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Fukushima Radiation: Some Difficult Truths
As radiation counts elevate in Japan, news of nuclear contamination spreading across a widening spectrum of life and its necessities, official pronouncements continue to play down events’ gravity. While some have questioned whether this is being pursued to promote calm, or perhaps the nuclear industry, the result has left many either skeptical of official claims or simply reassured by them. It seems time for some difficult facts.
Reports of false ‘nuclear rain’ warnings have made it to the news; but, just recently, so did valid rain warnings from local Japanese officials. And during the Chernobyl accident radioactive rain did occur, particularly striking some areas in Sweden.
It’s been estimated that “five percent of the released caesium-137 from the Chernobyl accident was deposited in Sweden due to heavy rainfall on 28-29 April 1986”.
Since Chernobyl, assorted scientific studies have demonstrated what one such effort termed the “serious impact of the Chernobyl accident on the environmental conditions in Sweden.” To this day, in some areas of the country Chernobyl’s legacy does remain a concern. And Sweden is a long way from Chernobyl.
While numerous proponents of nuclear power pursue what seems an exercise in surrealism, continuing to yet extoll ‘the benefits’ of ‘clean and safe’ nuclear energy, perhaps we should consider why so many trust that ‘the unthinkable' can never occur...at least until it does.
It was 27 April 1986 when radiation alarms sounded at Sweden’s Försmark nuclear power plant, radiation upon workers’ clothing being the cause, though it would soon be discovered that the source of this radiation was not a local one. Hours after the alarm, the then USSR began revealing Chernobyl’s nuclear accident, an accident across the Baltic Sea and many hundreds of miles to the southeast. Meanwhile, not far up Sweden’s Baltic Coast from Försmark sat the city of Gävle, a city almost a thousand miles from Chernobyl, but soon a place to be lastingly impacted by it.
It was twenty-one years after the Chernobyl fire, in May 2007, when one Swedish paper headlined “Swedes still dying from Chernobyl radiation”, Gävle and what is occurring there figuring prominently in the english-language article. A heavy rainstorm had struck the small city in 1986, doing so as a cloud of Chernobyl’s fallout was overhead.
Prevailing winds at that time had driven radioactive clouds from Chernobyl over parts of Scandinavia, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) providing a report upon the early amounts of radiation registered in Chernobyl’s aftermath, a report where Gävle is again significantly featured. A recent article on Time.com, “Fukushima: Chernobyl Redux?”, describes the immediate effect Chernobyl had upon Gävle.
Quoting from Time: “I remember that after Chernobyl there was a town in Northern Sweden called Gavle. The radioactive cloud went over the town and it started raining heavily and there was a lot of deposition of radioactive particulate material that was caught into surfaces of roads and buildings. There was a high level of cesium-137. When we went there and waved our Geiger counters about the counters maxed out--it was that bad.”
According to a 2006 Swedish study published in the American Journal of Industrial Medicine, it appears Sweden experienced approximately a thousand excess cancer fatalities because of Chernobyl, the number expected to increase, the cases concentrated proportional to the levels of radioactive exposure. As might be imagined, there were other health effects as well, such as effects with an impact upon unborn children.
A 2007 study performed by the prestigious National Bureau of Economic Reasearch, a Cambridge Massachusetts based think tank, examined the cognitive effects of Chernobyl’s radiation upon Swedish children. It found evidence that: “fetal exposure to ionizing radiation damages cognitive ability at radiation levels previously considered safe.”
Notably, this journalist lives about a ninety minute drive from Gävle, and I only heard of the cognitive problems through a chance meeting while food shopping. I was told that an unusually high number of pregnancies during the peak radiation period had resulted in children with cognitive issues, the above report suggesting the accuracy of that information. But only some years ago, I personally had lived in Gävle; though, I had no idea of its relationship to Chernobyl until I took up residence there.
Initially, one of the places I had lived was on the shore of a picturesque lake, the village it was in being about a half hour from the city’s center. I was struck by how lovely it was, until I learned one couldn’t eat the fish, and it wasn’t a good idea to do too much swimming, radiation being a problem.
Twenty years after Chernobyl, in 2006, Swedish National Television (SVT) did a news piece titled “Chernobyl still affects Gävle every day” (Tjernobyl påverkar ännu Gävle-vardagen). Among other items, it discusses how wild game is checked for radiation, and how residents now often travel to pick the wild berries or mushrooms that they once collected locally.
The effects of radiation proved lasting, and recent news reports revealed radiation has entered Japan’s food chain, affecting farm produce and milk, many levels of contamination being high multiples of the regulation limits.
Emphasizing what many perceive as a substantive part of the ongoing problem, The New York Times quoted Japan’s deputy chief cabinet secretary, Tetsuro Fukuyama, as observing that he would let his own children “eat the spinach” from Fukushima. But such ‘understatement’ has not been confined to Japan, the IAEA itself stating that only “up to four thousand” cancer fatalities will result from Chernobyl.
In contrast to IAEA fatality figures, a 2006 Greenpeace report forecast 100,000 cancer deaths, and a 2010 book by leading Eastern European scientists utilizing original ‘Slavic language’ documents ("Chernobyl: Consequences of the Catastrophe for People and the Environment"), claims a death toll of 985,000.
While some uncertainties exist, there are hard facts. The recent findings of contamination in Tokyo’s water supply is one of them, another being a New York Times report that Japan’s broader “contamination levels are well beyond what you’d expect from what is in the public domain”. The report added that this suggested problems “were deeper than had been publicly acknowledged.”
Gävle is about a thousand miles from Chernobyl, and the amount of nuclear fuel present at Chernobyl during the 1986 accident is reported as about 180 tons, none of which contained plutonium, an element much more toxic than the uranium used in standard reactor fuel. Estimates of the amount of nuclear fuel present at Fukushima are roughly in the 2000 ton range, dwarfing Chernobyl, and one of the six reactors (number 3) does use a mixture of plutonium and uranium, ‘mox’.
If nothing else, it would appear nuclear power is not the ‘clean, safe, inexpensive and reliable’ energy source some claim. As to what nuclear power is, both its past and ongoing catastrophes seem to amply define it.
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66 Comments so far
Show AllI was a junior in high school when a TVA nuclear engineer told me that accidents like chernobyl could not happen. Three years later it did.
Then we were told that the problem was the type of reactor used at chernobyl and that the engineers were "playing with it" at the time. Now Fukushima is one lie after another. Japan, since the atomic bombs, has counted every cancer death in Hiroshima and Nagasaki as the legacy of the bombs. Now I wonder will there be an annual count of the cancer related deaths from Fukushima? When will we learn that nuclear power is not a perpetual motion machine to boil water?
I \ Duplicate, sorry
>^^<
I just wanted to get this up top!!
LET'S NEVER FORGET THE BRAVE TECH'S LITERALLY DYING TO SAVE THIS MESS!
Unfortunate,, it's bloody crimonal! butr the responsible are never the ones to suffer are they!
>^^<
Your empathy (including any knowledge you may have of Japanese culture) probably makes you acutely aware, that all who feel responsible (engineers, regulators, even "gasp" financiers) are going through excruciating pain and remorse about what became of Fukushima-Daiichi in the tsunami. Maybe you would join me in wishing for each of them every opportunity to apply their experience and expertise to an ever-safer and better-understood (and partially nuclear-powered?) future.
And yes! Major respect to the emergency crews and scientists who are, no doubt applying intense effort and spirit to disaster recovery. Let's not forget about those working to relieve suffering from the many other (and more deadly) industrial accidents associated with Japan's latest earthquakes and tsunami.
A difficult truth of this entire Japanese disaster (as you are probably aware) is that much infrastructure (industrial fires, hydroelectric dam breaks, etc) claimed so very many victims, and have left an immense wake of sorrow and suffering. There is so very much to do to recover from all this, put it all into realistic perspective, and to prevent it from recurring around the world. I hope for this kind of recovery, without the world becoming debilitatingly mesmerized by disproportionate and irrational radiophobia.
yes, and here in Seattle, our post-Fukushima weather was both dramatically windy, with powerful gusts for several days coming from precisely the worst direction, the southwest, and particularly wet, with more than one heavy downpour during...
I have heard Geiger counters are hard to find, but I will start looking...
why is it so hard to get accurate local counts?
one wonders whether one is too late, or whether to comb the beaches for kelp, or simply stay indoors...
death is always out there, waiting...
keep that in front of your mind, and go about your prioritized business with a kind word for others, saving time for relaxation and play...
hookah time, jam time, orgy time...fiesta...carne vale...
Both of these links show Washington counts:
http://www.doh.wa.gov/topics/japan/monitor.htm
http://radiationnetwork.com/
thank you...this helps...
I will try to see if I can locate individuals in my area that have Geiger counters to see what they're reading...
The page has apparently moved.
The Washington State page is ok, and the readings look as expected, almost all the radiation went south, to LA. Here in Sacramento the hottest thing radioactivly is my neighbors, granite counter top. I only recently started daily readings, I had had a film badge on my cars dashboard for a few days, but it didn't react at all.
Time will tell.
>^^<
I suppose the industry ghouls will be along any minute now to tell us why logic isn't logical, poison isn't poisonous and danger isn't dangerous.
Unfortunately, the people in Japan seem to be getting the same type of disinformation. The water was radioactive yesterday but it's drinkable today?
Really?
Really.
http://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/special-reports/first-pictures-of-the-fukushima-50-the-nameless-samurai-saving-japan-from-meltdown/story-fn7zkbgs-1226027417825
Shill posts a link to an article that says: "After widespread alarm a day earlier when radioactive iodine above the safe level for infants was discovered in the capital's tap water, officials said it had dropped back to non-dangerous levels."
Thanks for the "official" view shill. I had referenced it in my original post but you were good enough to confirm what "officials" said.
Officials trying to prevent panic aren't what I'd consider a reliable source. If you - well, not you - if a real person had an infant in Tokyo, I suspect they'd still try to use bottled water, because that radioactive iodine had to go somewhere and there's no guarantee that, even if the levels really have gone down, they won't jump up again.
I wrote: "I suppose the industry ghouls will be along any minute now to tell us why logic isn't logical, poison isn't poisonous and danger isn't dangerous."
And sure enough, the Ghoul Du Jour, Hypewaders, wades in to prove me right.
Hey Hype, would you like to "wade" through that plant water?
Gonna tell us how safe it is when it turns to steam?
They could have put on extra filtration, moved to another source pump,, ease up there Fox Moulder.. not everything is a conspiracy.
They've been dealing with radition since Hiroshima, I'm sure they know more than you or I about day to day precautions.
>^^<
I hope you're right.
Me too, cause Americans are idiots! if that's who's telling them how to handle it their doomed! DOOMED I SAY!
>^^<
<:oD
Ctrl-Z: "Hey Hype, would you like to "wade" through that plant water?"
With the right gear, and if I could do it without getting in the way of smarter people doing very important work, then YES! I would jump at the chance (without making too big a splash, of course).
"Gonna tell us how safe it is when it turns to steam?"
If you care to study the science, you'll surely distill some knowledge about how the volatile products are a lot less scary than the heavier and insoluble elements. I'm actually not a fan of old boiler plants of this design- what a pity the tsunami came before the scheduled shutdown of the rest of the Fukushima reactors next year. Their ancient (by NP standards) design was all predicated on the principle of how steam separates the particulate nasties particularly well (which it admittedly does). That's how they were able to run steam straight from the core out of containment, through the turbines and back without heat exchangers.
That steam directly from the core routinely ran all over the boat always seemed a little freaky to me in the Navy, when I found myself moving around various plumbing with disconcerting labels. But as I recall, they also taught us more about the environmental systems than made me comfortable at the time- Secondary hydogen/oxygen circuits were so much more deadly (and explosive) than the dreaded nuke-you-lar steam-circuits on a really bad day aboard a submarine.
Which is what went so terribly wrong at Fukushima-Daiichi: Hydrogen explosions didn't blow up the core or storage- but they sure got everyone's attention. And yes, there's some nightmarish plumbing work, but this is not Chernobyl. Actually, Chernobyl was not Chernobyl (but that's another story boys and girls).
http://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/basic-ref/teachers/03.pdf
http://www.loe.org/shows/segments.html?programID=02-P13-00006&segmentID=9
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boiling_water_reactor
http://www.acme-nuclear.com/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Browns_Ferry_Unit_1_under_construction.jpg
http://www.nisa.meti.go.jp/english/files/en20110326-2-2.pdf
Chernobyl in 1986 - the timing is right. Maybe it explains how the world got so stupid as to apply Thatcherism-Friedmanism, LSE economic policies that have led to one disaster after another, human and technical.
Tokyo: A Long Way from Chernobyl -Sophie Knight
"there are several reasons why there will not be a spread of radioactive material significant enough to have health impacts beyond the 30-kilometre evacuation zone."
"...people have complained that both the Japanese government and the plant’s operators, TEPCO, have refused to discuss a ‘worst case scenario’, whereas the American and European press have been all too happy to oblige. The supposed lack of information in Japan (or rather the typically Japanese vague manner of speech and expression) has created a vacuum, into which the dark sludge of paranoia from the foreign press has poured. We need to evaluate the opinions of experts who actually have a grasp on the numbers and understand what different levels of radiation imply for human health, rather than meaningless figures such as ‘20 times higher than normal’."
"The general public, of course, is rarely rational in its response to such intense and hysterical media coverage. For every event, whether it is a natural disaster or a political crisis, there is always an extreme dislocation between actual events and the ‘angle’ given by journalists weary of the string of disasters they are made to report on."
"...In this case, the baseless scaremongering of the foreign press about the risk of radiation poisoning has had significant consequences."
http://www.spiked-online.com/index.php/site/article/10329/
http://techcrunch.com/2011/03/24/media-nuclear-hysteria/
Here's a video blog and a valiant effort: Katz Ueno is endeavoring to cut through the hysteria in international channels, by sharing all the information available to him live from Japan
http://www.ustwrap.info/multi/nhk-gtv::yokosonews::tbstv.
Long after these facts are proven to be true, the dumbass people amongst us will finally find get it. However, as planned, they will still be blaming the Japanese for this and not industries that brought you these failures and disinformation.
This entire tragedy (Fukushima and the wider disaster) and the Japanese response will be an admirable example to the world, of calm and resourcefulness in crisis- especially educational in the countries to which anxious and traumatized expats have been fleeing from Japan to in the greatest numbers.
In the USA (and especially along the Pacific coast) we should watch carefully as the full picture emerges, and learn about collective level-headedness. This could happen to us tomorrow, and we are not prepared nearly as well (logistically and psychologically) as are the Japanese people for emergencies like this.
OMG! Shill accidentally told the truth: "This could happen to us tomorrow..."
Thanks Shill!
Good catch ctrl-z!
: )
Phase II in my opinion and brightest hopes includes better education all around the world in radioecology (and many other things). We've really got to get hard to work reversing the dumb-down, before the ecological/gaian life-support smack-down outpaces our evolution of rational collective thinking.
Phase III, safer nuclear power: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thorium_fuel_cycle
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pebble_bed_reactor
also part of phase III, dramatically reduced greenhouse, toxic, and radio emissions from (presently still accelerating) fossil-fuel energy conversions, polluting our world while we burn up the irreplaceable hydrocarbon "furniture" for future structures more amazing than we've yet dreamed of.
...because Phase IV is when we start to harmonize and integrate our technologies with the art and soul of life, and then with Singular intelligence, our minds adapt to embrace a wondrous new balance and symbiotic fusion of nature and science... but I'm getting much too far ahead.
Back in the right here and now, and in an abundance of friendly curiousity, Hugh:
When there are airline disasters- do you feel compelled to advocate the abolition of aviation? Why Not (pray tell)? I expect you're aware of the accidental and even deliberate death toll from flying over the past century- and of the pollution, not to mention unparalleled volume of public exposure to ionizing radiation- all part of our riding so high.
You're no dummy, so you're probably aware and rationally accepting of these attendant risks and tragic history (not to mention the peanuts served in flight) even though they soar far higher than the nuclear power risks and casualties. What if we assessed the butcher and environmental bill for the automobile?
I don't imagine you're ready to call for their banning them for their climate-changing emissions, and a half million or so traumatic deaths (and still more traumatic disfigurements and debilitations) on the world's highways every year?
Are these concerns that bother you to the point that you want to see these activities stopped? I'd really like to know.
I apologize for being gruesome about the road kill we all mostly overlook and accept while media insulates us from confronting our greatest risks (we could talk about war here too). I'm loathe to draw the aviation comparison without also keeping road pollution and death, and the costs of warfare in perspective. I don't want anyone to live in fear, but I think it's a crying shame that collective fears can so dramatically distort our perceptions.
The greatest manipulators of history (and the future if we don't wizen up) know it very well. By the looks of things, present generations seem to be getting more and more vulnerable to yellow journalism, hysteria, and mass-manipulation through fear, even as the tools of the mass-manipulation trade proliferate. We really need to stop and think (and learn, debate, reach informed consensus, and organize) together.
http://www.nytimes.com/gwire/2011/03/18/18greenwire-humans-wired-for-terror-over-remote-radiation-61371.html?pagewanted=all
http://www.transport-links.org/transport_links/filearea/publications/1_771_Pa3568.pdf
http://www.discovery.com/area/skinnyon/skinnyon970212/skinny1.html
http://www.businessweek.com/ap/financialnews/D9M6EQE00.htm
http://ca.news.yahoo.com/video/canews-22424922/fighting-nuclear-fear-24527444.html
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/reaction/interviews/dupont.htmlhttp://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/reaction/interviews/dupont.html
"This could happen to us tomorrow, and we are not prepared."
Right.
They got Earthquakes, yearly Monsoons, and Hurricanes, also Godzilla and Mothra to worry about, I'm not surprised how well they handle emergencies.
>^^<
In a "fair" world of equal justice GE would face the corporate death penalty for the nuke disaster in Japan......
Just as Halliburton should have faced the death penalty numerous times for their destruction they've spread.
Same w/ BP and other corporate malfeasers.
Exactly right! Line 'em up and let's get rid of them; their "owners" need to go, too.
well nobody's interested in New Orleans, or the Gulf in general. Maybe we should move them overseas. (Nobody cares about America) least of all americans!
>^^<
As Andrew Jackson is noted to have said, a Corporation is a very hard thing to kill. Note that as before todays multinational monstors!
He was against allowing any corporations to be formed with out a 10yr sunset, forcing the corporations to prove trheir worth befor re-licensing would be allowed.
Course he was also for a Poll Taxx(like) and owned slaved (not like)
>^^<
The was a nuke plant near Portland Oregon called Trojan - it has been closed down since 1993 BUT the spent fuel rods are Still onsite and guarded around the clock -
The costs still to be borne deconstructing the parts of the plant still in existence are believed to be MORE than the cost to build it initially.
Nuke power is cheap? Even when you have high costs decades AFTER the plant stops producing electricity?
Only if you suspend all environmental laws, free market economic laws and Common Sense does Nuke power remain "Cheap".
What it is is Pure corporate welfare at a deadly cost -
hey anything or any danger for a nickle's profit to the Predator Vampires running our economic system.
The fuel rods (nothing spent about them) must be carefully managed for - Millions - of years. Even dry casks wear out after 60 years or so.
Good God!!! What are we doing to ourselves? And the children, what about the children?
I always believed the generations after mine would be the ones to look back at their ancestors and hate them for what they left them. I didn’t know I was going to be that generation!
"Fukushima radioactive fallout nears Chernobyl levels"
http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn20285-fukushima-radioactive-fallout-nears-chernobyl-levels.html
Mark Abram sez: "..the expected health impact is tiny."
What part of "..these substances could nevertheless pose a significant health risk outside the plant" did you miss?
New Press Conference info: Evidence indicates there are melted fuel rods in Number 3 reactor spent fuel pool.
Anyway, I urge people to check the link and see if you think they're saying "the expected health impact is tiny.".
Perhaps you should wait until the crisis is over before making that claim..
Can teach humans to read and write,,but you can't force them to listen or learn. Such insane, willful ignorance, can't be helped.. Except into a rubber room, so they can't scare the other lack-wits.
>^^<
Perhaps you should read what he wrote. He didn't qualify the health impact, he said it would be tiny because the radiation released was less.
Compared to putting your hand in a live core? Why not! I hear people are booking tours as I write this! lol
>^^<
At Chernobyl, the core rods blew up from being exposed. The Russian military claims they seeded the clouds to protect Moscow and the surrounding area from the fallout. The rain came down as black rain in Belarus.
Another big difference would be Chernobyl only used uranium.
This is still possible in Japan!
MA sez: " It's looking like they've got it under control."
In a press conference today they said it looks as if rods in the No. 3 containment pool have melted down. I'm pretty sure that's not part of the containment plan.
In Chernobyl, the graphite moderator material burned, "urainium melts", Some was carried away by the winds, Most of the release from Chernobyl was radioactive graphite and concrete, and a hells mix of lighter elements picked up in the fire and set on the winds!.
In japan nothing is burning, some light elements are attaching themselves to the steam from the cooling water. The biggest danger is a "Melt-Down" Japan especially in the Mt Fugi area is lose basalt,(Like Hawaii) this allows a lot of water to pool underground if the 500 - 600 deg mass hits an underground pool (a surity in a melt-down) a steam expolsion will shower thousans of miles with light, radioactive rock flakes and steam! Thiss will be a real problem, as your only hope is to isolate the mass of the former reactor from water! Not easy on a pile of loose rocks!
>^^<
Hoping for the best, being ready for the worst!
The Austrian Meteorlogical Bureau estimates 20%-50% of Chernobly released already, French Gov. estimates 20% and the question still is will they do an total explosive meltdown.
The Japanese gov. has been criminal in its miniscule evacuation area.
Intentionally inflammatory rhetoric.
Goldstein! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=55j_L9E2Ld0
"The New York Times quoted Japan’s deputy chief cabinet secretary, Tetsuro Fukuyama, as observing that he would let his own children “eat the spinach” from Fukushima."
What if Tetsuro Fukuyama is a bad parent who might even abuse his children?
Tsk-tsk, Ghandighost.
But I had a similar cynical thought: Fukuyama wouldn't be the first person whose overweening loyalty to Authority, The Boss, and their Profession (job) affected their judgement in a way that caused them to put their own families, children included, in harm's way.
Nuclear power causes illegal immigration
Japan's NRC and Tepco's caring more about delaying putting sea water in the reactors because of the possibility of making them to be unusable. its the ultimate insult to all humanity. Nuclear Energy Is a Filthy, Deadly, Source of Energy. Their Safety and Waste Management procedures are a bad Joke. Any politician who backs this dangerous technology should be recalled now. Look at the facts. you have six nuclear reactors, six overloaded, idiotically designed waste holding tanks (Please don't forget they were designed by the American Company that Pays No US Income Tax and Shares No Liability (G E General Electric). These tanks have had the bottoms blown out of them because someone was stupid enough to design them above a nuclear reactor on the 3rd floor! Give me a break. What kind of Stupidity is this. And you want to build more of these death machines, and keep the 27 of the same design up and running despite safety concerns? It is totally insane. The radiation from the machines from hell has already reached the California coast and has been deposited in the rains on all of the residents. Look at the radiation fallout in Sweden after the Russian Accident in 1986. Chernobyl only contained 180 tonnes of Uranium and no plutonium. The current emergency in the 6 Burning Japanese reactors hold 2000 tonnes of uranium rods and all six have no circulation systems that are working! How do you say Worst Case Scenario.? THE NRC, The Lobbyist Group for the Nuclear Industry is controlled by the Nuclear Industry so they can not tell you the truth about what is going on in Japan. And we are supposed to believe the same idiots who back this "guaranteed to loose" industry that we are not going to suffer any harm by all of this. I back Germany's answer, Shut these deadly contraptions down and store the nuclear wastes in the basements of those who designed financed and promote them. If they wont, we should shut them all down and move to implement clean energy sources now.
What about all the water used to cool the reactors and the fuel rods? It absorbs heat and radiation, and then they dump it back into the environment, whether the ocean, rivers, lakes, or streams. That water doesn't magically become non-radioactive. Does anyone know the science of this problem?
What about the fact that much of this radiation will remain lethal for thousands, even millions, of years. If Fukushima has 2000 tons of spent fuel rods, then most older reactors must also have many tons. How many tons in your backyard, or in the world? We need to stop now.