Saturday, November 19, 2011

#Radiation in Japan: First International Flight to Fukushima Airport Since March 11

A chartered flight from Taiwan arrived for the first time since March 11 at Fukushima Airport, carrying tourists who will spend their vacations in locations inside Fukushima Prefecture.

I don't understand why they do it; my best guess is that they just couldn't pass up great bargains to be had in Fukushima. It could be the bargain that they didn't even need to pay for the trip.

Asahi Shinbun (11/19/2011) reports:

東日本大震災と東京電力福島第一原発の事故の後、約8カ月ぶりとなる国際線のチャーター機が到着した福島空港の国際定期線再開に向けネックになっているのは、放射能汚染を心配する各国の規制だ。福島県は、各国・地域の航空会社に再開を要請し続け、19日の運航にこぎ着けたが、「次便は未定」(観光交流課)という。

The first chartered flight since the March 11 earthquake and Fukushima I Nuclear Power Plant accident arrived in Fukushima Airport. Regular international flights to and from Fukushima Airport haven't resumed, due to the restrictions placed by foreign countries for the fear of radiation contamination. Fukushima Prefecture has been requesting the resumption of the international flights to the international airlines in foreign countries and regions, and November 19's flight is the first result of the effort. However, according to the tourism section of the Fukushima prefectural government, the next flight is not scheduled.

 福島空港は原発から約60キロ離れ、放射線量は毎時0.1~0.2マイクロシーベルト台と低い。しかし、日本政府観光局が把握しているだけでも、12カ国・地域が福島県への渡航制限などを続ける。この日、福島に向けチャーター便が飛んだ台湾も、「福島県からの退避勧告」を出しており、観光客たちは自己責任で来県した。

The air radiation level at Fukushima Airport, 60 kilometers away from the nuclear power plant, is low, between 0.1 and 0.2 microsievert/hour. As far as the Japan National Tourism Organization (JNTO) knows, twelve countries and regions continue the travel restriction to Japan. Taiwan, from which the charter flight to Fukushima today was originated, recommends "evacuation from Fukushima Prefecture". The tourists came at their own risk.

 成長戦略の柱として外国人観光客増加を目指す日本が期待する中国も、依然として「深刻な被災地への訪問自粛」を勧告している。政府は各国に規制解除を働きかけるが、「色よい返事はない」(観光庁)という。

Japan is looking toward China as the growth engine for international tourism, but China continues to maintain the recommendation not to visit the areas seriously affected by the disaster. The Japanese government has been working on the foreign counterparts to loosen the travel restrictions, but so far received "no favorable response", according to JNTO.

Since when 0.1 to 0.2 microsievert/hour became "low radiation" level? It used to be 0.03 to 0.06 microsievert/hour in Fukushima before the accident.

JNTO has a website specifically targeting Taiwanese tourists, and has been heavily promoting Tohoku region including Fukushima.

Japanese Researcher: "Reactor 2 Suppression Chamber May Have Been Damaged in the Earthquake"

The researcher, Fumiya Tanabe, is the same one who also said back in August that the fuel of Reactor 3 had melted twice and dropped onto the Containment Vessel.

If what he says is true that the Reactor 2's Suppression Chamber broke during the earthquake, it may have grave implications for all the other nuclear reactors in Japan with the same earthquake specifications.

Reactor 2's building exterior is pretty much intact, with only one hole on the side of the building. Yet, the NISA's estimate shows this reactor may have released more radioactive materials than the other reactors (1 and 3). If the Suppression Chamber was broken as soon as the earthquake hit on March 11, that may explain it.

From Kyodo News Japanese (11/19/2011):

東京電力福島第1原発2号機で、原子炉格納容器下部の圧力抑制プールが地震の揺れで早期に損傷したか、劣化した可能性が高いとする解析結果を19日までに、原子力安全の専門家がまとめた。

An expert in nuclear safety complied the result of the analysis by November 19 that shows the high possibility of the Suppression Chamber of Reactor 2 at Fukushima I Nuclear Power Plant having been damaged or degraded by the earthquake.

 東電は、地震による原子炉の明らかな損傷はなく、津波による電源喪失が事故原因との立場。揺れで損傷していれば、福島第1と同様に従来の耐震基準が適用されている他の原発への影響も必至だ。東電や政府の事故調査・検証委員会の調査結果が注目される。

TEPCO still maintains its position that there was no visible damage to the reactors by the earthquake, and the cause of the accident was the loss of power because of tsunami. If the reactors were damaged by the earthquake, it would affect other nuclear power plants in Japan whose anti-earthquake standards are the same as those of Fukushima I Nuclear Power Plant. A closer look at the result of investigation by TEPCO and the fact-finding committee of the national government would be warranted.

 解析したのは日本原子力研究開発機構の元研究者で、社会技術システム安全研究所(茨城県ひたちなか市)の田辺文也所長。

The researcher who did the analysis is Fumiya Tanabe, a former researcher at the Japan Atomic Energy Agency (JAEA) and the current head of the Research Institute on Safety of Technology Systems (my translation, and not the formal name of the organization; 社会技術システム安全研究所) in Hitachinaka City in Ibaraki Prefecture.

I am trying to locate the details of his findings.

OT: President Obama Seen Chewing Gum Constantly in the ASEAN Meeting in Bali, Indonesia

The ASEAN meeting in Bali, Indonesia is being covered widely in Japan, as the Noda administration has expressed its extreme willingness to join the TPP (Trans-Pacific Partnership) pushed by the US administration. The TPP is a regional so-called "free-trade" agreement whose ultimate purpose seems to be the isolation of China in the region.

Watching the TV coverage of the ASEAN meeting, some Japanese are surprised to see what they perceive as "bad manners" by President Obama - chewing gum constantly, even in front of the cameras and during the face-to-face meeting with the Chinese premier. Crossing legs is not looked on very well either.

You can view President Obama chewing gum at ASEAN meeting at NHK News (11/19/2011). Click on the screen on the left side for the video.

It must be the nicotine gum, I assume. And no one in his entourage to caution the president.

At the same time, it may all be in perspective. Which one would the Japanese prefer,

  • A US president who puked on the laps of a Japanese prime minister in a state banquet (Papa Bush and PM Miyazawa); or

  • A US president who decided to drop nuclear bombs on Japan in short succession back in 1945; or

  • A US company selling nuclear reactors which spectacularly failed 40 years later; or

  • A US president who chews gum in an international conference?

Cesium-137 Deposition Simulation Shows Extensive Ocean Contamination Even in Japan Sea

I wrote on Monday November 14 about the paper by the international team of scientists on cesium-137 deposition simulation after the Fukushima I Nuclear Power Plant accident, from March 20 to April 19.

In the English paper that I linked, there was a map of cesium-137 deposition simulation in much wider area of Japan, which I showed in the post.

But then, in the press release by Nagoya University (one of the scientists is from this university), I realized I should have linked the different map of cesium-137 deposition simulation on land and on the ocean. A whole lot of radioactive materials may have fallen on the ocean, the Pacific Ocean AND the Japan Sea. (Remember, this is a simulation map, not the actual measurement.)

Looking at the map, I don't think I want to eat anything from the Pacific Ocean. Or the Japan Sea. Abalone fishing just started in Iwate Prefecture.

By the way, the paper and the researchers were criticized heavily on Twitter a couple of days ago (it still continues) from other researchers in Japan. Their beef was that the researchers of the paper withheld this information from the public when it could have made the difference in determining the government policy or in alerting more people on the possibility of much wider radiation contamination. Instead, the researchers waited for the peer review in the very prestigious scientific venue (the National Academy of Sciences of the United States) to be finished and the paper published. Some say the researchers had the temerity to say in their Nagoya University press release on November 15, "We request that the information in the paper not be used to spread a new set of "baseless rumors" [on the contamination]."

Well, as we have seen, they are not alone. There have been a lot of Japanese researchers who have done what they just did, announcing what could have been the vital information after their papers got accepted by foreign peer-reviewed magazines. I personally know one, whose radiation survey result in locations in Fukushima might have made a significant difference. But the researcher is still sitting on the data (though he was careless enough to put it on his website for a long time), because his paper is being peer-reviewed.

But then there are researchers like Professor Yukio Hayakawa of Gunma University, who released the radiation contour map he created soon after the accident, to much ridicule from the establishment initially. And Professor Bin Mori of Tokyo University, who published his world-first discovery of bio-concentration of radioactive silver in spider on his personal blog, and allowed me to spread the information both in Japanese and in English so that more people know about it as soon as possible.

Well, Professors Hayakawa and Mori have the professorship, and these researchers do not. Still it is too bad that they had to put their careers before the welfare of the population in Japan.

Friday, November 18, 2011

King and Queen of Bhutan Visited Elementary School in Fukushima, Cheered Children

The young king of Bhutan Jigme Khesar Namgyel Wangchuck and his 21-year-old queen Jetsun Pema Wangchuck, whom he married in October, have been in Japan as the first national guests after the March 11 disaster.

On November 18, they visited Soma City in Fukushima Prefecture and talk to children in an elementary school. The king talked about a "dragon" in everybody's heart. Children were ecstatic.

Bhutan is a "country of dragon". East of today's Iraq, a dragon is associated with power, majesty, and nobility. Total opposite of the west. The king would be horrified at Siegfried killing the dragon.

From NHK News video (11/18/2011), this is what the king said to the children of Soma City (he spoke in English):

Do you know that the dragons exist? I've seen the dragon. [Children go "What....?", some giggles.]

There's a dragon in each and every single one of us.

Dragons feed on experiences. It becomes stronger and stronger over the years. We must always be in control of that dragon.

He told the children to be strong, and feed the dragon inside them.

Afterwards, one of the children said, "I am so excited. He shook my hand, and I'm not going to wash it."

The king, devout Buddhist, performed a ritual of consolation for the dead at a location in the city where the tsunami swept off everything.

There are many on the net who expressed dismay that the Japanese government is using the young royal couple as another PR ploy that Fukushima is safe. One TV station (I don't know which one) apparently said in the morning news that this was all good, because it proved to the world that Fukushima was safe to visit, even for royals.

He and his wife are clearly touching the hearts of many Japanese, though their visit is not that widely publicized in the media, except for the visit to Fukushima.

I hope his country is set to receive tremendous amount of money and aid from Japan for his kindness.


IAEA: Source of Iodine-131 in Europe Is the Institute of Isotopes Ltd in Budapest, Hungary

(UPDATE) The said Hungarian Institute says "It's not us." "If the source of heightened radioactivity had been Budapest, the levels measured here should have been much higher."

-----------------------------------------------

The press release on 11/17/2011 from IAEA (emphasis is mine):

17 November 2011 | The IAEA has received information from the Hungarian Atomic Energy Authority (HAEA) that the source of the iodine-131 (I-131) detected in Europe was most probably a release to the atmosphere from the Institute of Isotopes Ltd., Budapest. The Institute of Isotopes Ltd. produces radioisotopes for healthcare, research and industrial applications. According to the HAEA, the release occurred from September 8 to November 16, 2011. The cause of the release is under investigation.

As previously mentioned, the levels of I-131 that have been detected in Europe are extremely low. There is no health concern to the population. If any member of the public were to breathe iodine for a whole year at the levels measured in European countries, then they would receive a dose in the range of 0.01 microsieverts for the year. To put this into perspective, the average annual background is 2400 microsieverts per year.

The IAEA was first notified of the presence of trace levels of I-131 by authorities from the Czech Republic on 11 November. Since this notification, the IAEA contacted several member states throughout the region to determine the cause and origin. The IAEA also worked with the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) to conduct air dispersion modelling, as part of efforts to determine the source.

At least IAEA didn't mention X-ray or transcontinental flight. Never mind that the average annual background includes external radiation, and that iodine-131 goes almost exclusively to thyroid; talking about the whole body radiation is irrelevant.

Thursday, November 17, 2011

Yomiuri: Cesium in Body Will Halve in 1.5 Years in Wild Animals Even If They Eat Contaminated Food Everyday

Yomiuri Shinbun may have made a fool of itself by summarizing the finding by a university researcher regarding the biological half-life of radioactive cesium in a very exaggerated (and inaccurate) way.

If you read the article, it's rather embarrassingly clear that "wild animals" are lab mice, and "eating contaminated food everyday" is drinking cesium-laced water only once. It is possible that the researcher's paper made a connection between a mouse and a wild animal, and drinking water once and eating contaminated food every day, and Yomiuri Shinbun, in its eagerness to bring the good tidings to the general public in Japan, omitted the connection in the article.

Oh well. Many of my Japanese twitter readers who read the article are saying, "What can you expect from a pro-nuke newspaper like Yomiuri?" or "Gomiuri (garbage seller)?"

From Yomiuri Shinbun (11/18/2011):

東京電力福島第一原発事故直後に野生動物に大量に取り込まれた放射性セシウム137の量は、動物が原発周辺の食物を摂取していても約1年半ごとに半減し、最初の5年間で8分の1以下になる可能性が高いことを大阪大学の中島裕夫助教が突き止めた。

Hiroo Nakajima of Osaka University has found that there is a high possibility that a large amount of radioactive cesium-137 ingested by wild animals right after the Fukushima I Nuclear Power Plant accident may halve every 1.5 years, falling to one-eighths after the first 5 years even if the animals keep eating the food around the nuclear power plant.

原発周辺地域の野生動物や住民の内部被曝(ひばく)の状況などを知る手がかりになるもので、17日、神戸市で開かれている日本放射線影響学会で発表した。

It will provide a clue to the internal radiation exposure of wild animals and people in the areas near the plant. His research was published in the meeting of the Japan Radiation Research Society in Kobe City on November 17.

中島助教は、マウスに半減期が約30年のセシウム137を含んだ水(体重1グラム当たり1キロ・ベクレル=1匹当たり28キロ・ベクレル)を一回だけ飲ませた後、時間経過とともに体内に残る量を調べた。

Nakajima fed mice with water with cesium-137 whose half life is about 30 years (1 kilo-becquerel/1 gram of live weight, or 28 kilo-becquerels per mouse) once, and studied the amount of cesium remaining in the body over time.

心臓や腎臓など大半の臓器では、摂取後すぐにピークを迎えたが、1週間後には25分の1以下、2週間後には120分の1以下になった。

In most organs such as heart and kidney, the amount of cesium peaked right after ingesting the water. However, it dropped to one-25th in one week, and to one-120th in 2 weeks.

So?

These wild animals (eh... mice) are likely to have been eating contaminated food and drinking contaminated water ever since March 11. So did people, like villagers in Iitate-mura or town folks in Namie-machi, for quite some time after the March 11 accident. They ate the vegetables they grew, and drank water from their wells, on assurance from the experts like Dr. Yamashita.

Here's the ICRP's chart, showing how the one-time episodic intake of 1000 becquerels of radioactive cesium is handled by the body, compared to the continuous, daily intake of low-level (10 becquerels and 1 becquerel) radioactive cesium (from ICRP publication 111, page 21):



(The researcher could have just put up this chart for his presentation, instead of feeding lab mice with cesium water.)

#Radiation in Japan: "Blowing in the Cold Autumnal Wind"

Everyday I get up in the morning hoping that people in Japan will wake up to the dire situation they are in and start doing something. Anything. Everyday I am disappointed. When they do something, it is almost always "WTF....?" Yesterday was no exception.

Here's a collection of small news in Japan from yesterday that made me recite the haiku by the master Matsuo Basho - "When I say something, as soon as the word leaves my lips, it's blowing in the cold autumnal wind" - there's no use in saying.

City in Fukushima Prefecture to send persimmons to the Imperial Household:

Aizu Wakamatsu City in Fukushima Prefecture is preparing its annual gift to the imperial family: persimmons harvested this year. They city has been giving the gift ever since 1928, when a granddaughter of the last lord of the Aizu (who sided with the Tokugawa Shogun regime in the civil war that toppled the Shogunate and ushered in the Meiji era) married a younger brother of Emperor Showa (the father of the current emperor). (Yomiuri Shinbun 11/17/2011)

Persimmon is one of the fruits that have been constantly found with elevated levels of radioactive cesium. The particular persimmons in Aizu are free of radioactive materials, according to the testing by Fukushima Prefecture. (Yes that's very trustworthy.)

I suppose it's their way of getting back, in a way. The Mayor of the city, when he visited a city in Kyushu, couldn't help commenting on the bitterly-fought civil war of almost 150 years ago in which his city under Lord Katamori Matsudaira lost to the forces that included the lord of that city in Kyushu.

The emperor is still hospitalized. All the imperial duties are delegated to the crown prince, who performs them without his wife accompanying him as she should. (In her case, it is nothing to do with radiation. She's been absent from almost all official duties for years because of her sensitive psychological problems.)

Government to send Self Defense Force soldiers to "decontaminate" within 20-kilometer radius:

The Kan administration sent SDF soldiers to Fukushima I Nuclear Power plant right after Reactor 1 blew up. They were taking up positions for the watering operation on March 14, when Reactor 3 blew up. Some warm feelings between the government and the SDF.

Now, the Noda administration will be sending the soldiers within 20-kilometer radius of the plant, to Namie-machi, Naraha-machi (where Fuku-II is located) and Tomioka-machi, to "decontaminate". The administration wants to accelerate the pace of decontamination in the no-entry zone so that people can return, and has decided to send in the Self Defense Force to the more contaminated area inside the no-entry zone starting early December. The SDF soldiers are expected to finish their "decontamination" work of the town halls in the above-mentioned towns by the end of December. (Mainichi Shinbun 11/17/2011, via Asyura so that the original article does not disappear)

It's not even the decontamination of people's houses or farmland. The SDF soldiers will be made to decon the municipal buildings that even the town's politicians are not very keen to return to.

There are some criticisms voiced to this government's move, but they are not about sending young soldiers in the high-radiation areas for useless work. They are about the government taking away the work of the private contractors. Three joint ventures headed by three major general contractors have been selected to carry out the "decontamination" in the no-entry zone and the planned evacuation zone, and they are not very happy about the SDF doing the work they are supposed to be doing and be paid for. (Also from the same Mainichi Shinbun article linked above.)

Who are these general contractors heading these JVs? Kajima, Taisei, Obayashi (Asahi Shinbun 11/15/2011). In other words, the same ones that have profited from building nuclear power plants and other big government infra projects, and some of the same ones who are getting disaster debris burning jobs in Miyagi Prefecture in a blatant case of collusion "dango".

People within 3 kilometer radius return temporarily to retrieve their stuff by car:

Fukushima Minyu (11/17/2011) tells us that the residents in the 3-kilometer radius from the plant in Okuma-machi started to return temporarily to retrieve their belongings. They are allowed to use their cars.

I am sure the cars will be decontaminated at the check point or at J-Village. The problem is that since the background radiation is high, the cars may test perfectly fine there.

Fukushima Prefecture to hold another Ekiden road race featuring underage boys and girls, on November 20:

Fukushima is doing the Ekiden road race again, in the high radiation Naka-dori, from Shirakawa City to Fukushima City, 96.5 kilometers. Participants are Fukushima resident athletes in cities, towns and villages in Fukushima Prefecture. Again, half the members are underage boys and girls, as young as 13, again. (The official cite of the event at Fukushima Minpo: http://www.minpo.jp/pub/ekiden2011/)

Why do they do this? Because 1) they did it last year about the same time; 2) to show to the rest of Japan what a wonderful place Fukushima is, how people are coping wonderfully, how it is safe to hold an event like this. To do the Number 2, what better way than to use 13, 14 year olds?

2 boxes full of contaminated soil sent to the Ministry of the Environment, and a worker at the Ministry dumps the soil in an empty lot:

Someone in Fukushima City send two boxes filled with contaminated soil to the Ministry of the Environment. A General Affairs section manager expressed his feeling that it could be buried in his backyard, so the worker under him took his meaning and took the boxes home, dumped the content in an empty lot in the neighboring city.

Goshi Hosono, Minister of the Environment and Minister in charge of the nuclear accident, said "I understand the person's feeling, but we will do our best to decontaminate so please refrain from sending the contaminated soil to us." (Sankei Shinbun 11/17/2011)

As usual, he lies. Fukushima City's decontamination is to be done by the city, who is busy rounding up volunteers. The city is not designated as any type of evacuation zone, and it is 60 kilometers away. So it's outside the government responsibility to decontaminate.

As the country slowly descends into lunacy, winter comes, and cold, north wind will blow from Fukushima's direction to Kanto and Tokyo.

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

#Fukushima I Nuke Plant Reactor 3 Video of Packbot Finding 1.32 Sievert/Hr Location

For more, see my previous post.

But here's the video of Packbot working at the 1.32 sievert/hr (or 1320 millisieverts/hour, or 1,320,000 microsieverts/hour) location in Reactor 3's reactor building where the human workers somehow will have to go in.

This is Part 2 of the 3 videos released by TEPCO on November 16, 2011:


This is the moment when the survey meter detected the highest radiation: 1.32 sievert/hr:

Here's Part 1 of the video, where all along the rails very high radiation is detected in several hundreds of millisieverts/hour:

Here's Part 3:

Video of J-Village, Fukushima I Nuke Plant by the Press, 11/12/2011

The video is from the November 12, 2011 press tour of J-Village and Fukushima I Nuclear Power Plant, first since the accident. The members of the press were limited to those who belong to the press club and the foreign correspondent club.

However, Shingetsu News Agency is distributing the video free of charge to independent journalists and the net based media as the protest against Japan's "media cartel", and here it is, with occasional English captioning by Tokyo Brown Tabby. (For more about Shingetsu News Agency, read Tokyo Brown Tabby's explanation of the video on Youtube.)

#Radioactive Rice: 630 Bq/kg Cesium from Rice in Fukushima City

For those of you who wrote to me that Fukushima rice was "safe" because it all "tested" well below the safety limit of 500 becquerels/kg of radioactive cesium, sorry. NHK has a piece of bad news for you.

630 becquerels/kg of radioactive cesium has been detected from the rice grown and harvested in Onami District of Fukushima City in Fukushima. It was discovered only because one farmer asked the local JA to test his rice.

The video clip accompanying the NHK News says 630 becquerels/kg of radioactive cesium from brown rice, and 300 becquerels/kg from white (milled) rice.

The entire Onami District was declared good to ship the rice, after the Fukushima prefectural government tested 2 samples in one location in Onami District.

Onami District of Fukushima City has high radiation contamination, and that's where the volunteers have been sent to "decontaminate", scooping out the sludge in the drain by hand, among other pleasant activities. (If you read Japanese, here's a report by very pro-nuke Nikkei Business on "decontamination" volunteering in Onami: http://t.co/pSgB131c)

NHK News Japanese (11/16/2011):

福島市大波地区の1か所の水田で収穫されたコメから、国の暫定基準値を超える1キログラム当たり630ベクレルの放射性セシウムが検出されたことが分かりました。福島県は、この水田を含む大波地区について、今年度のコメの出荷を見合わせるよう要請しました。

It has been revealed that 630 becquerels/kg of radioactive cesium, exceeding the national provisional safety limit, was detected from the rice harvested in a location in Onami District of Fukushima City [in Fukushima Prefecture]. Fukushima Prefecture has requested the farmers in Onami District to refrain from shipping this year's crop.

福島県によりますと、福島市大波地区の農家が1か所の水田で収穫したコメについて、今月14日、農協に放射性物質の検査を依頼したところ、簡易検査で国の暫定基準値の1キログラム当たり500ベクレルを超える放射性セシウムの値が検出されました。

According to Fukushima Prefecture, a farmer in Onami District of Fukushima City asked the local JA (agricultural co-op) to test his rice harvested in one of his rice paddies for radioactive materials. In a simplified test administered by the JA, radioactive cesium exceeding 500 becquerels/kg was detected which exceeded the national provisional safety limit.

このため福島県が改めて検査したところ、玄米から1キログラム当たり630ベクレルの放射性セシウムが検出されたということです。検出された農家が収穫したコメは、今年度およそ840キログラムあるということですが、市場には流通していないということです。検査結果を受けて福島県は、この農家の水田を含む福島市大波地区の今年度のコメの出荷を見合わせるよう要請しました。

Fukushima Prefecture then tested again, and 630 becquerels/kg of radioactive cesium was detected from the brown rice. The farmer has about 840 kilograms of rice harvested, but it is not being sold in the market. Upon receiving the test result, the Fukushima prefectural government requested all the rice harvested in Onami District of Fukushima City, including that of this farmer, to be not shipped this year.

福島県が先月行った放射性物質の量を調べる「本検査」では、大波地区にあたる旧小国村は、2か所で検査が行われましたが、放射性セシウムは、国の暫定基準値を大幅に下回る1キログラム当たり33ベクレルと28ベクレルしか検出されず、県はこの地区のコメの出荷を認めていました。福島県では、この農家を含めた大波地区の農家154戸について、さらに詳しい調査を行うとともに原因を調べることにしています。

In the "main survey" that Fukushima Prefecture conducted last month to measure radioactive materials in rice, two locations in the former Oguni-mura in Onami District were tested. Radioactive cesium detected there were vastly below the national provisional safety limit, at 33 becquerels/kg and 28 becquerels/kg, and the prefectural government allowed the shipment from the entire district. The Fukushima prefectural government plans to conduct a detailed survey of [the rice harvested in] all 154 farms in Onami district, and investigate the cause [of high radioactive cesium content].

Well, the cause is Fukushima I Nuclear Power Plant.

The governor of Fukushima Prefecture, the "world-famous" Yuhei Sato, had declared Fukushima rice to be "safe" and vowed to mount an aggressive PR campaign to promote the rice harvested in Fukushima throughout Japan. Koriyama City in Fukushima Prefecture, also with high radiation contamination, has started to feed school children with locally grown and harvested rice.

Oops.

#Fukushima I Nuke Plant: 1.3 SIEVERT/HR Inside Reactor 3 Bldg

where the carbon-based workers would have to go in to install the gas management system, which would filter the gas coming out of the Containment Vessel to capture radioactive materials and release it outside.

One minute of work at that location would get a carbon-based worker over 21 millisieverts radiation. One second 360 microsieverts.

As I said before, a futile window-dressing, as the CV have been breached somewhere already. It is absolutely crazy, bordering criminal, to send workers there for a cosmetic, token work.

First, as Mainichi Shinbun (11/16/2011) reports it:

東京電力は16日、福島第1原発3号機の原子炉建屋1階の北東側で、毎時約1300ミリシーベルトの放射線量を計測したと発表した。3号機の原子炉建屋内で計測された中で最も高い。

TEPCO announced on November 16 that 1,300 millisieverts/hour [or 1.3 sievert/hour] radiation was measured in the northeast corner of the reactor building 1st floor of Reactor 3 at Fukushima I Nuclear Power Plant. It is the highest radiation level so far measured inside the Reactor 3 reactor building.

 14日、格納容器入り口にあるコンクリート製扉を動かすレールにたまった水をロボットがふきとった際、床面から高さ10~20センチで検出された。ロボットは、格納容器内の気体を浄化して外部に放出する「ガス管理システム」の取り付け作業の準備で投入した。松本純一原子力・立地本部長代理は「事故で格納容器内の圧力が高くなって、放射性物質が漏えいした可能性がある」と語った。

On November 14, a robot wiped off the water on the rail that is used to move the concrete door of the Containment Vessel [of Reactor3], and detected the radiation at 10 to 20 centimeters off the floor. The robot was sent in to prepare for the work to install the "gas management system" that would clean the gas inside the Containment Vessel and release the cleaned gas into the atmosphere. TEPCO's Matsumoto said, "It is possible the pressure inside the Containment Vessel rose after the accident and that radioactive materials leaked".

 1号機の原子炉建屋では8月に毎時5000ミリシーベルト超が計測されている。

In the reactor building of Reactor 1, over 5,000 millisieverts/hour [or 5 sieverts/hour] radiation was measured in August.

Leak from the Containment Vessel "possible"? (Matsumoto is the master of understatement; he is good at presenting a ridiculous idea with straight face - like when he announced bath salt tracer.)

Back in April, New York Times quoted an anonymous Japanese nuclear industry insider saying there was a huge, vertical crack in the Containment Vessel of Reactor 3, and that the crack was getting wider. That reference was removed several days later after the article was published. (I copied what remained in the cache. I'm looking for it now.)

As to more than 5,000 millisievert/hour radiation in Reactor 1, we were never told how much "more than 5,000".

Now here's what TEPCO released to the press on November 16, 2011. The robot seems to be one of the Packbots. The radiation levels in the area where 1.3 sievert/hour radiation was detected are universally high, as you see in the page 1 of the handout below:


Tuesday, November 15, 2011

#Radiation in Japan: Tokyo to Accept Miyagi's Disaster Debris in Addition to Iwate's

Governor of Tokyo Shintaro Ishihara is ready for more "disaster" radioactive debris from Tohoku. After having started on Iwate's debris and scolded the residents to shut up and put up, he is eager to sign the deal with Miyagi Prefecture and bring in Onagawa's debris to Tokyo to crush, burn, and dump in the landfill in Tokyo Bay.

Reading the Mainichi article linked below, it is clear that the Tokyo government is going to circumvent the pesky residents completely by running the idea of accepting disaster radioactive debris with the Assembly of Special Ward ("ku") Mayors. There are 23 of these mayors, and as long as they're OK (they seem quite eager to help out Miyagi and Iwate for some reason), Ishihara will just do it. The Tokyo residents and the Metropolitan Assembly will be bypassed.

To remind you, the company who will do the incineration and burying the ashes in the landfill is Tokyo Rinkai Recycle Power, a TEPCO subsidiary receiving subsidies from the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry and the Ministry of the Environment and sweetheart land deal with the Tokyo Metropolitan government. Perfect regulatory capture.

From Mainichi Shinbun (11/16/2011):

東日本大震災で発生したがれき(災害廃棄物)の広域処理が進まない問題で、東京都と特別区長会が宮城県女川町のがれきの受け入れを検討していることが分かった。早ければ今月下旬にも正式決定する見込み。都内での受け入れが決まれば、岩手県宮古市のがれきに続き2例目となる。

Regarding the slow progress of wide-area processing of the disaster debris from the March 11 earthquake/tsunami, it has been revealed that the Tokyo Metropolitan government and the Assembly of the Special Ward Mayors have been discussing the acceptance of disaster debris from Onagawa-machi in Miyagi Prefecture. The formal decision may be made by the end of this month. If Tokyo accepts the debris from Onagawa, it will be the second such case since the debris of Miyako City in Iwate Prefecture.

 特別区長会の事務局などによると、宮城県側から10月にプラスチックなどの可燃物について打診を受け、協議してきた。被災地は処理能力を上回る廃棄物を抱えているが、放射能汚染への懸念から東北以外での広域処理は進んでおらず、事務局では「受け入れ先がなければ被災地の復興がままならない状況にあり、区民の考えを聞きながら検討したい」としている。

According to the secretariat of the Special Ward Mayors, they have been discussing the acceptance of flammable plastics since October at the request from Miyagi Prefecture. The disaster-affected areas have debris that exceed the areas' capacity to process, but concerns of radiation contamination has so far prevented the wide area processing outside Tohoku. The Secretariat of the Special Ward Mayors says, "If there is no place that would accept the debris, there will be no recovery for the disaster-affected area. We would like to listen to the residents [of Special Wards] and decide."

 特別区長会が受け入れを決めれば、都は宮城県と処理に関する協定を結ぶ方針。都は9月30日に岩手県と同様の協定を結んでおり、14年3月までの2年半に岩手、宮城両県から約50万トンの廃棄物の受け入れを表明した。

If the Assembly of the Special Ward Mayors agree, the Tokyo Metropolitan government plans to sign an agreement with Miyagi Prefecture. The Tokyo government signed the similar agreement on September 30 with Iwate Prefecture, and has announced that 500,000 tonnes of debris from Iwate and Miyagi will be accepted in Tokyo in two and a half years until March 2014.

Listening to the residents is as democratic as listening to the residents when a nuclear power plant is being planned; the meetings will be filled with government shills who will support the idea while expressing some concern for the safety. A farce.

Governor Ishihara is also calling the prime minister of Japan "incompetent" over the prime minister's inability, in his view, to explain the difference between the disaster debris and the radioactive debris. (From Sankei Shinbun 11/8/2011 article; Sankei is a paper whose editorial include gems like "Let's share the pain".)

Here's where Onagawa-machi, Miyagi Prefecture is located on Professor Hayakawa's map (blue circle):

#Radiation in Japan: 60,000 Bq/kg Cesium in Riverbed Soil in Fukushima

From Tokyo Shinbun, quoting Kyodo News (11/15/2011):

環境省は15日、福島県内の河川や湖、ダムなど計193地点について、底の土壌に含まれる放射性物質濃度の調査結果を発表。東電福島第1原発事故の緊急時避難準備区域に指定されていた南相馬市を流れる太田川の1地点の川底で1キログラム当たり最高6万ベクレルの放射性セシウムが検出されるなど、ほぼすべての地点で放射性セシウムが検出された。

On November 15, the Ministry of the Environment announced the result of the survey of the radioactive material density in bottom soil in 193 locations in rivers, lakes and dams in Fukushima Prefecture. Radioactive cesium was detected in almost all locations, with the highest density of 60,000 becquerels/kg of radioactive cesium in the riverbed soil in the Ota River that runs through Minami Soma City, which was designated as "evacuation-ready zone" after the Fukushima I Nuclear Power Plant accident.

 併せて実施した水質調査は、警戒区域内のダムで水1リットル当たり最高27ベクレルを検出するなどしたが、ほとんどの地点で不検出だった。環境省は「泥や砂の粒子に吸着した放射性物質が沈殿し、土壌の濃度が高くなっている」と分析。

The Ministry also conducted the survey of the water. Maximum 27 becquerels/liter of radioactive cesium was detected in the water from a dam inside the "no-entry zone" [within 20-kilometer radius], but in most locations it was not detected. The Ministry's analysis is that "radioactive materials have been absorbed by sludge and sands and sunk to the bottom, and that is why the radiation density is high [in the soil in rivers, lakes and dams]."

The survey result is not yet uploaded at the Ministry's website.

The provisional "safety" standard for drinking water in Japan is 200 becquerels/liter of radioactive cesium. (For reference, in Belarus, it is 10 becquerels/kg.)

Daily Mail: Geometric Patterns in China's Gobi Desert

GPS pattern recognition exercise by the Chinese military?

From Mail Online (11/15/2011):

A Google Maps satellite has spotted a series of bizarre structures during a sweep of the Gobi desert in China.

The internet is buzzing with theories about what their purpose is, with suggestions ranging from giant QR readers to practise targets for military satellites.

To add to the intrigue, they are located on the borders of Gansu province and Xinjiang in northwestern China - an area that the superpower uses to build military, space and nuclear equipment.

[Click the photos to enlarge.]





(More pictures at the Mail Online article.)

Monday, November 14, 2011

Now They Tell Us: Cesium-137 Soil Deposition May Be Much Wider Than Thought, Hokkaido and Western Japan May Have "Hot Spots"

Not the news that weary radiation-vigilant residents of Japan (including Tokyo Brown Tabby) wanted to hear.

But according to a new research paper by the international team of scientists to be published on the electronic version of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (PNAS), cesium-137 (half life 30 years) may have deposited in the soil in much wider areas including Hokkaido, Chubu, Chugoku, Shikoku in one month starting March 20. The cesium deposition in these regions is considered to be in much lower concentration than in Tohoku or Kanto, but the researchers say there may be radiation "hot spots" in these regions.

It's no surprise to anyone who used to look at the dispersion simulations by Austria's ZAMG, Germany's DWD and Norway's NILU in the early days of the nuclear crisis in March, April and May. I remember seeing large plumes engulfing Hokkaido a number of times, and occasional small plumes swiping Shikoku.

From Jiji Tsushin News (11/15/2011; links added):

東京電力福島第1原発事故で放出された放射性物質のうち、半減期が約30年と長いセシウム137が、3月20日からの1カ月間に中部や中国、四国地方の山 岳地帯や北海道の土壌に沈着した可能性があることが分かった。米大学宇宙研究協会(USRA)や名古屋大、東京大などの国際チームが14日までに行ったシ ミュレーションの結果で、米科学アカデミー紀要電子版に発表される。

Of radioactive materials released from the Fukushima I Nuclear Power Plant accident, cesium-137, whose half life is 30 years, may have deposited in the soil in the mountains in Chubu and Shikoku regions, and Hokkaido, in a month starting March 20. It is a conclusion from the simulation done by the international team of scientists including those from the USRA (Universities Space Research Association), Nagoya University, and Tokyo University. Their paper will be published in the electronic version of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

 これらの地域の大半は人体に影響を及ぼしたり、除染が必要だったりする汚染濃度ではないと推定される。ただ、局所的に濃度が高いホットスポットが存在する可能性があり、詳細な調査が必要という。

It is assumed that most of these areas do not have the level of contamination that may affect the health or may require decontamination. However, there may be "hot spots" with locally high radiation, and a detailed investigation may be necessary, according to the scientists.

 USRAの安成哲平客員研究員や名大の安成哲三教授、東大の早野龍五教授らは、ノルウェーで開発された地球全体の大気輸送モデル(20キロ四方単位)とヨーロッパ中期予報センターの気象データ、文部科学省の降下物観測データを組み合わせシミュレーションした。

Teppei Yasunari of USRA, Tetsuzo Yasunari of Nagoya University, and Ryugo Hayano of Tokyo University combined the global atmospheric transfer model (20-kilometer grid) developed in Norway, the meteorological data from European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) [in Redding, UK] and radiation fallout measurement data from Japan's Ministry of Education and Science to do the simulation.

 その結果、日本列島へのセシウム137沈着量は1カ月間で1000テラ(テラは1兆)ベクレル以上と推定された。福島県を中心に東北、関東の太平洋側の 沈着量が多いのは文科省の航空機モニタリング結果などと一致したが、中部、中国、四国の山岳地帯や北海道でも、低気圧が通過した際に同原発からセシウム 137の微粒子を含む風が流入し、雨で沈着した可能性が示された。 

According to their simulation, the cesium-137 deposition in Japan was estimated to be more than 1,000 terabecquerels in one month [starting March 20]. The simulation matched the result of the aerial survey by the Ministry of Education that showed the Pacific Ocean side of Tohoku and Kanto had a larger amount of cesium deposition. However, the simulation also shows that when the low pressures passed over the mountain areas in Chubu, Chugoku and Shikoku regions and in Hokkaido, wind that contained cesium-137 particles from Fukushima I Nuclear Power Plant may have blown and the particles may have fallen with the rain and deposited in the soil.

The paper is here: http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2011/11/11/1112058108.full.pdf

From the "Discussion" section of the paper (page 4, left column)

...we expect the true soil contamination across Japan to be considerably more variable than in our estimate. Even in regions where we find relatively low soil contamination levels, hot spots with high concentrations (e.g., due to convective rain fall, orographic enhancement of rainfall, or fine-grain soil flow by rainwater on the ground) may be possible. In contrast, relatively clean patches may also be present in areas with high overall contamination levels.

Supplementary information and data: http://www.pnas.org/content/suppl/2011/11/14/1112058108.DCSupplemental/pnas.1112058108_SI.pdf

From Page 5 of the supplementary data above, "Estimated Cs137 Concentration in Soil" (screen shot from a movie)

"Movie S4. Estimated 137Cs concentration range in soil using DRT of 0.001 and conversion coefficient (CC) of 38, 53, and 68 kgm−2 over Japan. CCs of 38, 53, and 68 kgm−2 correspond to −1σ, mean value, and þ1σ in Fig. S5, respectively. Outputs 0.2° × 0.2° were interpolated into finer resolution using cubic interpolation. The Merged IBCAO/ETOPO5 Global Topographic Data Product (1) was used to mask out ocean area below 0 m above sea level (a.s.l.)."

The movie can be seen here.

Photos of Fukushima I Nuke Plant as the Press Were Allowed in on November 12, 2011

(Click on the photos to see them large.)

Reactor 4:

A young worker standing to listen to Goshi Hosono, Minister in charge of the accident, speak:



Both photos were taken by the AP photographer David Guttenfelder.

For more high impact photos, go to cryptome.org page, here.

INPO Report on Fukushima I Nuke Plant Accident

The Institute of Nuclear Power Operations (INPO) based in Atlanta, Georgia has issued the report on the early days of Fukushima I Nuclear Power Plant accident with overview and timeline of the accident.

The 104-page document is available here: http://cryptome.org/0005/daiichi-inpo.pdf

From the introduction:

This report provides a narrative overview and timeline for the earthquake, tsunami, and subsequent nuclear accident at Tokyo Electric Power Company’s (TEPCO) Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station on March 11, 2011. The purpose of this report is to provide an accurate, consolidated source of information regarding the sequence of events that occurred in the first days of the accident. The information contained in this report may be used for determining future U.S. and international industry corrective actions.

... This report reflects the best available information, most of which was obtained from direct and ongoing interaction with TEPCO. ...

I haven't read it myself but feel free to report on it or any segment of it in the comment section.

(H/T TerraHertz)

Sunday, November 13, 2011

Iodine-131 in Europe: from Nuke Plant in Pakistan?

Breitbart says so, quoting the Polish source:

From Breitbart (11/12/2011):

...In Poland, a spokesman for the atomic energy agency told AFP that the cause may lie in Pakistan, where officials were forced to repair a leak at the nearly 40-year-old Karachi Nuclear Power Plant (KANUPP) on October 19.

After the incident, an official from KANUPP had told AFP that no radioactivity had been recorded and none of their staff had been affected. ...

According to the IAEA and the officials in the countries that have been detecting iodine-131, as long as the dose is minute and doesn't affect health, it's nothing to worry about.

In the meantime, 17 people are dead from an accident at a weapons facility in Iran, including the commander in charge of Iran's nuclear missile development.