Broomstick wrote:I always thought that the radioactive waste was stored underground in some desert area which is seismically stable.
Yes, that
was the idea behind the Yucca Mountain storage facility. I think there's an idea floating around that we built something of the sort. We didn't, because the project was killed due to lobbying.
Lobbying which, well, involved a lot of rhetoric similar to that used by AndroAsc... [glares in irritated fashion at AndroAsc]
Not that I blame you for this, Andro, what I mean is that this mindset- of assuming the worst in any situation with the word "nuclear" attached, assuming by default that
all the authorities are covering up the real magnitude of the disastrous consequences of things existing while having "nuclear" in the name... that is the soul and center of the anti-nuclear movement, and has done more to make nuclear power less safe and less common than almost anything else.
If there was a functional equivalent to Yucca Mountain that the Japanese could relocate spent fuel to, in all probability
there would be no major hazard from Fukushima. What major hazard exists comes from the fuel pools, which would not be needed, or would be needed to a much lesser degree.
Broomstick wrote:I'm probably missing something, but who cares if it is plutonium or plutonium oxide? Radioactivity does not depends on whether it is in the elemental or oxide form.
What you're missing is that ALL nuclear fuel rods contain plutonium as it is produced during normal operations. The only difference between the fuel rods is that MOX rods contain a higher percentage of plutonium. Any melting/burning/destruction of any reactor fuel rod will liberate some plutonium.
To clarify: Plutonium-239 is created when a uranium-238 nucleus absorbs a neutron.
There are a lot of neutrons flying around among the fuel rods in a nuclear reactor;
that's the point, without the neutrons there would be no nuclear reactor.
There is a lot of U-238 sitting around in the fuel rods. It's the U-235 that undergoes fission in a nuclear reactor (as a rule), and this is in some sense "the fuel" that provides heat to the reactor... but a hunk of pure U-235 the size of a power plant fuel rod is called a
nuclear bomb, with reason. Nuclear fuel uses only a small percentage of U-235, and the rest of the rod (ignoring fission byproducts) starts out as U-238.
So you have U-238, and you have neutrons. You get plutonium. It happens. People deal with it.
AndroAsc wrote:Yes, they should have made the area larger. Either at that time the Tokyo Power company was withholding information about the severity of the disaster which led the Japanese govt to make this mistake OR the Japanese govt did not want to impose a larger evacuation zone to make it look like the situation is not that serious.
Bullshit.
Do you honestly
not get that:
-The Japanese government has much bigger problems right now, like the actual
giant tidal wave that killed many thousands of people? And left hundreds of thousands homeless?
-Fukushima
has not released any major quantity of radiation that endangers people's lives within
either the 20km radius they evacuated
or the 50 km radius you arbitrarily decided they should evacuate because... um... it sounds like a nice round number?
-Fukushima
is not expected to release any such major quantity of radiation, and that there are qualified experts other than TEPCO assessing this situation, who are in a far better position to make policy decisions about what to do about it than you are with your paranoid ravings?
Agreed. But I think they are taking a too serialized approach to the problem, instead of doing more stuff in parallel. Only recently did they try to water bomb and use fire engines which admittedly did not work. But I wonder why did it take 3-4 days for them to implement this solution? When I first read that their reactors had a hole in the roof and they were unable to maintain stable operation of the water pumps, my first thought was to air drop water through the hole AND work on the water pumps at the same time? Would it had been effective if they had try a water pump + water bomb + fire engine combination on Day 2?
Bringing up the necessary equipment takes time. The decision to, effectively,
write off the equipment used as radioactive waste takes time. Identifying the problem takes time. The fact that you had some thought of doing something on Day 2 does not mean it could have been done on Day 2, or that real people who (I repeat) have bigger problems on their hands than Fukushima should be condemned for
not doing it on Day 2.
Also, the problems with the spent fuel pond did not arise until some days after the earthquake-tsunami combo hit. The problems only became
serious after the efforts to cool off the reactors and prevent further hydrogen explosions had already been underway.
I am in agreement with this. I suspect that Tokyo Power company was limiting their efforts because they were trying to save their reactors in one form or another.
Do you
not get that their immediate reaction to the loss of coolant power was to flood the reactors with seawater, permanently making them unsalvageable?
That was only on Day 4-ish of the event if I am not mistaken. They only requested boric acid supplies from South Korea when they realized that they had lost control of the situation. Wouldn't it not be more prudent to get the supplies for Day 1? At the worst if the situation is not as bad, you suffer the embarrassment of over-reaction. Let's hope that the delayed actions taken will not bottleneck any of their ongoing efforts.
The Japanese government was
busy. They had many, many things to do other than worry about Fukushima, which has so far been contained- it is
not a problem for the entire country. It is, at most, a problem for people who live within a day's walk of Fukushima. So far, it wouldn't even have been much of a problem for them.
Compare this to the massive tidal wave, the fact that there are huge numbers of people in Japan in danger of
dying of thirst, or starving, or dying of cholera or other disease. The Japanese government needs all the foreign aid it can get,
especially all the airlift and transport capacity it can get foreign countries to supply, to deal with THAT problem. It does NOT need to waste thousands of tons of shipping capacity on bringing in a shitload of concrete to dump in on the OFF CHANCE that the Fukushima reactors or coolant ponds MIGHT go apeshit on them.
To you, Fukushima is the biggest disaster of the decade because it has the word "nuclear" in it. To the Japanese government at the moment, it's the subject of their 2:00 meeting... while the rest of the day is spent coping with
real disasters that have killed
real people and will kill more
real people, instead of
potential disasters that have killed
no people and will possibly kill
hypothetical people later.
I can concede for practical purposes, letting the power company handle it on Day 1 or 2 is fine. But by Day 3, it's clear that the situation is out of hand and the government (led by their scientific experts) should have stepped in to mobilize all resources to deal with the problem. Don't forget that the person leading the efforts up to now has a conflict of interest in wanting to salvage their nuclear reactors. You can't possibly think that they have the best interests of the Japanese people at heart?
By Day 3, TEPCO
had already given up saving the reactors. Anyone who was paying attention on Day 3 (were you paying attention?) knew this: the reactors have been
poisoned by seawater. This means they cannot be used to generate power, ever. The Fukushima reactors are now among the world's biggest, most expensive, and most chemically diverse heaps of scrap metal.
Moreover, even if (as you pretend) the desire to save the reactors had dominated TEPCO's response, this desire would NOT affect their policy on the matter of the spent fuel pond, the single biggest problem faced at the whole facility. They have NO reason to save the fuel pond, they don't
want the fuel pond. It is, quite literally, a big pile of radioactive waste sitting in the middle of their facility. If they could get someone else to take it off their hands, or claim responsibility for it, that would no doubt be
great from their point of view. At this point, if they have any functioning reactors left at Fukushima, the biggest risk they face that might cause them to lose the reactors is that fuel pond- the risk that it will contaminate the whole plant and force them to abandon it.
They have
every reason to want someone else to take responsibility for Fuel Pond #4 off their hands. And no one else is stepping up. You know why? Because there is NO reason to assume (aside from your own paranoid ravings) that anyone else could do, or would do, a better job on such short notice.