Uh, It's Jayvee.

Exploring myself.

Welcome to my Tumblr!

click to hide

  • About
  • ask me anything
  • submit a post
  • rss
  • archive
  • mothernaturenetwork:

Japanese breakthrough will make wind power cheaper than nuclearA surprising aerodynamic innovation in wind turbine design called the ‘wind lens’ could triple the output of a typical wind turbine, making it less costly than nuclear power.

Now that is what I call rising from the ashes.

    mothernaturenetwork:

    Japanese breakthrough will make wind power cheaper than nuclear
    A surprising aerodynamic innovation in wind turbine design called the ‘wind lens’ could triple the output of a typical wind turbine, making it less costly than nuclear power.

    Now that is what I call rising from the ashes.

    Source: mothernaturenetwork
    • 1 year ago
    • 633 notes
    • #energy
    • #wind power
    • #Japan
    • #nuclear power
    • #science
    • #environment
    • #renewable energy
    • #tech
  • thepoliticalnotebook:

Released emails reveal that the British government launched a PR campaign specifically to play down the Fukushima nuclear disaster. The business and energy departments approached British energy companies like EDF, Areva and Westinghouse to come up with a plan to prevent the nuclear situation at Fukushima Daichi from doing damage to plans for new nuclear stations. The emails, which the Guardian got a hold of, show a fear of the “anti-nuclear chaps and chapesses,” as one official put it. They were particularly concerned about what comparisons to Chernobyl might do to the public image of the nuclear energy industry. View the emails here. (AP Photograph.)

    thepoliticalnotebook:

    Released emails reveal that the British government launched a PR campaign specifically to play down the Fukushima nuclear disaster. The business and energy departments approached British energy companies like EDF, Areva and Westinghouse to come up with a plan to prevent the nuclear situation at Fukushima Daichi from doing damage to plans for new nuclear stations. The emails, which the Guardian got a hold of, show a fear of the “anti-nuclear chaps and chapesses,” as one official put it. They were particularly concerned about what comparisons to Chernobyl might do to the public image of the nuclear energy industry. View the emails here. (AP Photograph.)

    Source: thepoliticalnotebook
    • 1 year ago
    • 1317 notes
    • #news
    • #Japan
    • #fukushima
    • #srsly?
    • #chaps and chapesses? for real?
  • mohandasgandhi:

What Happened to Media Coverage of Fukushima?

While the U.S. media has been occupied with Anthony Weiner, the  Republican presidential candidates and Bristol Palin’s memoir, coverage  of Japan’s Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant disaster has practially  fallen off the map. Poor mainstream media coverage of Japan’s now  months-long struggle to gain control over the Fukushima disaster has  deprived Americans of crucial information about the risks of nuclear  power following natural disasters. After a few weeks of covering the  early aftermath of Japan’s earthquake and tsunami, the U.S. media moved  on, leaving behind the crisis at Fukushima which continues to unfold.  U.S. politicians, like Rep. Joe Barton of Texas, have made disappointing and misleading statements about the relative safety of nuclear power  and have vowed to stick by our nuclear program, while other countries,  like Germany and Italy,  have taken serious steps to address the obvious risks of nuclear power  — risks that the Fukushima disaster made painfully evident, at least to  the rest of the world.
News outlets in other countries have been paying attention to  Fukushima, though, and a relative few in this country have as well. A  June 16, 2011 Al Jazeera English article titled, “Fukushima: It’s much worse than you think,” quotes a high-level former nuclear industry executive, Arnold  Gunderson, who called Fukushima nohting less than “the biggest  industrial catastrophe in the history of mankind.” Twenty nuclear cores  have been exposed at Fukushima, Gunderson points out, saying along with  the site’s many spent-fuel pools, this gives Fukushima 20 times the  release potential of Chernobyl.
[…]
For Americans who think “out of sight, out of mind” or “it can’t happen  here” when it comes to Fukishima and its ramifications, think again. Janette Sherman, M.D.,  an internal medicine specialist, and Joseph Magano, an epidemiologist  with the Radiation and Public Health Project research group, noticed a  35% jump in infant mortality in eight northwestern U.S. cities located within 500 miles of the Pacific coast since the Fukushima meltdown. They wrote an essay, published by CounterPunch,  suggesting there may be a link between the statistic and the Fukushima  disaster. They cited similar problems with infant mortality among people  who were exposed to nuclear fallout from Chernobyl. Sherman and Magano  urge that steps be taken to measure the levels of radioactive isotopes  in the environment of the Pacific northwest, and in the bodies of people  in these areas, to determine if nuclear fallout from Fukushima could,  in fact, be related to the spike in infant mortality. 
(Read more)

[Image via]

I’ve been wanting to ask a similar question, too. Thank God that at least some people still relay information about it. I think the statistics all urge us to think better about our nuclear power sources, whether they are being planned or not, and ultimately, to pray for all of the people in Japan, who are still bothered by this catastrophe. 

    mohandasgandhi:

    What Happened to Media Coverage of Fukushima?

    While the U.S. media has been occupied with Anthony Weiner, the Republican presidential candidates and Bristol Palin’s memoir, coverage of Japan’s Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant disaster has practially fallen off the map. Poor mainstream media coverage of Japan’s now months-long struggle to gain control over the Fukushima disaster has deprived Americans of crucial information about the risks of nuclear power following natural disasters. After a few weeks of covering the early aftermath of Japan’s earthquake and tsunami, the U.S. media moved on, leaving behind the crisis at Fukushima which continues to unfold. U.S. politicians, like Rep. Joe Barton of Texas, have made disappointing and misleading statements about the relative safety of nuclear power and have vowed to stick by our nuclear program, while other countries, like Germany and Italy, have taken serious steps to address the obvious risks of nuclear power — risks that the Fukushima disaster made painfully evident, at least to the rest of the world.

    News outlets in other countries have been paying attention to Fukushima, though, and a relative few in this country have as well. A June 16, 2011 Al Jazeera English article titled, “Fukushima: It’s much worse than you think,” quotes a high-level former nuclear industry executive, Arnold Gunderson, who called Fukushima nohting less than “the biggest industrial catastrophe in the history of mankind.” Twenty nuclear cores have been exposed at Fukushima, Gunderson points out, saying along with the site’s many spent-fuel pools, this gives Fukushima 20 times the release potential of Chernobyl.

    […]

    For Americans who think “out of sight, out of mind” or “it can’t happen here” when it comes to Fukishima and its ramifications, think again. Janette Sherman, M.D., an internal medicine specialist, and Joseph Magano, an epidemiologist with the Radiation and Public Health Project research group, noticed a 35% jump in infant mortality in eight northwestern U.S. cities located within 500 miles of the Pacific coast since the Fukushima meltdown. They wrote an essay, published by CounterPunch, suggesting there may be a link between the statistic and the Fukushima disaster. They cited similar problems with infant mortality among people who were exposed to nuclear fallout from Chernobyl. Sherman and Magano urge that steps be taken to measure the levels of radioactive isotopes in the environment of the Pacific northwest, and in the bodies of people in these areas, to determine if nuclear fallout from Fukushima could, in fact, be related to the spike in infant mortality. 

    (Read more)

    [Image via]

    I’ve been wanting to ask a similar question, too. Thank God that at least some people still relay information about it. I think the statistics all urge us to think better about our nuclear power sources, whether they are being planned or not, and ultimately, to pray for all of the people in Japan, who are still bothered by this catastrophe. 

    Source: prwatch.org
    • 1 year ago
    • 1968 notes
    • #news
    • #Fukushima
    • #Japan
    • #Nuclear Power
    • #U.S. Media FAILURE
  • Philippines detects radiation from Japan

    Yahoo News:

    MANILA, March 29, 2011 (AFP) - Small amounts of radiation from Japan’s damaged nuclear plant have been detected in the Philippines, the government said Tuesday, while emphasising the traces posed no danger to humans.

    “We have detected the isotopes, but we would like to ask the public not to panic,” Tina Cerbolis, a spokeswoman for the Philippine Nuclear Research Institute, told AFP.

    “These are very tiny amounts in the air.”

    The institute released an advisory notice Tuesday saying the radiation was from Japan’s nuclear power plant at Fukushima, which has been leaking since being damaged by an earthquake and tsunami on March 11.

    “Environment radiation monitoring around the world, including (in) the Philippines has detected very tiny amounts of radioactive isotopes, which appeared to be coming from the Fukushima nuclear power plant and which pose no human health hazards,” the advisory said.

    China and South Korea, which are nearer to Japan, also reported on Tuesday that small amounts of radioactive iodine-131 had been detected in their territories, while similarly warning they were not harmful to humans.

    The nearest major Philippine coastline to the stricken plant is about 2,500 kilometres (1,500 miles) to its southwest, with the Philippine capital Manila around 500 kilometres further.

    In other news,

    • Officials: plutonium found at Japan’s nuke complex
    • Japan nuke plant reactor core may be breached
    • Huge jump in radiation inside Japan nuclear plant
    • Japan disasters to cost up to $309 billion
    Source: Yahoo!
    • 2 years ago
    • #news
    • #Japan
    • #radiation
    • #Fukushima
    • #Philippines
    • #domino effect
  • Japanese Prime Minister says the situation at the nuclear plant is improving slowly - Kyodo

    This seems to be questionable judging from the food crisis they are experiencing now and the problems that are arising from Reactor number 3. Eyewitnesses say that there is smoke billowing from the problematic reactor. CNN is unsure whether the smoke is steam or hydrogen gas.

    Source: omnomnomjapanesefood
    • 2 years ago
    • 38 notes
    • #Japan
    • #news
    • #Fukushima
    • #radiation
    • #tsunami
    • #earthquake
  • : WHO warns of "serious" food radiation in disaster-hit Japan

    newsaboutjapan:

    (Reuters) - The World Health Organisation said on Monday that radiation in food after an earthquake damaged a Japanese nuclear plant was a “serious situation”, eclipsing clear signs of progress in a battle to avert a catastrophic meltdown in the reactors.

    Engineers managed to rig power cables to all six reactors at the Fukushima complex, 240 km (150 miles) north of Tokyo, and started a water pump at one of them to reverse the overheating that has triggered the world’s worst nuclear crisis in 25 years.

    The March 11 earthquake and tsunami left more than 21,000 people dead or missing and will cost an already beleaguered economy some $250 billion (154 billion pounds), but Prime Minister Naoto Kan said the situation at the nuclear plant was slowly improving.

    Overshadowing the good news from the facility, however, was mounting concern that radioactive particles already released into the atmosphere have contaminated food and water supplies.

    The health ministry has urged some residents near the plant to stop drinking tap water after high levels of radioactive iodine were detected.

    Cases of contaminated vegetables and milk have already stoked anxiety despite assurances from officials that the levels are not dangerous. The government has prohibited the sale of raw milk from Fukushima prefecture and spinach from a nearby area.

    “Quite clearly it’s a serious situation,” Peter Cordingley, Manila-based spokesman for the World Health Organisation’s (WHO) regional office for the Western Pacific, told Reuters in a telephone interview.

    “It’s a lot more serious than anybody thought in the early days when we thought that this kind of problem can be limited to 20 to 30 kilometres … It’s safe to suppose that some contaminated produce got out of the contamination zone.”

    He added that there was no evidence of contaminated food from Fukushima reaching other countries.

    Japan is a net importer of food, but has substantial exports — mainly fruit, vegetables, dairy products and seafood — with its biggest markets in Hong Kong, China and the United States.

    MOODY’S SEES INCREASED DOWNSIDE RISK

    The World Bank, citing private estimates of between $122 billion and $235 billion for the cost, said the disaster would depress Japanese economic growth briefly before reconstruction kicks off and gives the beleaguered economy a boost.

    Moody’s Investors Service said in a report that the downside risks from the crisis had increased over the past week for the country’s economy, sovereign credit, banking, insurance and non-financial corporate sectors.

    However, in a much-needed boost for Japan’s battered stock market, billionaire investor Warren Buffett said the earthquake and tsunami were an “enormous blow” but should not prompt the selling of Japanese shares. Instead, he called the events a “buying opportunity”.

    “It will take some time to rebuild. But it will not change the economic future of Japan. If I owned Japanese stocks, I would certainly not be selling them,” Buffett said during a visit to a South Korean factory run by a company that is owned by one of his funds.

    read more here.

    (via omnomnomjapanesefood)

    Source: uk.reuters.com
    • 2 years ago
    • 5 notes
    • #Japan
    • #Fukushima
    • #reactors
    • #radiation
    • #food
  • CNN: Japan could face up to 4% of GDP in costs with the Nuclear crisis in the Fukushima Dai-ichi Power Plants following the earthquake and tsunami. Rebuilding could take 5 years.

    That’s over 200 billion dollars.

    • 2 years ago
    • 19 notes
    • #news
    • #Japan
    • #fukushima
    • #reactors
    • #economy
  • : Japan plans up to $127 billion in lending after quake: Nikkei

    newsaboutjapan:

    (Reuters) - The Japanese government plans to dedicate up to 10 trillion yen ($127 billion) in crisis lending to businesses to help them finance day-to-day operations and repair damage from last week’s deadly earthquake and tsunami, the Nikkei newspaper reported on Saturday.

    The government can provide special financing in the form of low-interest loans or interest payment subsidies backed by public funds when a natural disaster or other event triggers major economic instability, the Nikkei said.

    The newspaper, without citing any sources, said that the government was considering allocating several trillion yen and up to 10 trillion yen to the scheme. Funds needed to support the scheme would be set aside in an emergency budget.

    The government looks certain to need an extra budget to fund disaster relief and reconstruction after the triple blow of a massive 9.0 magnitude earthquake, a tsunami and a dangerous radiation leak at a quake-crippled nuclear plant.

    The authorities, struggling to contain the nuclear crisis, have yet to produce an estimate of how much government spending would be needed to help the economy get back on its feet.

    Economics Minster Kaoru Yosano told Reuters in an interview earlier this week that the economic damage from the disaster would exceed 20 trillion yen, which was his estimate of the total economic impact of the 1995 earthquake in Kobe.

    Yosano said government spending was likely to exceed the 3.3 trillion yen Tokyo spent after Kobe, which up to now has been considered the world’s costliest natural disaster.

    On Friday, the Sankei newspaper said that the government planned to issue more than 10 trillion yen in emergency bonds to pay for the reconstruction and that the central bank would fully underwrite the issue. But Yosano and other government officials denied the report, saying no such plan was in place.

    The Nikkei said the government was also discussing creating a recovery fund that would provide medium- to long-term lending for firms directly hit by the disaster. However, setting up such a fund would require several changes to the law. ($1 = 78.855 Japanese Yen)

    (via omnomnomjapanesefood)

    Source: reuters.com
    • 2 years ago
    • 5 notes
    • #more
    • #Japan
    • #tsunami
    • #earthquake
  • : Supply concerns grow as Japan lacks parts, power, people

    newsaboutjapan:

    (Reuters) - From Apple Inc’s (AAPL.O) new iPad to Chevrolet pick-ups and many of the world’s airplane kitchens, concern is spreading down the global manufacturing supply chain about the impact fromJapan’s earthquake last week.

    Plant shutdowns across Japan following the earthquake, tsunami and nuclear crisis threaten supplies of everything from semiconductors to car parts to manufacturers across the globe.

    Even where factories in Japan are operating, power outages, shortages of fuel and raw materials and ruptured logistics mean products and parts face delays in getting to customers.

    Honda Motor Co (7267.T) said on Friday it extended a production halt in Japan, where it makes more than a fifth of its cars, for a further 3 days until next Wednesday.

    And, citing a memo distributed by the automaker, the Wall Street Journal reported Honda had warned U.S. dealers it was not sure if it could resume full production at some of its Japanese plants before May.

    Japan’s grip on the global electronics supply chain is causing particular concern. The world’s third-biggest economy exported 7.2 trillion yen ($91.3 billion) worth of electronic parts last year, according to Mirae Asset Securities.

    “Should the Japan crisis be prolonged, I expect a shortage of electronic parts in the second quarter,” said James Song, an analyst at Daewoo Securities, noting Japan provides 57 percent of the world’s wafers, used to make the chips that go into mobiles phones, cameras and other electronic devices.

    Apple may face shortages of key parts for its newly-released iPad 2, according to a report from research firm IHS iSuppli.

    Several parts of the new version of the popular iPad tablet PC come from Japan, including the battery and the flash memory used to store music and video on the device.

    “Logistical disruptions may mean Apple could have difficulties obtaining this battery, and it may not be able to secure supply from an external, non-Japanese source,” iSuppli said.

    Toshiba Corp (6502.T), one of the companies that produces the NAND flash memory used in the iPad 2, according to IHS iSuppli’s research, had briefly shut a flash memory facility in Japan, and warned it could face problems getting raw materials.

    Apple launched the iPad 2 in the United States last week to strong demand, with many stores selling out and analysts estimating sales of 1 million units during the debut weekend.

    Several other iPad 2 parts are sourced from Japan, said the IHS iSuppli report, noting some of these, particularly the chips, could be procured from alternative suppliers.

    Goldman Sachs warned of potential bottlenecks in the supply of silicon wafers, conductive film used in LCD circuits and resin used to connect chips to boards — products made by Japanese companies such as Shin Etsu (4063.T) and divisions of Sony (6758.T), Hitachi (6501.T) and Mitsubishi (7280.T).

    In Taipei, shares of electronics supply companies rebounded from recent falls, with Hon Hai Precision (2317.TW) and touch panel maker Wintek (2384.TW) both gaining more than 1 percent.

    EVEN THE KITCHEN SINK

    Japan’s top car manufacturers including Toyota Motor Co (7203.T) and Nissan Motor Co (7201.T) are struggling to restart production amid a shortage of parts, labor and power following the 9.0 magnitude earthquake and tsunami.

    The largest U.S. automaker, General Motors Co (GM.N), said it would temporarily idle a pick-up truck plant in Louisiana, where it builds the Chevrolet Colorado and GMC Canyon models, due to a parts shortage stemming from the crisis in Japan.

    “Like all global automakers, we will continue to follow the events in Japan closely to determine the business impact,” GM said in a statement on Thursday.

    North American output is likely to be affected unless Japanese suppliers revive their plants and send parts within 10 days, Wolfe Trahan & Co analyst Tim Denoyer said in a note.

    Renault Samsung, the South Korean unit of French car maker Renault SA (RENA.PA), said it will cut back on weekend and overtime production because of a potential parts shortage, and

    GM’s South Korean unit said it was considering a similar move.

    “We have an inventory until the end of March. But we expect the crisis to be prolonged until April before being normalized in May,” said a spokesperson for Renault Samsung, which makes one in every 10 Renault vehicles.

    A Japanese company that makes galleys for the long-awaited Boeing (BA.N) 787 Dreamliner, said it could face delivery delays due to scarce gasoline supplies.

    Jamco (7408.T), which ships the galleys from Yokohama port after making them at a plant in Murakami, Nigata, in northwest Japan, said production was unaffected, but delivery could be hampered by gasoline supplies and higher prices.

    (via omnomnomjapanesefood)

    Source: reuters.com
    • 2 years ago
    • 5 notes
    • #more
    • #Japan
    • #earthquake
    • #tsunami
  • : Japanese earthquake takes heavy toll on ageing population

    newsaboutjapan:

    The devastating impact of the Japanese earthquake on the country’s ageing population was exposed on Thursday as dozens of elderly people were confirmed dead in hospitals and residential homes as heating fuel and medicine ran out.

    In one particularly shocking incident, Japan’s self-defence force discovered 128 elderly people abandoned by medical staff at a hospital six miles from the stricken Fukushima nuclear plant. Most of them were comatose and 14 died shortly afterwards. Eleven others were reported dead at a retirement home in Kesennuma because of freezing temperatures, six days after 47 of their fellow residents were killed in the tsunami. The surviving residents of the retirement home in Kesennuma were described by its owner, Morimitsu Inawashida, as “alone and under high stress”. He said fuel for their kerosene heaters was running out.

    Almost a quarter of Japan’s population are 65 or over, and hypothermia, dehydration and respiratory diseases are taking hold among the elderly in shelters, many of whom lost their medication when the wave struck, according to Eric Ouannes, general director of Doctors Without Borders’ Japan affiliate.

    This comes after Japan’s elderly people bore the brunt of the initial impact of the quake and tsunami, with many of them unable to flee to higher ground.

    Although the people from the hospital near Fukushima were moved by the self-defence forces to a gymnasium in Iwaki, there were reports that conditions were not much better there. An official for the government said it felt “helpless and very sorry for them”. “The condition at the gymnasium was horrible,” said Cheui Inamura. “No running water, no medicine and very, very little food. We simply did not have means to provide good care.”

    Japan’s deepening humanitarian crisis came as the military was enlisted to try to douse the damaged nuclear reactors and spent fuel pools at the Fukushima plant using helicopters and high-powered hoses. Chinook helicopters dropped several tonnes of water, much of which seemed to miss its target. More workers were drafted into the danger zone to prevent the spread of radiation and the plant’s operator said it had managed to connect an electric cable to allow it to restart critical water pumps in one of the six units.

    The US Nuclear Regulatory Commission chairman, Gregory Jaczko, said the commission believed “radiation levels are extremely high” at the plant, while Britain said citizens should not go any closer than 50 miles from the plant, much further than Japan’s recommendation to stay 12 miles away or take shelter indoors if evacuation was not possible within an 18-mile radius.

    Sir John Beddington, Britain’s chief scientific adviser, also said he believed cooling water essential to preventing radioactive emissions from the spent fuel pools alongside reactor 4 had almost totally evaporated and he was “extremely worried” the storage pools at reactors 5 and 6 were also leaking.

    The Japanese government revised the estimated disaster death toll up from 10,000 to 15,000. It confirmed that 5,178 people had died and 2,285 were injured. The number of missing was increased to 8,913 from 7,844. Almost 200,000 households regained electricity, but this left more than 450,000 without power. Approximately 2.5m households still do not have access to water.

    Pat Fuller, of the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, which met on Thursday in the earthquake zone to plan longer term relief with the Red Cross of Japan, said the lack of heating oil was critical.

    “They don’t have enough kerosene to run heaters for all the evacuation centres,” he said. “Only a small percentage of the petrol stations are functioning which affects efforts to get food back into the shops. There had been an outbreak of gastric flu at one health centre we visited and if that hits old people there could be serious complications.”

    Search and rescue teams began scaling back their operations as relatives began to lose hope of finding missing loved ones alive. In the town of Kamaishi, American and British teams completed their final sweeps, and Japanese mechanical diggers began the task of clearing collapsed homes, offices and stores.

    Crews found more than a dozen bodies, some trapped beneath homes flipped on their roofs, another at the wheel of his overturned car. In three days of searching the battered coast, they found no survivors. “We have no more tasks,” said Pete Stevenson, a firefighter heading Britain’s 70-strong team. “The Japanese government have told us they are now moving from search and rescue to the recovery phase.”

    Heather Heath, a British firefighter, said: “There are probably dozens of bodies we just can’t reach. The water can force people under floorboards and into gaps we can’t search. It’s such a powerful force.”

    In Rikuzentakata Katsuya Maiya, whose home was hit by the tsunami, said he had accepted he would not find his 71-year old sister-in-law and her husband. The elderly couple fled their home on foot, but they could not keep up with their neighbours and fell behind as the tsunami rushed in.

    “I think there is no hope,” he said. “The only thing that I can do is wait until members of the Japanese self-defence force collect their bodies.”

    The very young too were suffering. Save the Children on Thursday reached Ishinomaki, Nobiru and Onagawa, north of Sendai, and reported children living in miserable conditions. “There were some terrible scenes, in some places like Onagawa there was nothing left,” said Ian Woolverton, who led the mission. “In other places like Ishinomaki we found children in evacuation centres huddled around kerosene lamps.”

    The charity said they met Kazuki Seto, eight, at an evacuation centre not far from Sendai. He told them: “We are really worried about the nuclear power plants. We are very afraid of nuclear radiation. That’s why we don’t play outside.” Another, Yasu Hiro, 10, added: “We know about the bombs at Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and we are very scared. It makes us really worry. If it explodes it is going to be terrible.”

    New footage also emerged of the tsunami striking last Friday, filmed by a local reporter who fled to safety as the wave swept in. The footage showed a wave crashing down a street moments after he found safety on a staircase.

    Buildings and cars were swept away, while a father and two children were stranded on the side of an upturned car. A woman clung to a tree. She was rescued using a fire hose. “Thank you. Thank you. I thought I was going to die,” she said.

    (via omnomnomjapanesefood)

    Source: Guardian
    • 2 years ago
    • 26 notes
    • #more
    • #Japan
    • #earthquake
    • #tsunami
  • : Who are the Fukushima 50?

    newsaboutjapan:

    Online posts from families and colleagues pull back the curtain on the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant workers whose heroism has inspired the nation.

     Who are the “Fukushima 50” — the workers trying to take regain control of Japan’s stricken Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant?

    Twitter messages and blog posts by the workers’ families offer an inkling of the “Fukushima 50,” so nicknamed because the 180 employees at the site work in 50-person shifts.

    One of the workers is a veteran power plant worker, a 59-year-old who volunteered to take on the assignment, according to Jiji Press, a Japanese news wire service, quoting a woman who claimed to be his daughter on Twitter. The job puts him at risk of exposure to dangerous amounts of radiation that could cause death or lead to a higher risk ofcancer.

    “I fought back tears when I heard that my father, who is to retire in six months, had volunteered,” @NamicoAoto wrote. “At home, he doesn’t seem like someone who could handle big jobs…but today, I was really proud of him,” she wrote. “I pray for his safe return.”

    @nekkonekonyaa said her mother wept when her father left work to head to the nuclear plant. “Please dad come back alive,” she said in her tweet.

    Power plant employees were running out of food, read one e-mail from a worker’s daughter.

    “He says he’s accepted his fate. Much like a death sentence,” the e-mail said, which was read aloud on the national television network, NHK.

    It has been reported that five employees of the operator of the nuclear power plant, Tokyo Electric Power Co., known as TEPCO, have died and 22 have been injured since last week’s massive earthquake and tsunami.

    Michiko Otsuki, an employee who evacuated from Fukushima No. 1 (Daiichi) on Monday, expressed pride in the coworkers who stayed behind.

    “The staff of TEPCO have refused to flee and continue to work even at the peril of their own lives. Please stop attacking us,” Otsuki wrote on her blog, which has since been taken down but wasreprinted by the Singapore newspaper Straits Times.

    Otsuki said employees at the plant worked bravely after the magnitude 9 quake, after the plant lost power and alarms sounded.

    “We carried on working to restore the reactors from where we were, right by the sea, with the realization that this could be certain death,” Otsuki wrote.

    “The machine that cools the reactor is just by the ocean, and it was wrecked by the tsunami. Everyone worked desperately to try and restore it. Fighting fatigue and empty stomachs, we dragged ourselves back to work.”

    Otsuki apologized for the unfolding disaster.

    “To all the residents [around the plant] who have been alarmed and worried, I am truly, deeply sorry,” she wrote.

    (via omnomnomjapanesefood)

    Source: Los Angeles Times
    • 2 years ago
    • 19 notes
    • #more
    • #Japan
    • #earthquake
    • #tsunami
    • #Fukushima
    • #reactors
    • #radiation
  • ProducerMatthew.com: Workers Risk High Radiation To Cool Fukushima Nuclear Reactors

    producermatthew:

    Wearing goggles and masks sealed with duct tape, 304 workers are racing against time to cool several reactors at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant.

    It’s unknown how many of the 304 are employed by the plant’s owner, Tokyo Electric Power Company, and how many are contract workers. Still, every worker is attempting to prevent a meltdown at the plant out of a sense of duty and order.

    “I think they’re doing it of their own free will,” Tokyo construction worker Masato Furusawa told Reuters.  “They don’t need convincing; it’s something that they have to do.”

    The identities of the workers have not been made available, but the Jiji news organization reported on one 59-year-old nuclear power employee who volunteered for the job.

    Online, several Facebook pages and Twitter hashtagss have been established honoring the men and women who brave high levels of radiation to prevent a Chernobyl-like disaster.

    On Friday, Japan’s nuclear safety agency raised the incident level at the Daiichi nuclear power plant’s number 1, 2 and 3 reactors to “Level 5,” indicating an “accident with wider consequences” on the International Nuclear Event Scale.

    (Original report, some information via Reuters)

    Source: matthewkeys
    • 2 years ago
    • 10 notes
    • #more
    • #Japan
    • #earthquake
    • #tsunami
  • Monkfish Jowls: Sayuri Okamoto, contributing editor to Asymptote, emailed this from...

    monkfishjowls:

    Sayuri Okamoto, contributing editor to Asymptote, emailed this from Japan on Tuesday and I asked her if I could post the text here. I hope that all of the events of the past few years cause the industrial world to reflect on our current path.

    As you all have probably known already, the…

    Source: monkfishjowls
    • 2 years ago
    • 474 notes
    • #more
    • #Japan
    • #earthquake
    • #tsunami
  • Sitting silent in their classroom, the 30 children whose parents have not come to collect them after tsunami swept away their town

    lickystickypickyme:

    Reporters not allowed to speak to children to guard against false hope

    Even amid the carnage and despair of Japan’s tsunami victims, the plight of the 30 children at Kama Elementary School is heartbreaking.

    They sit quietly in the corner of a third-floor classroom where they have waited each day since the tsunami swept into the town of Ishinomaki for their parents to collect them. So far, no one has come and few at the school now believe they will.

    Teachers think that some of the boys and girls, aged between eight and 12, know their fathers and mothers are among the missing and will never again turn up at the gates of the school on the eastern outskirts of the town, but they are saying nothing.

    Instead, they wait patiently reading books or playing card games watched over by relatives and teachers, who prevent anyone from speaking to them.

    Officials fear that even the sound of the door sliding back might raise false hope that a parent has come to collect them. Their silence is in marked contrast to other children playing in the corridors of the four-storey building, whose parents survived due to a complete fluke.

    Sports teacher Masami Hoshi said: ‘The tsunami came just when the parents of the middle age group were starting to arrive to collect their children so we managed to get them inside and to safety.

    ‘The younger ones had left with their parents a little earlier. The ones who went to homes behind the school probably survived, the ones who went the other way probably didn’t.’

    more

    (via lickypickystickyme)

    Source: Daily Mail
    • 2 years ago
    • 1033 notes
    • #more
    • #Japan
    • #earthquake
    • #tsunami
  • : Japan quake survivors too shocked to contemplate the future

    newsaboutjapan:

    (Reuters) - - A week after their lives were turned upside down by the biggest recorded earthquake in Japan’s history, many survivors are too shocked to contemplate the future.

    “My house does not exist anymore. Everything is gone, including money,” said Tsukasa Sato, a 74-year-old barber with a heart condition, as he warmed his hands in front of a stove at a shelter in Yamada, northern Japan.

    “This is where I was born, so I want to stay here. I don’t know how it will turn out, but this is my hope.”

    He spoke as snow fell gently on what remains of the town — once home to nearly 20,000 people but now a wasteland of shattered and charred rubble.

    Much of what wasn’t destroyed by the magnitude 9.0 earthquake was smashed to bits by the subsequent tsunami; what escaped the giant waves was torched by fires that broke out in the aftermath.

    Deputy mayor Shopichi Sato declines to give even approximate casualty figures for the town as he has bigger immediate problems: how to dispose of hundreds of corpses at a crematorium that can only handle five at a time — and with fuel for the furnace fast running out.

    Mirroring Japan’s national demographic, Yamada was home to a significant population of elderly people who now make up a majority of survivors gathered at an elementary school gymnasium that escaped the carnage on the edge of town.

    Bundled in blankets against the biting cold, they huddle around stoves — some chatting to pass the time, others just staring blankly into the distance, or at their hands.

    A TOUCH OF HUMANITY

    Rescue and salvage workers have tried to bring some humanity to their plight. Photo albums, pictures and other keepsakes recovered from the rubble have been placed near the entrance to one shelter in the hope that survivors might find some of their memories.

    Some 50 kms further south the once-picturesque seaside town of Rikuzentakada, which boasted a population of around 23,000 people, is now a muddy wasteland.

    Inside the skeletal remains of a resort hotel, loose broken pipes are blown about by an icy wind, the sound of colliding metal mingling with the cries of seagulls.

    Dozens of firemen, Self Defense Force personnel and other helpers comb the area, ostensibly searching for survivors but only finding bodies. The squawk of radios breaks the muted silence to announce another grim discovery.

    “Three bodies found. One is male, in his 70s; gender and age of the other two unknown,” says a disembodied voice.

    Hayato Murakami, 73, an amateur photographer, had returned with his son to where his house once stood to see if anything could be salvaged.

    Last Friday he escaped the tsunami by running up a hill, making it to safety with seconds to spare. Many of his friends and neighbors were not so lucky.

    Scrambling through the debris, Murakami and his son had collected a tray of his clothes, two 10,000 yen bills, a sepia-toned baby photo of the elder Murakami, and another picture of his son and grandchild.

    He was most excited about finding his wallet with the membership to a Tokyo art club.

    “I must have spent about 32 million yen on all kinds of camera equipment over the years,” he said. “You could build two houses with that kind of money. Its all gone.”

    (via omnomnomjapanesefood)

    Source: reuters.com
    • 2 years ago
    • 19 notes
    • #more
    • #Japan
    • #tsunami
    • #earthquake
© 2010–2013 Uh, It's Jayvee.
Next page
  • Page 1 / 4