Fukushima Is Still a Disasterby aletho |
By Harvey Wasserman | CounterPunch | June 4, 2014
The
corporate media silence on Fukushima has been deafening even though the
melted-down nuclear power plant’s seaborne radiation is now washing up
on American beaches.
Ever more radioactive water continues to pour into the Pacific.
At
least three extremely volatile fuel assemblies are stuck high in the
air at Unit 4. Three years after the March 11, 2011, disaster, nobody
knows exactly where the melted cores from Units 1, 2 and 3 might be.
Amid a dicey cleanup infiltrated by organized crime, still more massive radiation releases are a real possibility at any time.
Radioactive
groundwater washing through the complex is enough of a problem that
Fukushima Daiichi owner Tepco has just won approval for a highly
controversial ice wall to
be constructed around the crippled reactor site. No wall of this scale
and type has ever been built, and this one might not be ready for two
years. Widespread skepticism has erupted surrounding its potential
impact on the stability of the site and on the huge amounts of energy
necessary to sustain it. Critics also doubt it would effectively guard the site from flooding and worry it could cause even more damage should power fail.
Meanwhile,
children nearby are dying. The rate of thyroid cancers among some
250,000 area young people is more than 40 times normal. According to
health expert Joe Mangano,
more than 46 percent have precancerous nodules and cysts on their
thyroids. This is “just the beginning” of a tragic epidemic, he warns.
There is, however, some good news—exactly the kind the nuclear power industry does not want broadcast.
When
the earthquake and consequent tsunami struck Fukushima, there were 54
commercial reactors licensed to operate in Japan, more than 12 percent
of the global total.
As
of today, not one has reopened. The six at Fukushima Daiichi will never
operate again. Some 30 older reactors around Japan can’t meet current
safety standards (a reality that could apply to 60 or more reactors that
continue to operate here in the U.S.).
As part of his desperate push to reopen these reactors, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has shuffled the country’s regulatory agencies, and removed at least one major industry critic, replacing him with a key industry supporter.
But
last month a Japanese court denied a corporate demand to restart two
newer reactors at the Ooi power plant in Fukui prefecture. The judges
decided that uncertainty about when, where and how hard the inevitable
next earthquake will hit makes it impossible to guarantee the safety of
any reactor in Japan.
In other words, no reactor can reopen in Japan without endangering the nation, which the court could not condone.
Such
legal defeats are extremely rare for Japan’s nuclear industry, and this
one is likely to be overturned. But it dealt a stunning blow to Abe’s
pro-nuke agenda.
In
Fukushima’s wake, the Japanese public has become far more anti-nuclear.
Deep-seated anger has spread over shoddy treatment and small
compensation packages given downwind victims. In particular, concern has
spread about small children being forced to move back into heavily contaminated areas around the plant.
Under
Japanese law, local governments must approve any restart. Anti-nuclear
candidates have been dividing the vote in recent elections, but the
movement may be unifying and could eventually overwhelm the Abe administration.
A
new comic book satirizing the Fukushima cleanup has become a nationwide
best-seller. The country has also been rocked by revelations that some
700 workers fled the
Fukushima Daiichi site at the peak of the accident. Just a handful of
personnel were left to deal with the crisis, including the plant
manager, who soon thereafter died of cancer.
In the meantime, Abe’s infamous, intensely repressive state secrets act has seriously constrained the flow of technical information. At least one nuclear opponent is being prosecuted for sending a critical tweet to
an industry supporter. A professor jailed for criticizing the
government’s handling of nuclear waste has come to the U.S. to speak.
The American corporate media have been dead silent or, alternatively, dismissive about
the radiation now washing up on our shores, and about the extremely
dangerous job of bringing intensely radioactive fuel rods down from
their damaged pools.
Fukushima’s
General Electric reactors feature spent fuel pools perched roughly 100
feet in the air. When the tsunami hit, thousands of rods were suspended
over Units 1, 2, 3 and 4.
According to nuclear engineer Arnie Gundersen, the bring-down of the assemblies in Unit 4 may
have hit a serious snag. Gundersen says that beginning in November
2013, Tokyo Electric Power removed about half of the suspended rods
there. But at least three assemblies may be stuck. The more difficult
half of the pile remains. And the pools at three other units remain
problematic. An accident at any one of them could result in significant
radiation releases, which have already far exceeded those from Chernobyl
and from the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
At
least 300 tons of heavily contaminated Fukushima water still pour daily
into the Pacific. Hundreds more tons are backed up on site, with Tepco
apologists advocating they be dumped directly into the ocean without decontamination.
Despite
billions of dollars in public aid, Tepco is still the principal owner
of Fukushima. The “cleanup” has become a major profit center. Tepco
boasted a strong return in 2013. Its fellow utilities are desperate to
reopen other reactors that netted them huge annual cash flow.
Little of this has made its way into the American corporate media.
New studies from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission have underscored significant seismic threats to
American commercial nuclear sites. Among those of particular concern
are two reactors at Indian Point just north of New York City, which sit
near the highly volatile Ramapo Fault, and two at Diablo Canyon, between
Los Angeles and San Francisco, directly upwind of California’s Central
Valley.
The
U.S. industry has also suffered a huge blow at New Mexico’s Waste
Isolation Pilot Project. Primarily a military dump, this showcase
radioactive waste facility was meant to prove that the industry could
handle its trash. No expense was spared in setting it up in the salt
caverns of the desert southwest, officially deemed the perfect spot to
dump the 70,000 tons of high-level fuel rods now backed up at American
reactor sites.
But an explosion and
highly significant radiation release at the pilot project last month
has contaminated local residents and cast a deep cloud over any future
plans to dispose of American reactor waste. The constant industry
complaint that the barriers are “political” is absurd.
While
the American reactor industry continues to suck billions of dollars
from the public treasury, its allies in the corporate media seem
increasingly hesitant to cover the news of post-Fukushima Japan.
In
reality, those gutted reactors are still extremely dangerous. An angry
public, whose children are suffering, has thus far managed to keep all
other nukes shut in Japan. If they keep them down permanently, it will
be a huge blow to the global nuke industry—one you almost certainly
won’t see reported in the American corporate media.

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