon of March 12 the NRC was in full ass-covering mode for the U.S. nuclear industry.”

Excellent quotes from these e-mails are provided, quotes that show officials were aware of the radioactive plume headed for North America. Why was there no emergency broadcast warning?

“Interaction with DHS and federal agencies, including plume plot, possible exposure models, and monitoring of west coast.”

This information can only lead to one conclusion, stated perfectly by Thompson: “FEMA standing down, don’t expect the plume to hit the west coast that weekend. NRC thinks unit 2 ‘shut down safely.’ [Heh. The direct cite above indicates clearly federal agencies – FEMA, DHS, DOE, EPA – were very much aware that contamination from Fukushima would travel as a plume and that there would be fallout when it reached the U.S. mainland…”

In ‘document 6‘, an ‘Internal email’ from one William Ostendorff, and in reference to a 3:30PM conference call, there is another admission of knowledge of the plume, “4. Keep interacting with DHS on potential plume plots and modeling capability, etc…”.

5. Cover -up: Evidence of an effort to prepare for the inevitable pesky public inquiry can also be found in the internal email of Mr. Ostendorff:“Further develop Q&A as the attention will start to turn to US plants and our level of preparedness/protection from seismic and floods.”

But as Hixon points out, the directives for information control were given the day of the accident indicated in a bulletin from the ‘Operations Center’ dated March 11th at 3:04 PM:

“This is the ‘NOT A DRILL’ notice pictured above the squiggle. It sets the tone for information control with instructions specific to dealing with the international press.

In the first paragraph it identifies where employees may direct the press in order to access the ‘official’ press releases from NRC, and urges any NRC employees who ARE contacted by the media to inform the NRC Office of Public Affairs immediately.”

6. At the highest levels: There is plenty of evidence the White House knew everything and played a ‘lead’ part. In the Osendorff email he clearly states that “NRC posture to hold White House lead for U.S. response, NRC to be support only so as not to focus media attention on NRC-”.

Again, in a March 12th, 12:52 PM email from David Lew, we see White House involvement: “NRC remains in the monitoring mode. Chairman attended a meeting with White House. Marty Virgilio participated by VTC.” (video teleconferencing)

Later that afternoon another email from Mr. Lew states that there is a “Deputies Meeting at the White House with significant focus on the nuclear event.”

There is little doubt now that the radioactive plume had an effect on American citizens but keep in mind that people were not falling over dead in the street in numbers and the ‘plume’ is an invisible one so unless one had warning, there was virtually no way of detecting its presence.

According to a GlobalResearch.ca article based on research printed in the Journal of Health Services , Internist and Toxicologist Janette Sherman, MD insists we have paid a heavy toll from the fallout:

“Based on our continuing research, the actual death count here (USA) may be as high as 18,000, with influenza and pneumonia, which were up five-fold in the period in question as a cause of death. Deaths are seen across all ages, but we continue to find that infants are hardest hit because their tissues are rapidly multiplying, they have undeveloped immune systems, and the doses of radioisotopes are proportionally greater than for adults.”

It seems that the fundamental problem with what Americans are experiencing is not just radioactive fallout but Fascism, the merging of the corporate and the state.

In a fascist state, there is little or no responsible action from the corporations for there is little or no promotion of accountability from the state. The corporations, for all intents and purposes, control the state.

And when the time has come that corporate profits outweigh human safety, has not also the time come, as Americans, to ask ourselves: do we, as a society, even value human life as we once did and if we do what IS the worth of a life?

Perhaps for once, it should NOT be determined in terms of a dollar amount.

Additional Reading: There are over a 1,000 pages of FOIA documents that are being analyzed post haste in an effort to reveal the truth about the Fukushima accident and what authorities did or did not do following the meltdowns to protect U.S. citizens.

The 186 page NRC transcript of conference calls: Lot’s of redacting but on page 153 (lines 24 and 25) and page 154 (lines 1-8) of the document Chairman Jaczco is told by Jack Grob that:

“They asked for monitoring, both land-based and air-based monitoring. The DOE Radiological Assistance Program teams are on the ground in Japan, and they’ll be providing that monitoring. We have already established a relationship with the Department of Energy, and will get that information in real time, and that will be a huge benefit.”

Talking Points Memo: NRC talking points as of March 17th, 2011 0600 EDT. Shows radiation plume was headed for the US.

395 pages of NRC Emails and more reveal the inner workings of the cover-up. Includes the emails quoted above.

Report on ‘An Unexpected Mortality Increase In The United States Follows Arrival Of The Radioactive Plume From Fukushima: Is There A Correlation? By Joseph J. Mangano and Janettte D. Sherman.
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 seemslikeadream » Fri Mar 09, 2012 10:39 am

Japan foresaw possible Fukushima meltdown from day one: documents
Reuters – 4 hrs ago

TOKYO (Reuters) - Japan's government foresaw the possibility of a meltdown at the Fukushima nuclear power plant hours after a huge tsunami smashed into it, according to cabinet minutes released on Friday, although it took officials more than a month to acknowledge it.
The earthquake and tsunami on March 11 knocked out cooling systems at Tokyo Electric Power Co's (Tepco) Fukushima Daiichi plant, triggering the world's worst nuclear accident since Chernobyl in Ukraine in 1986.
"Cooling functions still in service are those run by batteries. They will last eight hours," a summary of the first emergency cabinet meeting, four hours after the quake, quoted an unidentified participant as saying.
"If core temperatures in the reactors remain on the rise for more than eight hours, there is a possibility that meltdown may occur."
A Trade Ministry official who acted as a government spokesman after the disaster struck was replaced after he mentioned the possibility of meltdown on March 12.
It was not until May that Tepco acknowledged that a meltdown of fuel rods appeared to have occurred, sparking criticism that the operator and officials were playing down the severity of the accident.
Tepco now believes that three of the six reactors at the plant, 240 km (150 miles) northeast of Tokyo, suffered fuel meltdown.
The minutes were released two days before the first anniversary of the disaster that left 19,000 dead or missing.
Other entries in minutes of emergency cabinet meetings show confusion and disagreement among top leaders as Japan faced its deepest crisis since World War Two.
"Who is the leader of the actual operation?" Yoshihiro Katayama, internal affairs minister at the time, told a March 15 meeting of the Nuclear Emergency Response headquarters.
"I've got too many unintelligible demands and requests. No one is holding the reins."
On March 14, then-Prime Minister Naoto Kan spoke of a consensus among specialists that a 20-km evacuation zone around the plant was sufficient. He was challenged by Koichiro Gemba, national strategy minister at the time, who pointed out contradicting views.
Gemba, whose constituency is in Fukushima, told a different meeting: "This is war. We only win or lose. We are already losing in some battles. But the important thing is how we manage to limit our loss."
(Reporting by Kiyoshi Takenaka; Editing by; Ron Popeski)



NewsFlash........so did seemslikeadream :cry: ....from day ONE
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 StarmanSkye » Fri Mar 09, 2012 2:15 pm

Retired schoolteacher of 18 years who lives just 25 km from Fukushima has been hosting a web-blog for the past year detailing her experience of failing health, rotting teeth, hairloss and skin rashes. She declares she is a test-subject reporting on the effects of long-term low-level internal and external radiation exposure, to emphasize the lies and denials of gov. officials failing to protect the public they are sworn to serve. She also cares for the many dogs who were abandoned when residents fled the area.

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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby StarmanSkye » Fri Mar 09, 2012 3:19 pm

Japanese farmers in the towns & villages surrounding the evacuation zones around Fukushima are taking the initiative on their own to conduct soil-radiation testing & make detailed maps of the contamination, noting average radiation counts for the most important active isotopes and charting hot-spots resulting from rainwater drainage concentration, esp. along roadside ditches. They've hired radiation academics and experts to educate them & teach them competant radiation measurement and mapping practices. They've also been experimenting with crop-growing & testing to establish vegetable radiation uptake baselines. Among what they are learning is how to determine whether and which home properties and cropland can be reclaimed and which lands are too contaminated to do so.

In short, local farmers are doing the basic work which local and national governments lack the will, interest and incentive to do that is essential for a functioning state to recover from this ongoing catastrophe. Yet another instance that underlines the incompetancy of officials and institutions that see their primary duty to corporate clients -- having lost sight of what the public interest really is.

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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby Nordic » Sat Mar 10, 2012 5:11 am

It's turning into a Libertarian utopia! No government whatsoever! Everybody on their own, fending for themselves.

Isn't it beautiful?
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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby seemslikeadream » Sun Mar 11, 2012 5:19 pm

3/11: Japan Marks Anniversary of Meltdowns, Tsunami in Day of Mourning, Protest US: groups call for day of anti-nuclear activism

- Common Dreams staff
On the first-year anniversary of the Fukushima tsunami disaster people gathered in Japan and around the world for a day of mourning and protest.
A little girl and her mother pray on Arahama beach for the victims of the earthquake and tsunami at Sendai city in Miyagi prefecture (Telegraph)

Agence France-Presse reports:

Japan fell silent on Sunday to honour the 19,000 people killed a year ago when a huge earthquake sent a tsunami barreling into the coast, sparking a nuclear crisis at Fukushima.

Tearful families gathered in the still shell-shocked towns and villages across the country's northeast to remember those lost when the towering tsunami smashed ashore.

At 2.46 pm (0546 GMT) much of the nation paused to mark the moment nature's fury was visited on Japan, when the 9.0-magnitude quake set off a catastrophic chain of events.

At a national ceremony of remembrance in Tokyo, Japan's mournful national anthem rang out before the prime minister and the emperor led silent prayers for those who lost their lives in the country's worst post-war disaster. [...]

Small rural towns along the coast that were turned to matchwood when the tsunami rolled in, wrecking whole neighbourhoods and wiping out communities, held their own emotional ceremonies. [...]

In the nearby city of Koriyama, monks banged drums and offered prayers ahead of an anti-nuclear protest rally, where numbers overwhelmed the seating available at a baseball stadium.

Organisers opened up parts of the stadium that have not yet been cleansed of radioactive fallout, asking participants with small children not to use the area, an AFP journalist said.

"We demand all children are evacuated from Fukushima now," said organiser Setsuko Kuroda.

"Some experts say one third of children in Fukushima were affected by radiation," she said. "Leaving the situation like this is like they are committing a murder every day."

Among those demonstrating were some of the nuclear refugees forced to flee their homes in the shadow of Fukushima Daiichi as it began venting toxic radiation over homes and farmland.
***

The Japan Times reports:

A year later, recovery efforts continue but the pace remains slow and uneven. Officially, the death toll stands at 15,854, with another 3,155 missing . A total of 343,935 people have been evacuated, and more than 6,000 were injured.

Throughout the country Sunday, official and unofficial memorial ceremonies took place and moments of silence were observed at 2:46 p.m., the time the quake struck. In the devastated coastal city of Ishinomaki, Mayor Hiroshi Kameyama spoke at an event attended by over 2,200 people.

"We lost more than 3,000 residents, the greatest loss of life in any of the disaster areas. Although the Self-Defense Forces, police and rescue workers continue their search efforts, it is still hard to believe so many remain missing," he said.

At first glance, it appears parts of Ishinomaki are well along the road to recovery.

Bars, cafes, and restaurants around the main railway station are coming back to life again thanks, residents say, to an influx of people hired to remove the millions of tons of debris generated by the tsunami.

But physical reconstruction of the town, and the rebuilding of shattered lives, is expected to take years, if not decades. At least 3,280 Ishinomaki residents lost their lives and another 553 are still officially listed as missing. As of January, nearly 17,000 had not returned to the places where they lived before the quake and tsunami hit, and are now living in either prefabricated temporary housing or apartments. [...]
***

Julian Ryall reports for the The Telegraph from the anti-nuclear protest in central Tokyo:
Women take part in a demonstraton denouncing nuclear power in Koriyama, Fukushima Prefecture (Telegraph)

Hikari Hirono was looking forward to the protest in central Tokyo on Sunday afternoon because she wanted to hold hands in a human chain.

At the tender age of four-and-a-half, she was unaware of the significance of taking part in the anti-nuclear demonstrations organised to marked one year since an earthquake and tsunami crippled the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant, but her mother is one of the growing number of Japanese who are only too aware of how their lives have changed in the last 12 moths.

"I didn't want to just watch the protests on television, as if nothing has happened or changed," said her mother, Yuko.

"I think opposition to nuclear power is growing," she said. "People used to feel safe and not say anything, but if you ask most people now they think differently.

"They want to shift to renewable energy, but that will not happen unless we act," said 34-year-old Hirono, a housewife from western Tokyo. "If we don't, I fear that the government will restart the nuclear power plants."

Organisers estimated that around 8,000 people attended, with the one-minute's silence at 2:46 pm - the exact time of the Great East Japan Earthquake 12 months ago - impeccably observed.

"Some people said we should not stage protests at this time as this is the anniversary of a day on which many people died in the disasters and that, instead, we should remember them," said Hirono.

"But there are others who say this day is very important and that it is the time for us to stand up and make our voices heard so that we can move forwards to a better future," she said. "We want something good to come out of this terrible situation.
***

Reuters reports:



***

In the US The Nuclear Information and Resource Service (NIRS) has called for a national day of action to protest Nuclear energy including protests, rallies, and flash mobs across the US and the world:

From Alabama to Wisconsin, Vermont to California and across the world, the first anniversary of the Fukushima nuclear disaster will be marked by protests, rallies, flashmobs and other actions from the growing movement for a nuclear-free, carbon-free energy future.

NIRS has compiled a list of Fukushima anniversary actions in the U.S. here: http://www.nirs.org/action.htm. Local contacts and/or links are provided for the actions. Note that there is a link to a different page listing actions across the world, available in five languages.

The listed events include a wide variety of actions, from “die-ins” in several states to a mock “evacuation” of Vermont Yankee to rallies in California, New York and elsewhere. In Washington, DC, a goat named Katie, whose milk contained high levels of radioactivity when she lived near the Millstone Nuclear Power Plant in Connecticut and who has been stricken with inoperable cancer, takes her Farewell Tour to the White House on Sunday, March 11, at 12 noon.
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 Project Willow » Wed Mar 14, 2012 9:25 pm

Hey, local folks, this should not be missed, even though I will probably miss it, as it's too early in the morning.

Caldicott and Gundersen in Seatown

http://www.facebook.com/events/176277572486705/

Lessons from Fukushima for the Northwest & U.S.
Public Event · By Danny Noonan and Tom Buchanan

Saturday
9:00am until 3:00pm

To mark the anniversary of the 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster and scope risks facing our region we are hosting an all day forum and workshop.

“Fukushima: Lessons for the Northwest”
University United Methodist Temple Church, 1415 NE 43rd Ave., Seattle, 98105
Saturday, March 17, 2012, 9 AM – 3 PM
All sessions free and open to public (Free parking in parking lot, University Lutheran Church, 1604 50th St. NE, 98105)
Question and answer session follows each speaker.

8:45 AM REGISTRATION & SIGN IN
9:00 AM Introductions & poetry reading
9:15 Dr. Helen Caldicott “What We Learned From Fukushima”
10:30 Break
10:45 (video conference) Robert Alvarez , Institute for Policy Studies
“Assessing Risk: Nuclear Spent Fuel at Fukushima AND Hanford”
12 Noon LUNCH BREAK (NO HOST)
1 PM (video conference) Dr. Arnie Gundersen, Fairewinds Associates
“Lessons for Hanford from Fukushima”
2 PM Tracy Bier, “Introducing Our Northwest Activist Groups”
• Washington Physicians for Social Responsibility,
• Heart of America of the Northwest
• Hanford Challenge
2:55 PM WRAP UP & Poetry Reading


Dr. Helen Caldicott is a physician, Nobel Peace Prize winner, noted author, anti-nuclear power advocate and has founded numerous national and international groups which are opposed nuclear power & weapons, including Physicians for Social Responsibility.
http://www.helencaldicott.com

Arnie Gundersen is an international energy advisor with over 30 years experience, working with the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, U.S. Congress and state legislatures, and managing projects at 70 nuclear power plants.
http://www.fairewindassociates.org

Robert Alvarez is a senior scholar at the Institute for Policy Studies, former senior adviser to the Energy Department in the 1990s, published author in Science Magazine, Bulletin of Atomic Scientists, Washington Post, and featured on 60 Minutes and NOVA television shows.
http://www.ips-dc.org/staff/bob
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Re: Nuclear Meltdown Watch

Postby Nordic » Fri Mar 16, 2012 5:13 pm

http://www.zerohedge.com/news/remember- ... impact-map

Remember Fukushima: Presenting The Radioactive Seawater Impact Map
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/16/2012 11:46 -0400

fixed New Normal Nuclear Power


A few days after the one year anniversary of the Fukushima disaster, nobody talks about it anymore. After all it's "fixed", and if it isn't, the Fed will fix it. Remember in the New Normal nothing bad is allowed the happen. So for those who have forgotten, here is a reminder.

From ASR, a global coastal and marine consulting firm, The Radioactive Seawater Impact Map

Image

We use a Lagrangian particles dispersal method to track where free floating material (fish larvae, algae, phytoplankton, zooplankton...) present in the sea water near the damaged Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power station plant could have gone since the earthquake on March 11th. THIS IS NOT A REPRESENTATION OF THE RADIOACTIVE PLUME CONCENTRATION. Since we do not know exactly how much contaminated water and at what concentration was released into the ocean, it is impossible to estimate the extent and dilution of the plume. However, field monitoring by TEPCO showed concentration of radioactive Iodine and Cesium higher than the legal limit during the next two months following the event (with a peak at more than 100 Bq/cm3 early April 2011 for I-131 as shown by the following picture).

Assuming that a part of the passive biomass could have been contaminated in the area, we are trying to track where the radionuclides are spreading as it will eventually climb up the food chain. The computer simulation presented here is obtained by continuously releasing particles at the site during the 2 months folllowing the earthquake and then by tracing the path of these particles. The dispersal model is ASR's Pol3DD. The model is forced by hydrodynamic data from the HYCOM/NCODA system which provides on a weekly basis, daily oceanic current in the world ocean. The resolution in this part of the Pacific Ocean is around 8km x 8km cells. We are treating only the sea surface currents. The dispersal model keeps a trace of their visits in the model cells. The results here are expressed in number of visit per surface area of material which has been in contact at least once with the highly concentrated radioactive water.



"He who wounds the ecosphere literally wounds God" -- Philip K. Dick
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