First from yesterday's news and topics re: ongoing disaster:
Cabinet's nuclear safety chief totally confused after TEPCO reversal on water injection
The head of the Cabinet Office's Nuclear Safety Commission is at a loss following Tokyo Electric Power Co. (TEPCO)'s sudden denial that a seawater injection operation to cool an overheating reactor at the Fukushima No. 1 Nuclear Power Plant was ever stopped.
"My head is full of question marks. I'm totally confused now," Haruki Madarame told reporters on May 26.
TEPCO had claimed that the injection operation to cool the Fukushima plant's No. 1 reactor was halted by a government order before reversing itself on May 26. Madarame's name had been attached to the supposed halt order due to comments he allegedly made on March 12 warning the operation could reignite nuclear reactions in the core. The comments were included in news conference materials used by the joint government-TEPCO nuclear crisis response office.
Madarame consistently denied any connection to a halt order, and the crisis response office later amended his comments to read, "A return to criticality cannot be ruled out."
"Right now, all I want is someone to tell me what is really going on," Madarame said. "So the operation was never halted. So how did I get dragged into this mess?"
http://mdn.mainichi.jp/mdnnews/news/20110527p2a00m0na005000c.htmlNo shit, Madarame, my feelings exactly. Wait, hasn't he heard what the shills say? Nothing to worry about, trust your utility, trust your government, trust your international regulatory bodies, trust the UN.....
U.S. regulator saw serious Fukushima fuel damage soon after disaster
NEW YORK (Kyodo) -- A senior official of the U.S. nuclear regulatory agency said Thursday he had believed there was a "strong likelihood" of serious core damage and core melt in reactors at the Fukushima nuclear plant in the days after the March disaster in Japan.
"There were numerous indications of high radiation levels that can only come from damaged fuel at those kinds of levels, so we felt pretty confident that there was significant fuel damage at the site a few days into the event," said Bill Borchardt, executive director for operations of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
His agency also had "suspicions" about the spent fuel pool conditions, Borchardt told reporters after a speech at the Japan Society in New York.
Based on that assumption, he said, the commission recommended U.S. residents in Japan remain outside an 80-kilometer radius of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, as opposed to the Japanese government's directives for people living in a 20-km radius to evacuate...
http://mdn.mainichi.jp/mdnnews/news/20110527p2g00m0dm018000c.htmlI know, I know, it was just my Extreme Enviroweenie Biased Claptrap mind that ever thought that was the case.
Nuclear power opponents increase in 7 countries
2011/05/27
More people are opposed to nuclear power since the accident at the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power plant, according to an Asahi Shimbun poll survey of seven nations…
…Those who favored the use of nuclear power outnumbered those against in the United States and France, whereas pros and cons were about even in South Korea and China. Opponents outnumbered proponents in Japan, Germany and Russia…
…There was a marked increase in opposition from before the accident in four countries: from 56 percent to 81 percent in Germany, from 18 percent to 42 percent in Japan, from 27 percent to 45 percent in South Korea and from 36 percent to 48 percent in China. Opposition in Germany, which was already off the charts before the accident, grew…
…Amid criticism that the Japanese government is concealing information on the nuclear plant accident, a larger number of respondents in all countries surveyed said they thought the Japanese government was not supplying accurate and sufficient information on the accident than those who said otherwise. In South Korea, 89 percent of respondents said the Japanese government was withholding information…
http://www.asahi.com/english/TKY201105260164.htmlTEPCO may need to plug leak at Fukushima plant
The operator of the Fukushima nuclear power plant says highly radioactive water continues to leak from a waste disposal facility in the complex.
Tokyo Electric Power Company said on Friday that the water level had dropped by around 3 centimeters as of 7 AM from the level observed at 5 PM on Thursday.
TEPCO had transferred to the facility some of the highly radioactive water flooding the basement of the No.3 reactor's turbine building and nearby tunnel, before it suspended the work earlier this week.
On Thursday, the transferred water was found to be leaking into an underground passage to another building...
Friday, May 27, 2011 12:16 +0900 (JST)
http://www3.nhk.or.jp/daily/english/27_12.htmlWorkers check contaminated water in No.1 reactor
Workers have entered one of the damaged Fukushima reactor buildings to survey a pool of radioactive water that the plant operator plans to recycle as a coolant. The No.1 reactor at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant is thought to have suffered a meltdown after the March 11th earthquake and tsunami.
Highly contaminated water is apparently leaking from holes created in the pressure and containment vessels, flooding the building's basement.
Workers entered the reactor building on Friday, preparing to pump out the leaked water before cooling it and sending it back to the reactor...
...However, water from the No.3 reactor building is apparently leaking from the storage site into a passage leading to another building. Workers are monitoring the flow of water, and aim to prevent it seeping into the ground.
Friday, May 27, 2011 19:45 +0900 (JST)
http://www3.nhk.or.jp/daily/english/27_33.htmlIAEA team inspects Fukushima nuclear plant
A team from the International Atomic Energy Agency has inspected the troubled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant to see damage caused by the March 11th quake and tsunami.
The 18 experts from Britain, France and other countries have been in Japan since Tuesday to investigate the accident at the plant.
On Friday, the team, headed by Mike Weightman, first visited nuclear facilities at the Fukushima Daini plant, which is south of the Daiichi plant.
The head of the Daiichi plant briefed the members on how a series of problems has developed and how the plant's operator has responded...
Friday, May 27, 2011 19:45 +0900 (JST)
http://www3.nhk.or.jp/daily/english/27_36.htmlSuper Typhoon Songda Projected To Pass Over Fukushima Nuclear Power Plant
Tyler Durden
Zero Hedge
May 27, 2011
So far the only good news to accompany the Fukushima catastrophe has been that for all the fallout, the radiation has been mostly contained due to Northwesterly winds which have been blowing any radioactivity mostly out and into the Pacific (coupled with relatively little rainfall), as well as the dispersion of irradiated cooling water which promptly enters the Pacific after which it is never heard of or seen again (there is at least a several year period before 3 eyed tuna fish feature prominently in restaurants across the country). This may be changing soon now that Super Typhoon Songda, which according to Weather Underground will form shortly as a Category 5 storm with 156+ mph winds, will take a northeasterly direction and 2 days later will pass right above Fukushima. The good news: by the time it passes over Fukushima, Songda will be merely a Tropical storm. The bad news: by the time it passes over Fukushima, Songda will be a Tropical storm. As the latest dispersion projection from ZAMG shows, over the next two days the I-131 plume will be covering all of the mainland. Although judging by how prominent this whole topic is in the MSM lately, it seems that conventional wisdom now agrees with Ann Coulter that radioactivity is actually quite good for you.
http://www.prisonplanet.com/super-typhoon-songda-projected-to-pass-over-fukushima-nuclear-power-plant.htmlHi ho!