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Showing posts with label radiation fallout. Show all posts
Showing posts with label radiation fallout. Show all posts

Friday, April 8, 2011

Is the U.S. Government Telling Us The Truth About Radiation From Japan?

Do you want to know where the radioactive water from the Fukushima Nuclear facility will spread?... Here is a pretty good idea.

Fukushima Daiichi Radioactive Seawater Model April 5 from ASR Limited on Vimeo.


If you don't think that the government would cover up something as important as radiation in the United States from Japan, think again...


ALERT: Government Cover Up Of This Story Underway
Important! After you read this article, make sure you read this to open your eyes to how the government propaganda machine works.


Despite countless reassurances that no harmful levels of radiation from the Japan nuclear fallout would hit the US from the EPA, the University of Berkley in California is now reporting that rainwater in San Francisco water has now been detected at levels 18,100% above federal drinking water standards.


Radioactive Iodine-131 in Pennsylvania rainwater sample is 3300% above federal drinking water standard.


The Federal Governments also plans to raise the legal limits of acceptable radiation exposure so they can continue to say the amounts of radiation are below levels of concern.





The question is though, if the amounts being detected really present no danger to the public, then why raise the legal levels of acceptable radiation exposure?


Do you worry about radiation? Maybe we should.

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Fukushima Reactor 4 - New Fire - Video Update and Analysis

Will this be another Chernobyl times three?


Emergency is at a 4 right now, where Chernobyl was a 7.  However, they are raising the emergency very soon.

The last ditch effort is seawater.  Three partial melt-downs are going on right now.  The outer shell has blown off of # 3.

Worse case:  Complete meltdown...Chernobyl, but with multiple reactor sites.  This would make areas of Japan uninhabitable for quite some time...weeks, months, longer.

Best case:  Extended period ending in shut down.

Can they restore the faith of the Japanese people in the nuclear power?


IAEA Update on Japan Earthquake

IAEA Flag

Japanese Earthquake Update (15 March 11:25 UTC)
Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant Update

Radiation Dose Rates Observed at the Site
The Japanese authorities have informed the IAEA that the following radiation dose rates have been observed on site at the main gate of the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant.
At 00:00 UTC on 15 March a dose rate of 11.9 millisieverts (mSv) per hour was observed. Six hours later, at 06:00 UTC on 15 March a dose rate of 0.6 millisieverts (mSv) per hour was observed.
These observations indicate that the level of radioactivity has been decreasing at the site.
As reported earlier, a 400 millisieverts (mSv) per hour radiation dose observed at Fukushima Daiichi occurred between units 3 and 4. This is a high dose-level value, but it is a local value at a single location and at a certain point in time. The IAEA continues to confirm the evolution and value of this dose rate. It should be noted that because of this detected value, non-indispensible staff was evacuated from the plant, in line with the Emergency Response Plan, and that the population around the plant is already evacuated.
About 150 persons from populations around the Daiichi site have received monitoring for radiation levels. The results of measurements on some of these people have been reported and measures to decontaminate 23 of them have been taken. The IAEA will continue to monitor these developments.
Evacuation of the population from the 20 kilometre zone is continuing.
The Japanese have asked that residents out to a 30 km radius to take shelter indoors. Japanese authorities have distributed iodine tablets to the evacuation centres but no decision has yet been taken on their administration.

Where will the "Radiation Cloud" travel? Japanese ordered indoors in radiation leak crisis!

Japanese ordered indoors in radiation leak crisis

What About Japan's Children?Play VideoABC News  – What About Japan's Children?
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The rubble caused by an earthquake and tsunami fill the landscape in Yamada, Iwate Prefecture, Japan, Monday, March 14, 2011, three days after northeaAP – The rubble caused by an earthquake and tsunami fill the landscape in Yamada, Iwate Prefecture, Japan, …
SOMA, Japan – High levels of radiation leaked from a crippled nuclear plant in tsunami-ravaged northeastern Japan after a third reactor was rocked by an explosion Tuesday and a fourth caught fire in a dramatic escalation of the 4-day-old catastrophe. The government warned 140,000 people nearby to stay indoors to avoid exposure.
Tokyo also reported slightly elevated radiation levels, but officials said the increase was too small to threaten the 39 million people in and around the capital, about 170 miles (270 kilometers) away.
In a nationally televised statement, Prime Minister Naoto Kan said radiation has spread from four reactors of the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant in Fukushima state, one of the hardest-hit in Friday's 9.0-magnitude earthquake and the ensuing tsunami that has killed more than 10,000 people, plunged millions into misery and pummeled the world's third-largest economy.
Officials just south of Fukushima reported up to 100 times the normal levels of radiation Tuesday morning, Kyodo News agency reported. While those figures are worrying if there is prolonged exposure, they are far from fatal.
Kan and other officials warned there is danger of more leaks and told people living within 19 miles (30 kilometers) of the Fukushima Dai-ichi complex to stay indoors to avoid the possibility of radiation sickness.
"Please do not go outside. Please stay indoors. Please close windows and make your homes airtight," Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano told residents in the danger zone. "Don't turn on ventilators. Please hang your laundry indoors."
"These are figures that potentially affect health. There is no mistake about that," he said.
Weather forecasts for Fukushima were for snow and wind from the northeast Tuesday evening, blowing southwest toward Tokyo, then shifting and blowing west out to sea. That's important because it shows which direction a possible nuclear cloud might blow.
The nuclear crisis is the worst Japan has faced since the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki during World War II. It is also the first time that such a grave nuclear threat has been raised in the world since a nuclear power plant in Chernobyl, Ukraine exploded in 1986.
Some 70,000 people had already been evacuated from a 12-mile (20-kilometer) radius from the Dai-ichi complex and about 140,000 remain in the zone for which the new warning was issued.


The radiation level is now elevated to a point that may damage health, a government spokesman said. The exact amount of radiation being leaked is still unclear, but the country's prime minister said publicly that people within 19 miles of the troubled nuclear power plant should stay indoors.
After a third explosion in four days rocked the earthquake-damaged Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant in northeast Japan early Tuesday, the country's nuclear safety agency said the explosion may have damaged a reactor's containment vessel. 
Following the fire, explosion and public warning, only 50 of the plant's 800 or so workers will remain at the site to pump seawater into three stricken reactors at the plant, in order to minimize exposure to unhealthy levels of radiation, reports the New York Times.
Making matters worse, the wind over the radiation-leaking nuclear plant in northern Japan will blow inland from the northeast and later from the east on Tuesday, the Japan Meteorological Agency said, according to Reuters. Harmful radiation can spread via wind and rain. 
At a shelter in Sendai, workers told CBS News that everyone must avoid Tuesday's rain, as it carries nuclear radiation.  Officials in far-off Tokyo have already detected slightly higher-than-normal radiation levels there, but insist there are no health dangers.
Takayuki Fujiki, a Tokyo government official says: "The amount is extremely small, and it does not raise health concerns. It will not affect us." Radiation at up to 9 times the normal level was briefly detected in Kanagawa near Tokyo.
The blast at Dai-ichi Unit 2 followed two hydrogen explosions at the plant - the latest on Monday - as authorities struggle to prevent the catastrophic release of radiation in the area devastated by a tsunami.
The cascading troubles in the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant compounded the immense challenges faced by the Tokyo government, already struggling to send relief to hundreds of thousands of people along the country's quake- and tsunami-ravaged coast where at least 10,000 people are believed to have died.
Japanese nuclear authorities insist they are in control, reports CBS News correspondent Celia Hatton. Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano said the situation will not turn in to another Chernobyl.
Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan said the government is setting up a joint response headquarters at Tokyo Electric Power Co.'s main office to better manage the crisis.
Later, a top Japanese official said the fuel rods in all three of the most troubled nuclear reactors appeared to be melting. 
Japan radiation leak
A one-year-old boy is re-checked for radiation exposure after being decontaminated in Nihonmatsu, Fukushiima, northern Japan Monday, March 14, 2011. 
(Credit: Toru Nakata,AP Photo/Asahi Shimbun)
Nuclear energy experts disagree on the severity of the current situation..













Exactly where a hypothetical "radiation cloud", from either Fukushima Daiichi or Onagawa, would go should depend upon the weather pattern at the time of, and following, the release.
Moreover, it should depend upon how high the cloud rose into the atmosphere. This is because the winds normally vary widely between the near-surface and the upper atmosphere, home to the eastward-flowing jet stream.
Generally speaking, any radioactive cloud rising significantly into the atmosphere would travel essentially eastward and northeastward across the Pacific Ocean, eventually reaching North America anywhere between Alaska and California. The precise details as to timing and path taken would depend upon the state of the atmosphere at the time of the hypothetical radiation release.
Although such a cloud would pose virtually no threat while in the upper atmosphere, the fallout at the ground of radioactive particles from it should be a concern for any monitoring authority.