Archive for March 13th, 2011

March 13, 2011

Tsunami, earthquake, nuclear crisis – now Japan faces power cuts – Prime minister warns of biggest crisis since 1945 with rolling cuts aimed at averting total blackout

 

Cached:  http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/mar/13/japan-tsunami-earthquake-power-cuts

 

Japan is facing its greatest crisis since the second world war, its prime minister, Naoto Kan, warned as the country struggled for a third day to avert a nuclear disaster following the massive earthquake and tsunami.

Police warn that the death toll could exceed 10,000 in Miyagi prefecture alone, and a UN agency reported that more than 1,600 people were confirmed dead. Most are thought to have drowned.

“The earthquake, tsunami and the nuclear incident have been the biggest crisis Japan has encountered in the 65 years since the end of the second world war,” Kan told news media. “We’re under scrutiny on whether we, the Japanese people, can overcome this crisis.”

The extent of this challenge was underscored by the news that the capital of the world’s third largest economy will see rolling three-hour power cuts from Monday.

Officials have ordered the measure because nuclear plant closures have drastically reduced the electricity supply. They warn that the blackouts could last for weeks.

“We have to avoid at all costs a sudden power shortage whose scale could have devastating consequences for the economy and people’s lives,” Kan said.

Friday’s 9.0 magnitude earthquake, upgraded from 8.9, is the worst in Japan’s recorded history and the fifth strongest worldwide in the past century. It caused a tsunami 10 metres high in some places.

As aftershocks continued to shake the coast, the Foreign Office urged Britons to avoid all non-essential travel to Tokyo and the north-east of Japan, while the US state department recommended that Americans stay away from Japan.

The Japanese meteorological agency warned that there was a 70% possibility of a magnitude 7 or greater tremor during the next three days. It lifted the tsunami warning, but cautioned that aftershocks could cause further waves.

The agency also warned that a volcano in the south was erupting again after a fortnight without noticeable activity. Ash and rock spewed from the crater of Shinmoedake on Kyushu island, 950 miles from the epicentre of Friday’s tremor. There were no reports of injuries or damage.

Tokyo has doubled the number of troops in its rescue and relief team, but damage to roads and bridges has hampered efforts.

“Rescue and relief operations are being hampered by continuous aftershocks, tsunami alerts and fires. Many areas along the north-east coast remain isolated and unreachable,” the UN Office for the Co-ordination of Humanitarian Affairs said in a statement.

It reported that at least 1,600 people were known to have died and 10,000 were missing. Almost 600,000 have been displaced, or evacuated, because of the earthquake and tsunami or radiation fears, it added.

Etsuko Oyama, who was rescued by a neighbour after the wave swept her 400 metres from her home, struggled to hold back tears as she spoke to NHK’s news channel, the Japanese public broadcaster.

“I grabbed my daughter’s hand but I lost my grip when I was swept away by the debris and water,” she said. “I managed to survive but my daughter was washed away … I hope she is still alive somewhere.”

Japanese troops rescued a 60-year-old man who was swept 10 miles out to sea on the roof of his home. But Hiromitsu Shinkawa said his wife had been washed away when the tsunami hit as they returned home to gather possessions after the quake.

While there were welcome moments of celebration as survivors were reunited, any good news was generally alloyed by grief.

With phone services still down in many areas, many survivors made their way to civic centres to check boards with names of others known to have survived and those who had died.

The Kyodo news agency reported that more than 20,000 buildings nationwide were either destroyed or badly damaged. Some 2.6 million households were without power and 1.4 million without drinking water, said Japan’s ministry of health, labour and welfare, although electricity was restored to some parts of Sendai city. Others in the area reported food shortages.

Survivors huddled in public shelters for another night in near-freezing temperatures. In addition to the central government’s relief efforts, cities and private businesses have sent help. The deputy mayor of Tokyo said the city was dispatching 384,000 blankets and 9,000 portable toilets, while Nissin, an instant noodle manufacturer, said it would send a million packets and “kitchen cars” equipped with stoves and water.

International relief and rescue teams from more than a dozen countries, including China, the US and the UK, are arriving to help Japanese troops. Almost 70 countries have offered donations, such as India’s consignment of blankets and self-contained field hospitals from Australia.

Many of the donors, including Pakistan and Sri Lanka, have been scarred by earthquakes or tsunamis in recent years.

Kandahar in southern Afghanistan also pledged cash. “I know $50,000 [£31,000] is not a lot of money for a country like Japan, but it is a show of appreciation from the Kandahar people,” Ghulam Haidar Hamidi, the mayor, told Reuters.

Yukio Edano, Japan’s chief cabinet secretary, has said the government would use its contingency funds of some 200bn yen (£1.5bn) to pay for the relief effort. But there is already talk of a possible temporary tax increase to fund relief work.

Japan, overtaken by China last year as the world’s second largest economy, will require tens of billions of dollars for reconstruction. The 1995 Kobe earthquake is said to have been the most expensive natural disaster in history, causing more than £1bn damage.

The country will also need to count the cost of industrial losses, with much of the north-east at a standstill.

March 13, 2011

Japan nuclear woes cast shadow over U.S. energy policy

Cached:  http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/42059593/ns/business

By Jeff Mason and Will Dunham

WASHINGTON — Anxiety over Japan’s quake-crippled nuclear reactors has triggered calls from lawmakers and activists for review of U.S. energy policy and for brakes on expansion of domestic nuclear power.

President Barack Obama has urged expansion of nuclear power to help meet the country’s energy demands, lower its dependence on imported fossil fuels and reduce its climate-warming greenhouse gas emissions.

But as engineers in Japan tried on Sunday to avert a meltdown at three nuclear reactors following Friday’s massive earthquake, some U.S. policy makers were reevaluating their take on nuclear energy even as the industry itself offered assurances about the safety of new and existing plants.

“I don’t want to stop the building of nuclear power plants,” independent Senator Joe Lieberman, chairman of the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, said on the CBS television’s “Face the Nation.”

“But I think we’ve got to kind of quietly put, quickly put, the brakes on until we can absorb what has happened in Japan as a result of the earthquake and the tsunami and then see what more, if anything, we can demand of the new power plants that are coming on line,” Lieberman added.

Since the 1979 accident at the Three Mile Island nuclear plant in Pennsylvania, many Americans have harbored concerns about nuclear power’s safety. Controversy has also dogged the nuclear power industry due to its radioactive waste, which is now stored on site at reactor locations around the country.

The Nuclear Energy Institute, which represents the industry in Washington, said regulators already are reviewing license applications for 20 reactors that would be built over the next 15-20 years. Four to eight new reactors are slated to begin operating between 2016 to 2020, spokesman Steven Kerekes said.

“It is a fairly measured build-out program,” he said. “We feel it would be premature at this point to draw any conclusions from the tragic events in Japan relative to the U.S. program.”

In February 2010, Obama announced $8.3 billion in loan guarantees to build the first U.S. nuclear power plant in nearly three decades. The backing helps Southern Co build two reactors at a plant in the U.S. state of Georgia.

The White House said it was watching the events in Japan for lessons about nuclear safety but indicated that no major policy changes were imminent.

“Information is still coming in about the events unfolding in Japan, but the administration is committed to learning from them and ensuring that nuclear energy is produced safely and responsibly here in the U.S.,” White House spokesman Clark Stevens said.

“The president believes that meeting our energy needs means relying on a diverse set of energy sources that includes renewables like wind and solar, natural gas, clean coal and nuclear power.”

GREEN QUESTIONS

Environmentalists said Japan’s example should be a wake-up call for Obama to reconsider his policies.

“Obama’s request for additional loan guarantees for new nuclear reactor projects is now revealed to be a questionable approach given the inherent safety risks of nuclear reactors and resulting radioactive waste,” said Tom Clements of environmental group Friends of the Earth.

“Congress should deny any additional funding,” he said. The group was opposed to the expansion of nuclear power even before the Japan disaster.

Both Democrats and Republicans have embraced expanding nuclear power as a way to generate electricity and jobs. The recent spike in gasoline prices as well as the Gulf of Mexico oil spill have put a renewed focus on revamping U.S. energy policies to find more sources of fuel.

Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell, speaking on “Fox News Sunday,” urged a cautious approach.

“I don’t think right after a major environmental catastrophe is a very good time to be making American domestic policy. I think we ought to just concentrate on helping the Japanese in any way that we can,” McConnell said.

Lieberman noted there are 104 nuclear power plants in the United States, and that about 23 of them are built according to designs similar to the nuclear power plants in Japan that are now the focus of the world’s concern.

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters

March 13, 2011

U.S. military aid arrives in Japan amid concerns for nuclear plants

Cached:  http://www.stripes.com/news/u-s-military-aid-arrives-in-japan-amid-concerns-for-nuclear-plants-1.137522

Stars and Stripes
Published: March 12, 2011

TOKYO — U.S. military manpower and equipment started arriving in Japan on Saturday to assist in rescue and humanitarian operations, as the death toll from Friday’s 8.9-magnitude earthquake and powerful tsunami mounted along with concerns about the safety of nuclear power facilities in northern Japan.

Col. Craig Timberlake, commanding officer for 3rd Marine Expeditionary Brigade. They boarded a KC-130J cargo plane laden with medical supplies, food, water, and vehicles. Matt Orr / Stars and Stripes

Officials said late Saturday about 600 had been killed, but The Associated Press reported that local media outlets were estimating the number of dead will likely climb to more than 1,300.

While aftershocks continued to rumble across the country Saturday, and the search for bodies of the dead and the missing continued, the most pressing concern of the day was that fate of a couple of Japan’s nuclear power plants.

Officials declared states of emergency for five nuclear reactors at two power plants after the units lost cooling ability, including the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant 20 miles from Iwaki, where an explosion Saturday prompted Prime Minister Naoto Kan to order everyone living within a 12-mile radius of the facility to evacuate.

More than 125 aftershocks have occurred, many of them above magnitude 6.0, which alone would be considered strong. AP reported that more than 215,000 people were living in 1,350 temporary shelters in five prefectures, or states. Since the quake, more than 1 million households have not had water, mostly in the northeast part of the country.

The transport ministry said all highways from Tokyo leading to quake-hit areas were closed, except for emergency vehicles. Mobile communications were spotty and calls to the devastated areas were going unanswered.

Despite the widespread death and destruction, officials said the U.S. military in Japan escaped relatively unscathed with no reported deaths or injuries, nor significant damage from the disaster. The hardest hit U.S. facility was Misawa Air Base in northern Japan, where most residents remained without heat or electricity Saturday and many scrambled to stock up on supplies at the commissary before nightfall. At the Potter Fitness Center, members of the 35th Force Support Squadron set up nearly 200 cots and sleeping bags.

U.S. ships and aircraft began heading to mainland Japan on Saturday following a request for help from the Japanese government.

The USS Ronald Reagan carrier strike group is expected to arrive Sunday along the east coast of Japan’s main Honshu island, where it will support relief efforts in areas hit hardest by the earthquake, 7th Fleet spokesman Cmdr. Jeff Davis said.

The Reagan was en route to South Korea, where it was scheduled to participate in a joint South Korean-U.S. military exercise this week.

The Reagan “is prepared to serve as an afloat platform for refueling Japan Self Defense Force and other helicopters involved in rescue and recovery efforts ashore,” Davis wrote in an e-mail.

Meanwhile, U.S. aircraft from Okinawa filled with medical and humanitarian relief supplies were scheduled to fly Saturday afternoon to Marine Corps Air Station Iwakuni, where they would be pre-positioned to respond quickly to the devastated regions.

Prime Minister Kan also ordered 50,000 Japanese troops to take part in rescue operations. Japan had received offers of help from 50 countries, Kan said.

“We need to put our utmost effort into saving survivors and those who were isolated today,” Kan said during an emergency meeting Saturday morning. “Today is a very important day on how much rescue efforts will move forward.”

Japan’s Ministry of Defense said in a news release that it had asked U.S. Forces Japan to transport approximately 900 Japanese troops and 250 vehicles to disaster-hit areas. The U.S. Navy’s 7th Fleet and Japanese naval forces were making plans for a joint rescue operation, according to an MOD news release.

U.S. military officials in South Korea, Japan and at the U.S. Pacific Command in Hawaii could not say Saturday whether U.S. troops stationed elsewhere in the Pacific region would be asked to participate in rescue efforts. However, U.S. Secretary of Defense Robert Gates said Friday that the U.S. would help “in any way we possibly can.”

Travel disrupted

Transportation on the ground and in the air is still a major problem.

While much of Tokyo seemed to return to business as usual Saturday, outbound traffic from Tokyo headed toward the devastated Miyagi Prefecture on Route 4 backed up for hours Saturday afternoon and into the evening.

Japanese authorities closed portions of the Tohoku Expressway running parallel to Route 4 and were only allowing emergency vehicles to enter the highway as help continued pouring into Miyagi.

News of an explosion at a nuclear power plant in Fukushima, roughly 75 miles south of Sendai, began hitting the radio late Saturday afternoon. Electronic signs on the roads warned drivers that only “designated” vehicles would be allowed to continue toward Fukushima.

At Yokota Air Base, 537 passengers from two commercial airplanes happily loaded onto buses Saturday afternoon and continued on to Narita International Airport after they were detoured to the base in the wake of the earthquake.

Passengers from Delta Flight 295 and Delta 647 were two of 11 commercial planes diverted from Narita in the aftermath of the quake. The two were the only flights unable to depart Friday, leaving passengers stranded overnight at the base.

Passenger Richard Emerson was anxious about continuing his trip.

“It’s been an adventure,” he said with a laugh. “It’s the start of a seven-week vacation for us — a hell of way to start it.”

Emerson said his heart went out to those more impacted by the disaster.

“This is such a tragic thing for the Japanese up there and all of Japan,” he said.

With communications still spotty in many areas of Japan, Internet social media and news sites were utilized by people checking on the welfare of family and friends.

The U.S. State Department set up e-mail addresses to help the effort. Americans in Japan who need help, or people seeking information about a loved one in Japan, can e-mail japanemergencyusc@state.gov. Americans outside Japan but in tsunami-affected areas who need help, or people seeking information about an American in affected areas outside Japan, can e-mail pacifictsunamiusc@state.gov. An information line also has been set up at 1-888-407-4747

Staff writers T.D. Flack, Charlie Reed, Nathan Bailey, Elana Sugiyama, Ashley Rowland, Chiyomi Sumida, Hana Kusumoto, Grant Okubo, Erik Slavin and Jon Rabiroff contributed to this report.

March 13, 2011

Nuclear plant explosion raises concerns – Residents aware of nuclear danger in Western Mass. U.S.A.

Cached:  http://www.wwlp.com/dpp/news/local/franklin/Nuclear-plant-explosion-raises-concerns

Updated: Saturday, 12 Mar 2011, 1:13 PM EST
Published : Saturday, 12 Mar 2011, 1:13 PM EST

NORTHFIELD, Mass. (WWLP) – Thousands living near the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear facility were evacuated Saturday.

An explosion at the plant blew the walls out of the building that houses the reactor.

At one point, the plant was releasing each hour the amount of radiation a person normally absorbs from the environment in a year.

Western Massachusetts is in the backyard of its own nuclear power plant. Vermont Yankee has been here since 1972 and many residents strongly oppose having a nuclear power plant so close by.

Sara Jenney lives in Colrain she told 22News, “There’s a big debate about having the license renewed for Vermont Yankee for next year and hopefully this will sway people’s opinion to not renew it.”

But the Nuclear Regulatory Commission just announced the Vermont Yankee license will be renewed for another 20 years.This still scares many long time residents.

Larry Burdick of Winchester said, “I mean let’s face it, you’re crazy, that’s like holding the stick of dynamite in your hand and asking someone to light it for you.”

At one point officials were concerned the explosion at Fukushima could have resulted in a disaster like the one in Chernobyl. Twenty five years ago, an explosion at a Ukrainian nuclear power plant caused possibly the worst disaster in the nuclear power industry’s history.

Luckily a catastrophe at the Fukushima plant was averted.

 

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