Michele Kearney's Nuclear Wire

Major Energy and Environmental News and Commentary affecting the Nuclear Industry.

Friday, April 15, 2011

Q&A With Richard Muller: A Physicist and His Surprising Climate Data

Q&A With Richard Muller: A Physicist and His Surprising Climate Data

Global Warning No Nukes? Bjørn Lomborg

Global Warning

No Nukes?

Bjørn Lomborg

Tiny Nukes How dangerous are small doses of radiation? By Darshak Sanghavi

Tiny Nukes

How dangerous are small doses of radiation?

Japan's nuclear crisis It’s the worst; it’s also not so bad

Japan's nuclear crisis

It’s the worst; it’s also not so bad

Is Carbon Sequestration Really Green? - Newsweek newsweek.com

 

Bubbles of the Future?

Carbon sequestration is a promising potential way to reduce climate change, but many environmentalists aren't supporting it.

What if the $152 billion to clean up Fukushima were spent on solar instead?

nukes

What if the $152 billion to clean up Fukushima were spent on solar instead? 


NucNet: NISA Fears Leak Of Cooling Water From Fukushima-Daiichi Unit 2

THE NUCLEAR COMMUNICATIONS NETWORK World Nuclear Review – week ending 15th April 2011

NISA Fears Leak Of Cooling Water From Fukushima-Daiichi Unit 2

15 Apr (NucNet): Water being used to cool the number 2 reactor at the Fukushima-Daiichi nuclear plant might be leaking into the trench between the reactor and turbine building, Japan’s Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency (NISA) has said.

The plant's operator, Tokyo Electric Power Company (Tepco), transferred about 660 tonnes of highly contaminated wastewater from the unit 2 turbine building installation trench to a turbine condenser on 13 April 2011.

As a result, the water level in the trench dropped by 8 cm, but had risen again by 3 cm yesterday morning.

The contaminated water needs to be moved because there is a risk it might continue to leak outside the unit’s controlled zone and from there flow into the sea.

Contaminated water has also been found in the turbine hall basements of units 1 and 3, although its level of radioactivity is much lower than the water at unit 2.

The total amount of water to be removed is estimated at more than 60,000 tonnes, the International Atomic Energy Agency said.

The water has been hampering work to restore the reactors’ cooling systems.

Tepco also plans to transfer contaminated water to the plant's waste processing facility, but the facility has not yet been made leak-proof. The utility says it does not know when it can start removing water from reactors other than unit 2.

Yesterday, workers continued to move emergency diesel generators to higher ground where they would be safe from aftershocks and tsunamis, according the Japan Atomic Industrial Forum.

NISA reported that an earthquake that hit Fukushima prefecture on 13 April 2011 had an epicentre 75 km from the Fukushima-Daiichi nuclear power plant and 67 km from Fukushima-Daini, but no unusual events have been reported at either facility.

Meanwhile, interim analysis of water from the spent fuel pool of unit 4 at Fukushima-Daiichi shows higher than normal levels of radiation, which suggests some of the fuel assemblies stored there might be damaged.

Tepco said analysis of samples collected from the pool on 12 April 2011 showed 220 kilobecquerels per litre (kBq/L) of iodine-131, 88 kBq/L of caesium-134 and 93 kBq/L of caesium-137.

The utility also said the water temperature in the unit 4 SFP had risen to about 90 degrees Celsius, significantly higher than the normal temperature range of 20 to 40 degrees Celsius.

To cool the fuel, workers sprayed almost 200 tonnes of water on the SFP for six hours on Wednesday morning.

The condition of spent fuel in the SFPs at units 1 and 2 is not known, while at unit 3 Tepco says it suspects there might be some damage.

Cooling capacity at all four SFPs was lost after the earthquake and tsunami on 11 March 2011 and keeping the fuel cool has been a priority as Tepco works to stabilize the plant.

Stabilizing Fuel Likely To Take Months, Atomic Energy Society Says

15 Apr (NucNet): Once cooling systems have been fully restored at the Fukushima-Daiichi nuclear plant it is likely to take another two or three months before all nuclear fuel can be stabilized, the Atomic Energy Society of Japan has said.

The society’s deputy head, Takashi Sawada, made the projection at a meeting of society members yesterday, the Japan Atomic Industrial Forum (JAIF) said.

He said data published by plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Company (Tepco) show that parts of the fuel rods in reactors 1 and 3 have melted and settled at the bottom of the reactor pressure vessels.

Mr Sawada said Tepco’s most important task is to remove all the contaminated water and rebuild a cooling water circulation system.

Contaminated water has also been found in the turbine hall basements of units 1, 2 and 3. According to the International Atomic Energy Agency the amount of water to be removed has been estimated at more than 60,000 tonnes.

Once these jobs are done, stabilizing the nuclear fuel could take 2 to 3 months, if not longer, Mr Sawada said.

But he warned that the situation could deteriorate if another strong earthquake knocks out power to the plant and makes it impossible to keep the nuclear fuel cool for a few days.

Tsunami Reached Heights Of 15 Metres At Plant, Says Tepco

15 Apr (NucNet): The tsunami that hit the Fukushima-Daiichi nuclear plant in northern Japan on 11 March 2011 reached heights of up to 15 metres, exceeding the plant’s design reference value of five metres, Tokyo Electric Power Company (Tepco) said.

Tepco said that a survey of high water marks at the plant had shown that the tsunami reached up to 15 meters on the ocean side of the reactor and turbine buildings, significantly higher than the original estimate of 5.7 metres.

Tepco said that all six reactors at the plant had been under as much as five meters of water.

Japan Announces Evacuation Plans For More Residents

15 Apr (NucNet): The Japanese government is to evacuate the population of a number of towns and villages to the northwest of the Fukushima-Daiichi nuclear plant to prevent the accumulation of individual exposure doses over the next 12 months.

According to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), authorities have found that some areas beyond the existing 20 km evacuation zone could be exposed to more than 20 millisieverts (mSv) during the course of the next year, until March 2012.

The evacuation will be a “planned evacuation” with authorities aiming to move people within the next four weeks.
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Lawmakers seek studies for Calif. nuclear plants By ADAM WEINTRAUB Associated Press

Lawmakers seek studies for Calif. nuclear plants

By ADAM WEINTRAUB Associated Press
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U.S. needs nuclear storage site

U.S. needs nuclear storage site

More data reveals spread of radiation

 

More data reveals spread of radiation
15 April 2011
More sand lances caught in waters off of Fukushima and Ibaraki prefectures have been found to be contaminated with radiation.
Reactor-by-reactor, system-by-system summary from JAIF as of 15 April
Reactor-by-reactor, system-by-system summary from JAIF as of 15 April; yellow indicates abnormal/unstable; red means damaged/nonfunctional/unsafe
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The Case for Moving U.S. Nuclear Fuel to Dry Storage

Energy

The Case for Moving U.S. Nuclear Fuel to Dry Storage

Nuclear waste pools are packed more densely in the U.S. than those at Fukushima, with no removal plan in sight.

New Mexico looks to expand nuclear-waste business

New Mexico looks to expand nuclear-waste business

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Pilgrim will store its waste in casks

Pilgrim will store its waste in casks

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T.V.A. Considers Improvements for 6 U.S. Nuclear Reactors By MATTHEW L. WALD

T.V.A. Considers Improvements for 6 U.S. Nuclear Reactors

Burial of Japan reactors trickier than Chernobyl: pump firm

Map of Japan with Fukushima highlightedImage via Wikipedia

Burial of Japan reactors trickier than Chernobyl: pump firm

(Reuters) - Encasing reactors at Japan's Fukushima nuclear plant in concrete would present much more of a challenge than Chernobyl, according to an executive of the firm whose pumps are helping cooling efforts there.
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Tepco to Move Backup Generators as Months of Aftershocks Loom

logoImage via Wikipedia

Tepco to Move Backup Generators as Months of Aftershocks Loom

 

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German nuclear exit 'would cost up to EUR2 bn': minister

German nuclear exit 'would cost up to EUR2 bn': minister
Berlin (AFP) April 15, 2011 - German Economy Minister Rainer Bruederle said Friday that a switch from nuclear power to alternative forms of energy could cost Europe's top economy up to two billion euros ($2.9 billion) per year. "It could be one to two billion euros," the minister told German radio, cautioning that a precise figure was "difficult to estimate." Citing internal government projections, the Sueddeutsche Z ... more
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Russia talks up nuclear energy after Japan crisis

Russia talks up nuclear energy after Japan crisis
Boao, China (AFP) April 15, 2011 - Russian President Dmitry Medvedev said Friday the ongoing nuclear crisis in Japan should not hinder the development of atomic energy, amid global concerns over the safety of nuclear facilities. "In the nearest future, we will hand over to our partners proposals on the development of peaceful nuclear energy taking into account the Japanese tragedy," Medvedev said at a forum on China's souther ... more
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Japan orders nuclear firm to compensate families

Japan orders nuclear firm to compensate families
Tokyo (AFP) April 15, 2011 - Japan's government on Friday ordered the embattled operator of the crippled Fukushima nuclear plant to offer payouts to tens of thousands of people made homeless by the ongoing crisis. Tokyo Electric Power (TEPCO) said it would give an initial one million yen ($12,000) to each family living around the radiation-leaking Fukushima Daiichi power station. "We have decided to offer necessary ... more
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US downgrades Japan nuclear evacuation advice

US downgrades Japan nuclear evacuation advice
Tokyo (AFP) April 15, 2011 - The US has downgraded advice that had sent diplomats' families fleeing Japan in the wake of a nuclear emergency, allowing them to return to the country, a statement said Friday. "The Department of State has lifted voluntary authorised departure, allowing dependents of the US government employees to return to Japan," said a statement issued in Washington. The statement said the risk from ... more
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