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Meltdown in Japan??? Fallout here???


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2011 Mar 12, 12:39pm   22,838 views  255 comments

by terriDeaner   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

As of right now, there seems to be some uncertainty as to whether meltdowns (yes, multiple) are underway at the failing nuclear facility in Japan. If there is a widespread release of radioactive particulates, is there any good way of knowing if any (and how much) would blow our way?

http://www.cnn.com/2011/WORLD/asiapcf/03/12/japan.quake/index.html?hpt=T1&iref=BN1

http://www.zerohedge.com/article/stratfor-japan-government-confirms-meltdown

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/03/13/world/asia/13nuclear.html?hp

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36   tatupu70   2011 Mar 14, 6:08am  

Troy says

For one, I’ve read that the backup generators were taken out by the tsunami, and replacement generators couldn’t be hooked up because the electrical switching room was *in the basement*.

Thank you--I've been wondering this whole time why we just didn't fly in some new diesel generators... That would make sense.

38   Â¥   2011 Mar 14, 9:19am  

oh fuck.

NHK says number #2 reactor leaking contaminated water -- "could be worst case scenario for BWR in Japan" -- container vessel damage possible. "Some operators evacuated to other locations"

"Explosion in pressure suppression room" at 6:14AM

Oh, and the wind is blowing towards Tokyo now. 4.4 m/s velocity.

40   Â¥   2011 Mar 14, 9:33am  

It's not really "worst case" yet.

Right now there's Chernobyl-level contamination, but only locally, unless the explosion was bigger than just a "large sound".

Worst case is the spent fuel pools in the reactors somehow losing their water levels, allowing *them* to overheat, catch fire, and spew contaminants into the air for months.

In the press conference the press person is being a jerk.

"What is the nature of the accident at this time? We are not asking your feeling . . . We want the facts. . ."

"The blast was heard near the pressure vessel . . . suppression pool pressure falling, indicating damage to the suppression pool . . . causing evacuation of the operators"

"however, other parameters have not changed greatly, water level is 2.7m under the control rods."

"Partial staff evacuation started?"

Questions about how many, when and where did the staff go?

A: "We'll get back to you on that"

41   terriDeaner   2011 Mar 14, 9:36am  

Still... not good by a long shot. I hope that they are able to evacuate the danger zone quickly.

42   Â¥   2011 Mar 14, 9:43am  

"how many people remain on site"

A: "Around 50"

43   terriDeaner   2011 Mar 14, 9:44am  

That transcript doesn't give me a great deal of confidence in their information. Just makes me wonder more about what they're not willing to detail.

44   Â¥   2011 Mar 14, 9:47am  

Losing the suppression pool container is a secondary thing -- the suppression pool is where steam collects after leaving the primary pressure container. When the suppression pool pressure gets too high they vent it outside, into the containment building (or outside, as the containment buildings for reactors 1 and 3 have been lost)

45   terriDeaner   2011 Mar 14, 9:51am  

Troy says

Losing the suppression pool container is a secondary thing — the suppression pool is where steam collects after leaving the primary pressure container. When the suppression pool pressure gets too high they vent it outside, into the containment building (or outside, as the containment buildings for reactors 1 and 3 have been lost)

Secondary in terms of safety level (as in the first level of the containment vessel breached) or secondary as in not important for containment/cooling at this point?

46   terriDeaner   2011 Mar 14, 10:07am  

I guess that would be the former, and more ominous, meaning of 'secondary thing':

New Blast Reported at Nuclear Plant as Japan Struggles to Cool Reactor

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/03/15/world/asia/15nuclear.html?hp

47   Â¥   2011 Mar 14, 10:12am  

Maybe it helps filter out contaminants from the steam before it exits the plant. But nuclear plants aren't supposed to vent their steam from the suppression chamber in the first place. It's an emergency back-up, to handle pressure overflow from the main pressure chamber, to condense the steam coming out of the primary pressure vessel..

Since they can't keep the water level high enough in reactor 2's core, this implies the steam pressure in the primary vessel is too high.

What probably happened was they couldn't vent the suppression pool, and so it vented itself by failing.

900 microsieverts per hour was measured after the explosion.

By way of comparison, the hot areas of Chernobyl exclusion zone measure 300 microsieverts/hr.

48   terriDeaner   2011 Mar 14, 10:20am  

This is absolutely terrifying. I don't even want to imagine what might happen if radioactive particles are blown down to Tokyo... consider that Chernobyl was essentially in the middle of nowhere and is now a ghost town 25 years after the event.

49   Â¥   2011 Mar 14, 11:03am  

Like Chernobyl, Cesium is the primary contaminant we have to worry about I'd guess. It's got a half-life of 30 years. Coastal Fukushima is certainly fucked now.

A further problem is the reported measurement of 8 millisieverts. TEPCO didn't say where that was measured, but it was probably associated with the rupture of the separation pool. Now if they need to vent the primary reactor pressure vessel they don't have any hard containment on that, the steam will just leak out into the containment building.

This makes it difficult for anyone to be working anywhere in the building since a worker can only take 8 millisieverts for several hours before getting a cancer risk.

All this is IN ADDITION to the first reactor that blew up on Saturday and the plutonium-fueled reactor that is now "smoking".

50   Â¥   2011 Mar 14, 12:16pm  

Oh fuck. Chief cabinet secretary is talking about millisievert releases.

This is Chernobyl now, with radiation poisoning and the people working in the plant are national heroes.

51   seaside   2011 Mar 14, 12:30pm  

Troy, are you still considering Japan as your retirement place?

Things are too bad... just too bad for them... maybe to surrouding countries... and to you.

52   terriDeaner   2011 Mar 14, 12:57pm  

And this from the ny times:

"The sharp deterioration came after government officials said the containment structure of the No. 2 reactor, the most seriously damaged of three reactors at the Daichi plant, had suffered damage during an explosion shorly after 6 a.m. on Tuesday.

They initially suggested that the damage was limited and that emergency operations aimed at cooling the nuclear fuel at three striken reactors with seawater would continue. But industry executives said that in fact the situation had in fact spiralled out of control and that all plant workers needed to leave the plant to avoid excessive exposure to radioactive leaks.

If all workers do in fact leave the plant, the nuclear fuel in all three reactors is likely to melt down, which would lead to wholesale releases of radioactive material — by far the largest accident of its kind since the Chernobyl disaster 25 years ago. "

I can't believe this is happening.

53   Â¥   2011 Mar 14, 1:01pm  

Tokyo Governor Ishihara may be an asshole but he recently said the tsunami disaster might wake up Japan from its greed.

This is an interesting political direction for society to explore.

Prior to Friday, Japan was both fantastically wealthy and yet so much of the rural population was simply passed by with little hope of economic opportunity. Life was pretty hard in Tohoku, people living there had to work for their money.

I don't know how bad the nuclear disaster is going to get, and I don't know which reactor situation is worse! #1 failed first and then blew up, so it might be the hottest and hardest to cool, #2 apparently has a compromised secondary containment, allow vented steam from the core to escape directly into the containment building without further buffering, #3 has 5% plutonium and the building is still smoking after it blew up, yet #4 is "on fire" and has the highest radiation readings.

The area NE of Tokyo isn't that economically productive, but it does have some established industries that would be painful to move. If Tokyo has to be evacuated

This is however a golden opportunity for Japan to stop with the bullshit and start making the really tough decisions, basically declaring war on the recession and start applying itself to create a sustainable economy without the quintillion yen national debt hanging over it.

54   terriDeaner   2011 Mar 14, 1:03pm  

Troy says

Like Chernobyl, Cesium is the primary contaminant we have to worry about I’d guess. It’s got a half-life of 30 years. Coastal Fukushima is certainly fucked now.
A further problem is the reported measurement of 8 millisieverts. TEPCO didn’t say where that was measured, but it was probably associated with the rupture of the separation pool. Now if they need to vent the primary reactor pressure vessel they don’t have any hard containment on that, the steam will just leak out into the containment building.
This makes it difficult for anyone to be working anywhere in the building since a worker can only take 8 millisieverts for several hours before getting a cancer risk.
All this is IN ADDITION to the first reactor that blew up on Saturday and the plutonium-fueled reactor that is now “smoking”.

I'd have to agree, the plutonium and cesium would be the immediate concerns. Also, radioactive isotopes of iodine and strontium will likely be present. All present long-term problems.

55   terriDeaner   2011 Mar 14, 1:07pm  

Troy says

This is however a golden opportunity for Japan to stop with the bullshit and start making the really tough decisions, basically declaring war on the recession and start applying itself to create a sustainable economy without the quintillion yen national debt hanging over it.

Interesting perspective. Doesn't look like they took the first steps in that direction today, though:

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-03-13/japan-readies-massive-liquidity-as-boj-gauges-risk-to-post-quake-economy.html

Hard to fault them for this in the short term though as they are just trying to protect their economy from collapsing after a natural disaster. Didn't seem to work too well, however. Guess we'll see what happens in the long term.

56   terriDeaner   2011 Mar 14, 1:59pm  

And an even worse worst case scenario surfaces:

In Stricken Fuel-Cooling Pools, a Danger for the Longer Term

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/03/15/world/asia/15fuel.html

Spent, combustible fuel rods stored in cooling pools ABOVE the reactors could become a problem in days-weeks. If their cooling water boils away, they will become exposed to the atmosphere and can catch fire, thereby releasing large quantity of radioactive materials. Could be "worse than a meltdown", according to the article. Scary shit, period.

57   Â¥   2011 Mar 14, 3:52pm  

crap. I hadn't thought of the possibility that the spent fuel pools would evaporate.

Right now NHK is saying that this might have happened, just the spent fuel rods emit enough heat to evaporate their pools.

58   terriDeaner   2011 Mar 14, 4:02pm  

Somewhere in the blur of the last few hours I came across a bit of information about the #4 reactor. That was the one that was most recently on fire. Seems that they were using it for spent fuel storage instead of power generation. Perhaps its cooling pool had more spend fuel rods than the rest?

59   terriDeaner   2011 Mar 14, 4:23pm  

Some good news:

Fire at No.4 reactor put down
http://www3.nhk.or.jp/daily/english/15_33.html

The end of this article is cryptic though...

And:

All Fukushima No.2 plant reactors safely halted
http://www3.nhk.or.jp/daily/english/15_24.html

Note that this is #2 plant and not #2 reactor.

60   thomas.wong1986   2011 Mar 14, 4:38pm  

terriDeaner says

Moving on, the issue is whether the released radioactive material will get pushed high enough into the atmosphere and/or get dumped into the ocean and make its way here to the Pacific coast. Further, the amount and type of material are a important considerations.

Above ground testing of Megaton Nukes/H-Bombs has been going on during the 50-60s. Others into the 70s. We are still kicking!!

61   Â¥   2011 Mar 14, 5:41pm  

terriDeaner says

Fire at No.4 reactor put down

apparently the US military had a hand in that.

Maybe that's why the USS Reagan was so close to Fukushima this week . . .

62   pkennedy   2011 Mar 14, 10:45pm  

This definitely got out of control. I'm a little surprised with all this time, they couldn't get power to the pumps somehow, and/or injected a new pump into the system.

Although I just read this on CNN '"The level has come down to the level to cause no harm to human health, according to the report I have received," Edano said.' It seems that the half life is fairly short for most of what got out.

Now they've got rain and snow hitting those areas hit hardest. Ugh.

63   bob2356   2011 Mar 14, 11:37pm  

terriDeaner says

bob2356 says

terriDeaner says

…and that problems from exposure to radiation do not always manifest immediately, so washing with soap and water is just a first response treatment. Is is really paranoid to CONSIDER that, given the escalating problems at the Japanese nuclear facilities, things may get bad enough that we could be adversely affected, even across an ocean?

You need to gain a much better understanding of radiation, radioactive materials, exposure levels, and effects. There are many sources of information that can explain this material if you are actually interested in facts not hysteria.

PLEASE educate me bobby. Pretty please.

Harmful radiation from a ground level event crossing 6000+ miles of ocean is so unlikely as to be up there with being hit by an asteroid. So don't worry about being adversely affected if you are sitting in the US. People on the ground within 10 km of the reactors have real reason to worry, not you.

Washing the the US personal exposed to LOW LEVEL radiation with soap and water was the correct thing to do. You get more radiation exposure on a long plane flight than these guys got.

This situation is serious, very serious. But radiation isn't some monolithic death sentence. Everyone is exposed to radiation of many kinds every day. The type of radiation, the distance from the source, the dosage, the exposure time, etc. etc. all determine the danger level. The workers in the plant are at real danger of harm if total dosages aren't measured carefully. People in the immediate area, 10 km or less, could be in danger, and have been evacuated. Outside the immediate area, 10 to 50 km, radiation levels are elevated but still in the getting an xray range, people are advised to stay indoors. People in Tokyo are in very little danger, but under the right circumstances (strong wind from the right direction) could have elevated danger levels. Is it paranoid to consider harmful effects from this event in the Us? Yes.

64   American in Japan   2011 Mar 15, 1:34am  

I am back in Japan. BTW I flew back to Japan on Swiss Air today (First class upgrade since they needed me to translate). Anyway there were 3 experts on nuclear reactors on the flight from Switzerland heading to Japan to check out the reactor in Fukushima Pref.

65   FortWayne   2011 Mar 15, 2:02am  

elliemae says

ChrisLA says

That’s not the same thing nomo. You can’t equate nuclear reactor blowing up to a nuclear bomb.

Actually, I believe that you can. And the radiation from the nuclear tests in the 50’s & 60’s can directly be linked to cancers that are devastating people to this day. There are many “downwinders” sites that discuss the compensation for the victims - it’s an ongoing concern.
However, the atmosphere would probably help to dissapate the radiation to harmless levels. It is concerning that they’re talking about more than one reactor melting down, tho. If that happens, the Japanese people are totally screwed.

Ellie it would depend on how much radiation the plant(s) throws out. Environment may not dissipate it enough, for one thing half life of Uranium they use is 244,500 years. Which means it isn't going away on it's own in our lifetime.

It will spread around, and whoever wins that lottery is going to suffer a lot. When Chernobyl blew up, entire countries near by got hit by it. People in other countries became ill and died because their immune system became completely knocked out by radiation.

I know our media dummifies everything, but there is "NO" safe amount of uranium radiation. There are consequences.

66   Vicente   2011 Mar 15, 2:31am  

Plant name Unit MW Mfr Status

Fukushima-Daiichi

1 460 GE filling with sea water

2 784 GE, Toshiba filling with sea water

3 784 Toshiba filling with sea water

4 784 Hitachi fire extinguished

5 784 Toshiba shut down for scheduled maintenance

6 1,100 GE, Toshiba shut down for scheduled maintenance

Fukushima-Daini

1 1,100 Toshiba cooled down safely

2 1,100 Hitachi cooled down safely

3 1,100 Toshiba cooled down safely

4 1,100 Hitachi cooled down safely

(Source: Tokyo Electric Power, govt agencies and media as of 0640 GMT on Tuesday)

67   Vicente   2011 Mar 15, 2:34am  

The premise of this thread, worrying about US fallout, is a sign of the USA total preoccupation with itself and it's poor grasp of basic science. This is far more of a blow to the JAPANESE people, their economy, and by extension I suppose global economies. Ecological disaster or cancer hazard for US is WAY down the list. I am not Japanese, never been there, but obviously they have tragically more close up experience with fallout and they do not seem from afar to be in full panic.

68   Â¥   2011 Mar 15, 2:46am  

bob2356 says

Washing the the US personal exposed to LOW LEVEL radiation with soap and water was the correct thing to do. You get more radiation exposure on a long plane flight than these guys got.

Talk about long plane flights is only semi-useful because we don't inhale long plane flights or track long plane flights into our homes, nor do long plane flights contaminate the food chain.

70   terriDeaner   2011 Mar 15, 2:50am  

American in Japan says

I am back in Japan. BTW I flew back to Japan on Swiss Air today (First class upgrade since they needed me to translate). Anyway there were 3 experts on nuclear reactors on the flight from Switzerland heading to Japan to check out the reactor in Fukushima Pref.

Glad to see you're safe. Are you in Tokyo or elsewhere in Japan?

71   tatupu70   2011 Mar 15, 3:02am  

ChrisLA says

getting hit by even the smallest amount of uranium radiation damages immune system.

There is a lot of misinformation on this thread. I don't have time nor am I probably qualified to give Radiation 101, but suffice it to say that you are getting background radiation all the time. Watching TV, eating a banana, getting an X-Ray all expose you to ionizing radiation. The element producing the radiation does not matter--you need to worry about the type of radiation (alpha, beta, gamma, X-Ray, or neutron), the activity of the source, the absorbed dose, or most important the dose equivilent. This is typically measured in REMs in the US or Sieverts as the SI unit (1 Sv = 100 REM)

As a guide, the occupational dose limit is 5 REM/year to the whole body (or 50 mSv)

Hope that helps some.

72   American in Japan   2011 Mar 15, 3:10am  

Some links from JapanToday.

http://japantoday.com/category/national/view/hydrogen-explosion-occurs-at-fukushima-no-1-nuclear-power-plant

http://www.japantoday.com/category/national/view/work-resumes-to-pump-seawater-into-troubled-nuclear-reactor-unit#comments

I am in Tokyo (not panicking but I will be checking the news, weather and limiting my time outside for now). At least I can spend the time catching up on Patrick.net!

73   terriDeaner   2011 Mar 15, 3:29am  

Looks like we've reached the point where this thread is ready to deteriorate into tangential mess, so I'd like to briefly summarize the original thesis and what we've learned so far from research and discussion:

Thesis: There is an escalating nuclear disaster happening in a fission plant on the coast of Japan. Although it seems unlikely, what is the potential for fallout (via atmospheric deposition or ocean currents) reaching the Pacific Coast?

What we've learned:
1. Evidence from contemporary reactor design and past meltdowns INDICATES that radioactive releases will be largely contained and MOSTLY localized.

2. Long range atmospheric distribution of radioactive materials (particulates) is much more of an issue from a bomb blast, where large quantities of radioactives are injected into the upper atmosphere, thereby made available to long-ranging air currents (like the jet stream).

3. Particulate pollution from clouds originating from (ground level) Chinese coal plants HAS BEEN detected in substantial quantities on the West Coast in recent history.

4. While the Pacific ocean does provide a potentially huge pool for particulate dilution, ocean currents DO NOT mix it evenly. Further, we currently DO NOT know for certain how a slug of radioactively contaminated water will circulate and disperse in the Pacific.

5. Radioactive contamination from the Daiichi plant could include uranium, plutonium, cesium, idodine, strontium, among other long-lived and dangerous isotopes. It is these toxic and long-lived particulates that pose the GREATEST danger for long-term and long-range contamination: they persist in the environment for long periods of time, many are readily absorbed in trace amounts, and then can be accumulated to dangerous levels in the human body. IT IS NOT CLEAR to what degree these contaminants HAVE BEEN released at this point in time. IT IS NOT CLEAR to what degree these contaminants WILL BE released in the future.

6. Although the emergency crews have put in a heroic effort to avert a complete meltdown at all of the Daiichi reactors (there are 6), partial meltdowns have likely occured at #1,#2,#3 and the spent fuel in the cooling pool on #4 caught fire (and was later extinguished).

7. Radioactive releases have been reported, and radiation readings downwind have elevated, but not yet to a level that immediately threatens human health. 180,000 people have been moved from the evacuation zone.

8. There is still a risk of full meltdown at the #1,#2,#3 reactors, and risk of the spent fuel cooling pools, which are stored throughout the facility, catching fire. Arguably, the latter scenario carries more danger than the former since the spent rods are not protected by a containment vessel. The #2 reactor seems to be in the worst shape, and potentially has a compromised containment vessel.

9. 50 brave emergency workers remain to keep the affected reactors and cooling pools from overheating further, likely at the risk of their own lives.

10. No one, including the emergency workers, TEPCO, the Japanese government, and the varied voices here, can be sure whether the situation will get worse or better in the short term.

and finally,

11. SINCE this exact event has never played out before in history, we do not know what the outcome will be. THIS is why discussion of the possibilities, however remote, is useful and not an exercise in paranoia. I believe most of us hope for the best, and fear for the safety of the Japanese people.

74   terriDeaner   2011 Mar 15, 3:37am  

American in Japan says

I am in Tokyo (not panicking but I will be checking the news, weather and limiting my time outside for now). At least I can spend the time catching up on Patrick.net!

Good luck to you!

75   terriDeaner   2011 Mar 15, 3:48am  

tatupu70 says

There is a lot of misinformation on this thread. I don’t have time nor am I probably qualified to give Radiation 101, but suffice it to say that you are getting background radiation all the time. Watching TV, eating a banana, getting an X-Ray all expose you to ionizing radiation. The element producing the radiation does not matter–you need to worry about the type of radiation (alpha, beta, gamma, X-Ray, or neutron), the activity of the source, the absorbed dose, or most important the dose equivilent. This is typically measured in REMs in the US or Sieverts as the SI unit (1 Sv = 100 REM)
As a guide, the occupational dose limit is 5 REM/year to the whole body (or 50 mSv)
Hope that helps some.

Where are you guys getting this stuff from? Grade school science books? 1960's era civil defense manuals? Cereal boxes?

In all seriousness, much of this type of reasoning seems to be focused on the acute dosage one would receive from a nuclear detonation. While this is relevant to a nuclear bomb blast, it is not really relevant to a discussion of the effects of fission plant nuclear meltdown and subsequent pollution over long distances.

Do you understand that if you ingest trace amounts of radioactive cesium or strontium it will accumulate over time in your body, replacing normal elements like potassium and calcium? Imagine the blood cancer risk resultant from having a radioactive skeleton. And the problem is compounded by bioaccumulation through the food chain. This means that low levels of radioactive dust over grass gets concentrated by cows eating the grass, and further concentrated in humans eating the cows.

And don't just take my word for it:

From the handbook on the toxicology of metals

http://books.google.com/books?id=nKulgztuzL8C&pg=PA276&lpg=PA276&dq=bioaccumulation+radioactive+cesium&source=bl&ots=QRRO9esdYw&sig=8S8ppPu32s-bNlk1UqPEV4oep38&hl=en&ei=GaZ_TbnsO4KGuQPvwMjQBw&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=3&sqi=2&ved=0CCYQ6AEwAg#v=onepage&q&f=false

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