Japan – Nuclear Plant Leaking Highly Radioactive Water Into Pacific Ocean

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    In this Friday, April 1, 2011 photo released by Tokyo Electric Power Co. (TEPCO), a TEPCO employee points at a maintenance pit with a crack inside, not in the photo, on the edge of the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear nuclear power plant in Okumamachi, Fukushima Prefecture, northeastern Japan. The crack was apparently caused by the March 11 earthquake and may have been leaking since then, said the company's spokesman Osamu Yokokura. (AP Photo/Tokyo Electric Power Co.) Tokyo – Japan’s tsunami-stricken nuclear power plant was leaking highly radioactive water into the sea Saturday, nuclear safety officials said.

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    The plant has been spewing radioactivity since March 11, when a magnitude-9.0 earthquake and ensuing tsunami knocked out power, disabling cooling systems and allowing radiation to seep out of the overheating reactors.

    The water was seeping Saturday from a newly discovered crack in a maintenance pit on the edge of the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear site into the Pacific Ocean, Japan Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency spokesman Hidehiko Nishiyama said.

    Measurements show the air right above it contained 1,000 millisieverts of radioactivity. Exposure to 500 millisieverts over a short period of time can increase the long-term risk of cancer. But experts say radiation is quickly diluted by the vast Pacific and that even large amounts have little effect.

    It wasn’t immediately clear whether workers who have been rushing to bring the reactors under control were exposed. People living within 12 miles (20 kilometers) of the Fukushima plant have been evacuated.

    Nishiyama said officials will check the level of radiation in seawater near the reactor as well as seawater around 9 miles (15 kilometers) from the reactor. They will use concrete to seal the 8-inch (20-centimeter) crack and try to stop the radiation from leaking.

    “This could be one of the sources of seawater contamination,” Nishiyama said. “There could be other similar cracks in the area, and we must find them as quickly as possible.”

    Over the past week, radioactivity beyond the legal limit has been detected in seawater just off the plant.


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    3 Comments
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    AlbertEinstein
    AlbertEinstein
    13 years ago

    Scare tactics.

    If you took all the uranium in the reactor (forget about the water) and dispersed it into one cubic kilometer of sea water, the net radiation would be less than background.