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First for breaking news and analysis: Compelling world news stories from NBC News journalists. Follow us on Twitter and Facebook.

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  • 1
    May
    2013
    4:01am, EDT

    'A very fragile situation': Leaks from Japan's wrecked nuke plant raise fears

    Slideshow: Triple tragedy for Japan

    An earthquake, a tsunami, a nuclear meltdown -- residents of Japan's northeast coast suffered through three intertwined disasters after a massive 9.0 magnitude temblor struck off the coast on March 11, 2011.

    Launch slideshow

    By Arata Yamamoto and Ian Johnston, NBC News

    TOKYO — Like the persistent tapping of a desperate SOS message, the updates keep coming. Day after day, the operators of the wrecked Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant have been detailing their struggles to contain leaks of radioactive water.

    The leaks, power outages and other glitches have raised fears that the plant — devastated by a tsunami in March 2011 — could even start to break apart during a cleanup process expected to take years.

    The situation has also attracted the attention of the International Atomic Energy Agency, which sent a team of experts to review the decommissioning effort last month. They warned Japan may need longer than the projected 40 years to clean up the site. A full report is expected to be released later this month.

    Journalists have been given a rare glimpse inside Japan's Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, which was crippled in the 9-magnitude earthquake and tsunami that hit the country two years ago. NBC News' Arata Yamamoto reports.

    The discovery of a greenling fish near a water intake for the power station in February that contained some 7,400 times the recommended safe limit of radioactive cesium only served to heighten concern.

    There was also some reassuring news in February, when a report by the World Health Organization said Fukushima had caused “no discernible increase in health risks” outside Japan and “no observable increases in cancer above natural variation” in most of the country.

    But for the most affected areas, the report said the lifetime risks of various cancers were expected to increase. For example, baby boys were predicted to have up to a 7 percent greater chance of getting leukemia in their lifetime and for baby girls the lifetime risk of breast cancer could be up to 6 percent higher than normal.

    Independent nuclear expert John Large — who has given evidence on the Fukushima disaster to the U.K. parliament and written reports about it for Greenpeace — said there would be hundreds of tons of “intensely radioactive” material in the plant.

    He said normally robots could be sent in to remove the fuel relatively easily, but this was difficult because of the damage caused by the tsunami.

    Large said the plant was close to the water table, so it was difficult to stop water getting in and out.

    “Until you can stop that transfer, you will not contain the radioactivity. That will go on for years and years until they contain it,” he said. "The structures of containment start breaking down. Engineered structures don’t last long when they are put in adverse conditions."

    Larged added: "It may have some marked effect on the health of future generations in Japan. What it will create is a Fukushima generation — like in Nagasaki and Hiroshima - where girls particularly will have difficulty marrying because of the stigma of being brought up in a radiation area."

    Leaks into the sea would not only affect the marine environment, Large said, as tiny radioactive particles would be washed up on the beach, dried in the sun and then blown over the surrounding countryside by the wind.

    Slideshow: Then-and-now: Tsunami cleanup

    AP

    View side-by-side the progress that Japan has made since the tsunami and earthquake in March 2011.

    Launch slideshow

    Japanese activists are also worried by the ongoing leaks from the plant.

    The Associated Press reported that "runoff ... and a steady inflow of groundwater seeping into the basement of their damaged buildings produce about 400 tons of contaminated water daily at the plant." According to the plant's operator, 280,000 tons of contaminated water has been stored in tanks there.

    Hisayo Takada, energy campaigner with Greenpeace Japan, complained no real progress had been made.

    “It’s still a very fragile situation and measures implemented by the government and [power company] TEPCO are only temporary solutions,” she said. "The issue with the contaminated water is very serious and we're very concerned. And we're very angry because it’s been two years and they've been saying that everything's safe."

    Greenpeace has been testing food sold in supermarkets, and to date has not found “radiation levels higher than government guidelines,” Takada said.

    But she said the “land and sea will never return to the way it was before the accident.”

    One man who knows this all too well is cattle farmer Masami Yoshizawa. He lives in the Namie area, which was once inside a 12-mile, mandatory evacuation zone but is now among the places where people have been allowed to return.

    He tends his herd of 350 cows as “a living symbol of protest.”

    Nearly a year after a tsunami and 9.0 magnitude earthquake hit Japan, NBC News Chief Foreign Correspondent Richard Engel travels to the evacuation zone surrounding the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant. The plant suffered a triple meltdown in the wake of the earthquake, turning the neighborhoods in the 12 mile radius of the plant into ghost towns. Engel journeyed near the mangled plant which remains very much a hotspot.  Radiation levels were so high, the NBC News team on the ground had to wear face masks and full body suits. Even as NBC News drove half a mile from the reactor, radiation monitors were screaming in alarm.

    “As long as they're alive, I will keep them to show to the world -- these cows that have been exposed to radiation, cows that are no longer marketable, and that I’m being told to have slaughtered,” said Yoshizawa, 59.

    “For us farmers, it’s impossible for us to return to work in Namie. Our community will disappear. It’s going to become like Chernobyl … Only the elderly who say they don't care about the radiation will return. Children will never return,” he said.

    The nuclear industry in the U.S. argues its safety standards are higher than at Fukushima.

    Steve Kerekes, a spokesman for the Nuclear Energy Institute, said it was “incredibly unlikely” that a similar accident could happen in the U.S.

    Significant safety improvements were made in the U.S. after Fukushima, the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks and the last major nuclear incident in America at Three Mile Island in 1979, he said.

    “Our layers of defense extend beyond what the Japanese had in place,” he said. “We’re now well into our fifth or sixth layer of back-up defenses to ensure there would not be – regardless of the cause – a serious accident that would jeopardize public safety.”

    A survey for the institute in February found that 68 percent of Americans supported nuclear energy. 

    “[Support] did drop for about six to eight months after the Fukushima accident … it hasn’t quite reached the pre-Fukushima historic highs, but we have rebounded to a considerable extent,” Kerekes said.

    Part of this support comes from those who see nuclear energy as key in the fight against climate change.

    Kerekes pointed to a report by climatologist James Hansen — until recently head of NASA’s Goddard Institute — that said nuclear power had stopped the release of massive amounts of greenhouse gases and saved 1.8 million deaths related to air pollution.

    “Every technology has pros and cons. We feel when you look at the benefits of nuclear energy, it’s very effective, round-the-clock electric supply,” Kerekes said.

    “As we look to help try to drive our economy and provide jobs that people need, there’s a strong role for nuclear energy going forward. We believe that’s widely recognized on a bipartisan basis.”

    It remains to be seen whether this support will be eroded by the drip, drip of leaks from Fukushima.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    Related:

    • Japan's Fukushima nuclear plant leaking contaminated water
    • Rats! Anti-rodent work shuts down Fukushima nuclear plant's cooling system
    • The Fallout: Fukushima nuclear plant a year after earthquake

    148 comments

    I guess all that water has no affect on the rest of the world. What is it doing to the ocean? What is it doing to the fishes and plants that live in the waters? Must be some global affect if radiation has already been proven on the rise in west coast US. We are not supposed to worry, it will only be …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: japan, radiation, nuclear-power, leaks, featured, fukushima, arata-yamamoto
  • 5
    Apr
    2013
    11:11pm, EDT

    Japan's Fukushima nuclear plant leaking contaminated water

    Reuters

    An aerial view shows Tokyo Electric Power Co.'s (TEPCO) tsunami-crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in Fukushima Prefecture March 11, 2013.

    By Reuters

    As much as 120 tons of radioactive water may have leaked from a storage tank at Japan's crippled Fukushima nuclear plant, contaminating the surrounding ground, Tokyo Electric Power Co said on Saturday.

    The power company has yet to discover the cause of the leak, detected on one of seven tanks that store water used to cool the plants reactors, a spokesman for the company, Masayuki Ono, said at a press briefing.

    The company plans to pump 13,000 cubic meters of water remaining in the tank to other vessels over the next two weeks.


    Water from the leaking tank, which is located 800 meters from the coast, is not expected to reach the sea, Kyodo news wire reported, earlier, citing unidentified officials from the utility.

     


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    The company did not say how long the tank had been leaking.

    The operator of the Fukushima Daiichi plant has faced a range of problems with controlling ground water and maintaining the massive cooling system built to keep the reactors stable.

    The power company said on Friday said it lost the ability to cool radioactive fuel rods in one of the plant's reactors for about three hours. It was the second failure of the system to circulate seawater to cool spent fuel rods at the plant in the past three weeks.

    The facility was the site of the worst nuclear disaster since Chernobyl in March 2011 when a magnitude 9.0 earthquake triggered a tsunami that destroyed back-up generators and disabled its cooling system. Three of the reactors melted down.

    The storage tanks, pits excavated at the site in the wake of the disaster, are lined with water proof sheets meant to keep the contaminated water from leaking into the soil

    Work to decommission the plant is projected to take decades to complete.

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    80 comments

    And this is EXACTLY why, despite narrow minded thinkers, we will always have a problem with nuclear plants. Only a short sighted ignoramus could ever believe that nukes are good for anything but death on a scale of thousands of years.

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    Explore related topics: japan, nuclear, featured, fukushima
  • Updated
    5
    Apr
    2013
    8:16am, EDT

    Rats! Anti-rodent work shuts down Fukushima nuclear plant's cooling system

    TEPCO via EPA

    Attempts stop rats getting inside a reactor at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant led to a cooling system shutdown. Debris on the fuel rack in a spent-fuel pool is seen in this handout photograph taken in mid-February.

    By Yuri Kageyama, The Associated Press

    TOKYO -- A cooling system at a tsunami-damaged nuclear plant in Japan failed Friday for the second time in a month after an outage caused by construction work to keep out rats suspected of setting off the earlier blackout.

    Power for the cooling system for a storage pool for fuel was restored after a two-hour break at reactor No. 3, and there was no immediate danger from the breakdown, according to Tokyo Electric Power Co., the utility that operates Fukushima Daiichi in northeastern Japan.

    TEPCO via Reuters

    A dead rat is seen near a temporary switchboard used to supply power to cooling systems at three fuel pools in the Fukushima facility in this handout photograph taken on March 20.

    Work to put up nets to keep out rats and other animals at Fukushima Daiichi plant in northeastern Japan inadvertently caused the power outage, TEPCO spokesman Akitsuka Kobayashi said. Details were not clear, and the outage was still under investigation.

    A dead rat found near a switchboard was suspected of the power outage last month that led to a cooling system not working for two days at the plant.

    Nuclear Regulation Authority spokesman Takahiro Sakuma said an alarm went off in the afternoon about the latest problem at reactor No. 3.

    Multiple meltdowns
    The cooling system can be turned off for two weeks before temperatures approach dangerous levels at the spent fuel storage pools.

    But if the water runs dry, the fuel rods, even spent ones, will spew enormous levels of radiation.

    The plant went into multiple meltdowns after the March 2011 tsunami damaged backup generators and all cooling systems failed, including those for the reactors.

    Journalists have been given a rare glimpse inside Japan's Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, which was crippled in the 9-magnitude earthquake and tsunami that hit the country two years ago. NBC News' Arata Yamamoto reports.

    The plant is being decommissioned, but continues to have glitches.

    Fears are growing about the safety of nuclear plants, and people have periodically staged streets protests that are rare in Japan.

    Only two of the nation's 50 working power plants are up, and the government is running beefed up safety checks on the plants, including scrutinizing quake faults right below or near the plants.

    Shinzo Abe, who became prime minister about three months ago, has expressed a desire to restart nuclear plants.

    Japan lacks natural resources and relied on nuclear energy for about a third of its electricity needs prior to March 2011. Energy imports have soared over the last two years, putting a strain on the economy.

    Richard Engel goes to Japan a year after the devastating earthquake and subsequent tsunami to see how people live just miles away from the Fukushima nuclear plant.

    Related:

    Rare tour of Fukushima reveals colossal decontamination efforts

    'Nuclear refugees' visit their home near Fukushima 

    More coverage of Fukushima disaster from NBC News


    This story was originally published on Fri Apr 5, 2013 8:13 AM EDT

    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    9 comments

    Anti-rodent work shuts down Fukushima nuclear plant's cooling system Micky Mouse behaving badly?

    Show more
    Explore related topics: japan, nuclear, power-plant, featured, updated, fukushima
  • 28
    Mar
    2013
    5:55am, EDT

    Google Street View takes former residents on virtual tour inside Japan nuclear zone

    Google via AP

    A screenshot made from the Google Maps website shows stranded ships left as a testament to the power of the tsunami which hit the area, near a road in Namie, Japan.

    Google via AP

    A crushed building in Namie, a nuclear no-go zone where former residents have been unable to live since they fled from radioactive contamination near the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant two years ago.

    By Arata Yamamoto, Producer, NBC News

    Google via AP

    Google's camera-equipped vehicle moves through Namie in a photo released on March 27, 2013 and taken earlier in the month.

    Crumpled homes, abandoned shops, empty streets. The town of Namie has lain virtually untouched since its residents were evacuated two years ago, following the accident at the nearby Fukushima nuclear plant.

    On Wednesday they were able to see their town again thanks to Google, which began offering glimpses of Namie on its Street View service. The town's mayor, Tamotsu Baba, invited Google to document the current state of Namie after receiving numerous requests from constituents who wanted a reminder of their home town.

    Although some restrictions on entering the town have been lifted, Namie's 21,000 former residents have not yet been allowed to return to live there due to the still-high levels of radiation.

    In a message posted on the Google website, the mayor said he hoped that sharing the images with the rest of the world would serve as a reminder of the consequences of a nuclear accident.

    Related:

    Nuclear refugees visit their home near stricken Fukushima plant

    Fukushima: Before, during and after

    Inside the Fukushima exclusion zone

     

    Google via AP

    Google via AP

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    13 comments

    I am surprised the city hasn't been looted, plundered.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: japan, asia, nuclear, world-news, featured, namie, google-street-view, tech-science, fukushima
  • Updated
    11
    Mar
    2013
    1:24pm, EDT

    Fukushima disaster will make Japan 'stronger,' PM says

    The 2011 earthquake and tsunami disaster that struck Japan is remembered across the country with memorial services and protests. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    By Arata Yamamoto, Producer, NBC News

    TOKYO — Japan marked the second anniversary of the earthquake and tsunami that swept through northern Japan, damaging more than one million homes and killing almost 19,000 people.

    A moment of silence was observed at 2:46 p.m. local time on Monday at various locations where the scars of the disasters still remain.


    While most of the debris has been cleared, progress has been extremely slow in redeveloping areas affected following the tsunami-triggered explosion at Fukushima Daicihi nuclear power plant.

    More than 320,000 people remain displaced, many of them living in temporary housing units provided by the government.

    Journalists have been given a rare glimpse inside Japan's Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, which was crippled in the 9-magnitude earthquake and tsunami that hit the country two years ago. NBC News' Arata Yamamoto reports.

    Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who took office in December, vowed to accelerate the speed of the reconstruction efforts and his government has already expanded the relief budget to $266 billion to subsidize many of these projects.

    "Our ancestors have overcome many difficulties and each time emerged stronger," Abe said.

    Meanwhile, thousands of anti-nuclear protesters marched in Tokyo. "People and the media are starting to forget Fukushima and what happened there," one 32-year-old mother of two at the demonstration told Reuters.

    This fall, the operators of the plant will begin extracting fuel rods from one of the less-damaged reactor units to mark the start of decommissioning the nuclear facility. But without a clear plan to carry out the removal for the rest of the reactors, the process is expected to take at least 40 years to complete.

    Reuters contributed to this report.

    Slideshow: Triple tragedy for Japan

    An earthquake, a tsunami, a nuclear meltdown -- residents of Japan's northeast coast suffered through three intertwined disasters after a massive 9.0 magnitude temblor struck off the coast on March 11, 2011.

    Launch slideshow

    Related:

    Still searching for bodies two years after the tsunami in Japan

    Rare tour of Fukushima reveals colossal decontamination efforts

    'Nuclear refugees' visit their home near Fukushima

    This story was originally published on Mon Mar 11, 2013 8:26 AM EDT

    31 comments

    Running out of storage for the contaminated ground water and the cooling water still being poured into the damaged reactors, Tepco is releasing some of this water into the sea. There is still open atmospheric release ongoing. The Pacific ocean is big, but this pollution does not lose it's potency  …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: japan, nuclear, featured, updated, shinzo-abe, fukushima, arata-yamamoto
  • 8
    Mar
    2013
    6:28am, EST

    Rare tour of Fukushima reveals colossal decontamination efforts

    Journalists have been given a rare glimpse inside Japan's Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, which was crippled in the 9-magnitude earthquake and tsunami that hit the country two years ago. NBC News' Arata Yamamoto reports.

    By Arata Yamamoto, Producer, NBC News

    TOKYO — Journalists have been given a rare glimpse inside Japan’s Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, which was crippled in the 9-magnitude earthquake and tsunami that hit the country two years ago. 

    The tour of the plant ahead of the March 11 anniversary  of the disaster — which killed nearly 19,000 people and forced about 160,000 from their homes — sheds light on the colossal effort to decommission the nuclear reactors. The process is expected to take up to 40 years.


    Richard Engel goes to Japan a year after the devastating earthquake and subsequent tsunami to see how people live just miles away from the Fukushima nuclear plant.

    Inside the facility, rows of large tanks store contaminated water used to cool the reactors. Temperatures in the plant have been kept stable — between 59 to 95 Fahrenheit — by continuously injecting cooling water. 

    According to a briefing by plant operator TEPCO, each container holds up to 1,100 tons of water and fills up in two-and-a-half days.  There are 930 of these tanks, and already 75 percent have been filled, according to officials.  Although TEPCO plans to increase capacity by an additional 771,600 tons, they are running out of space.

    The process is also yielding roughly 440 tons of water every day, raising the issue of what to do with the contaminated liquid. Officials hope that this water purification system will remove nuclear particles when completed.

    TEPCO expects the water’s contamination levels to be reduced to low enough levels  to release it into the ocean. It is not clear how they will be able to overcome the public discontent over this plan, however.  For example, local fishing cooperatives are adamantly against the proposal. In February, a fish with a record level of cesium, 5,100 times the government safety standard, was found near the plant's port.

    Japanese researchers unveil robots along with a robotic suit to assist workers going inside the damaged Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    But the most important task in decommissioning the reactors is the removal of the fuel rods, a process that will begin in November. Work is already under way to build a protective cover for the rods. 

    There is still no plan to remove fuel rods for the other reactor units, which are much more damaged.

    Although the government's aim is to finish decommissioning the plant in 30 to 40 years, the plan also relies on  technological advances, an assumption that presents a profound challenge  as Japan struggles to contain this daunting nuclear crisis.

    Related: 

    'Nuclear refugees' visit their home near Fukushima 

    Only slight risk of cancer after Japan tsunami, WHO says

    More coverage of Fukushima disaster from NBC News



     

    72 comments

    Everyone thinks there is some magical answer to our energy needs...there isn't. Fossil fuels, in the long term (say 50 to 100 years) is dead...they will run out or become so freaken expensive, that only the top 2% will afford to burn them.

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  • 7
    Mar
    2013
    10:35am, EST

    'Nuclear refugees' visit their home near stricken Fukushima plant

    Franck Robichon / EPA

    Wearing white protective masks and suits, Yuzo Mihara, left, and his wife Yuko pose for photographs on a deserted street in the town of Namie, Fukushima prefecture, Japan, on Feb. 22, 2013.

    Franck Robichon / EPA

    A single house remains standing in an area wiped out by the tsunami near Ukedo port in the town of Namie.

    Until two years ago, Yuzo Mihara and his wife Yuko lived quietly in the Japanese town of Namie. Yuzo ran a store and Yuko a beauty salon. But their lives were upended on March 11, 2011, when an earthquake and tsunami crippled the nearby Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant. 

    Yuzo and Yuko are now among over 100,000 Japanese 'nuclear refugees', having had to abandon their home when the town was evacuated due to the nuclear alert.

    European PressPhoto Agency photographer Franck Robichon followed the couple as they made a brief visit to their old home last month. They were able to collect a few belongings and clean the house, which had been invaded by mice.

    Franck Robichon / EPA

    Yuko Mihara enters her house, where the floor is littered with books and furniture.

    Franck Robichon / EPA

    Yuko Mihara offers prayers to her ancestors in front of a family Buddhist altar inside her house.

    Franck Robichon / EPA

    Yuko Mihara cleans her kitchen, which is covered with debris and putrefied food.

    Franck Robichon / EPA

    Yuzo Mihara cleans the couple's house, which has been invaded by mice.

    Located within the 20-kilometer exclusion zone, Namie saw its coastal area wiped out by the tsunami and its inland zone contaminated by radiation. Most of the town's 21,000 former residents still hope to make a permanent move back in the future, but for now they are only allowed to return for a few hours to minimize their exposure to radiation.

    Wearing white protective masks and suits, former Namie residents have to drive through Okuma and Futaba, towns where the radiation levels are so high that a future return is inconceivable. 

    Most of the former residents of the exclusion zone are still waiting for proper compensation to be negotiated with the government and TEPCO, the operator of the Fukushima plant. Two years have passed since the disaster and frustration is gaining ground in the community. Cloistered in cramped temporary accommodation, the evacuees face an uncertain future. The stigma of being seen as 'assisted persons' by the wider community only adds to their despair.

    Franck Robichon / EPA

    Yuzo Mihara carries garbage out of his house.

    Franck Robichon / EPA

    Yuzo Mihara looks at a collapsed house in his neighborhood.

    Franck Robichon / EPA

    A destroyed house in the abandoned town of Namie.

    Related:

    Fukushima: Before, during and after

    Inside the Fukushima exclusion zone

    Slideshow: Triple tragedy for Japan

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    10 comments

    This is a sad time for these families who had to leave their home and businesses. Very devastating. Hope theses families get the money and the help they deserve. This wasn't their fault.

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  • 31
    Jan
    2013
    7:54am, EST

    Police: 'Yakuza' gangster tries to cash in on Fukushima disaster

    By Arata Yamamoto, Producer, NBC News

    TOKYO — A member of one of Japan's infamous "yakuza" organized crime syndicates has been arrested for illegally sending men to work at a construction company helping to clean-up the area around the tsunami-hit Fukushima nuclear power plant, police said Thursday.


    Yoshinori Arai, 40, who allegedly belongs to the Sumiyoshikai crime group, was detained after he sent three workers to do decontamination work without proper permits in November, according to Yamagata police.

    The Yomiuri Shimbun newspaper reported the three men aged in their 50s were paid about $164 to $186 a day, mainly for cutting grass and other decontamination work.  A third of the pay went to Arai, according to the report.

    Police said they were also investigating a similar case involving 10 other workers allegedly sent to the area in December.

    Related:

    Worker at Japan's tsunami-hit Fukushima nuclear plant: Firm sent crews into danger

    Slideshow: Devastation in Japan after quake

     

    14 comments

    After 9-11, the trucking company used to haul away the metal from the WTC towers was mob controlled. Much of the metal disappeared. Seems mobs in every country take advantage of a crisis.

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  • 27
    Dec
    2012
    9:44pm, EST

    US sailors sue Japan's TEPCO for post-quake radiation exposure

    Nicholas A. Groesch / Reuters file

    Sailors aboard the aircraft carrier USS Ronald Reagan wash down the flight deck to remove potential radiation contamination while operating off the coast of Japan providing humanitarian assistance in support of Operation Tomodachi on March 22, 2011.

    By Kari Huus, NBC News

    A group of U.S. Navy personnel involved in the humanitarian effort after Japan's March 2011 earthquake and tsunami have filed a lawsuit against the Tokyo Electric Power Co. for more than $200 million in compensation, punitive damages and future medical costs for exposure to radiation that leaked from the damaged Fukushima Nuclear Power Plant at the time.

    The plaintiffs include eight troops serving on the USS Ronald Reagan aircraft carrier — one of whom was pregnant at the time of the alleged exposure — and her daughter.

    They charge that the utility, known as TEPCO, "knowingly and negligently caused, permitted and allowed misleading information concerning the true condition of the (plant) to be disseminated to the public, including the U.S. Navy Department," according to the complaint filed on Dec. 21 in a U.S. federal court in San Diego.



    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

     The plaintiffs are suffering a variety of symptoms that attorney Paul Garner says were caused by the exposure, including rectal bleeding, thyroid problems and persistent migraine headaches, and all face an increased chance of developing cancer and requiring expensive medical procedures.

    The U.S. carrier was positioned just offshore from the damaged Fukushima Nuclear Power Plant, which and suffered a meltdown which triggered the release of high levels of radiation into the air and water.

    "The carrier was less than two football fields away from the Fukushima Daiichi when it released a cloud of radiation," said Garner, speaking to NBC News on Thursday.

    He said the crew was unknowingly exposed to high levels of radiation in numerous ways, including when they cleared the carrier's decks of snow that was contaminated, and washed down the helicopters with sea water that was contaminated.

    Archival video: Of all the aftershocks that could hit Japan, nothing frightens the world more than the possibility of a devastating nuclear disaster. NBC's Anne Thompson.

    The complaint said that by relying on misrepresentations about the situation by TEPCO, the U.S. Navy was "lulled into a false sense of security," believing it was "safe to operate with the waters adjacent to the FNPP, without doing research and testing that would have revealed the problems."

    It goes on to charge that through its conduct, TEPCO "rendered the Plaintiffs infirm and poisoned their bodies. The Plaintiffs must now endure a lifetime of radiation poisoning and suffering which could have and should have been avoided."

    Archival video: Damon Moglen of Friends of the Earth discusses the potential dangers that still loom in Japan following an explosion at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear facility.

    The suit is seeking $10 million in damages for each plaintiff, plus $30 million in punitive damages and a judgment requiring TEPCO to create $100 million fund to pay for their medical costs, including monitoring and treatments.

    TEPCO could not immediately be reached for comment by NBC News.

    A TEPCO spokesman reached by The Japan Times said the company had not yet received the complaint.

    "We will consider a response after examining the claim," said Yusuke Kunikage, according to the Times.

    Since the disaster, TEPCO has operated a fund to compensate victims in Japan.

    Garner said that he didn't believe his clients would get justice through the Japanese system, which is why the suit was filed in a U.S. court. The complaint was served to TEPCO's office in Washington, D.C. on Thursday, he said.

    "We need the U.S. justice system to make this right," Garner said.

     More world stories from NBC News:

    • As rebels advance on Central African Republic capital, US evacuates Americans
    • Pakistan's 'dynastic politics': Bhutto's son launches career
    • Video:China bust nabs nearly 200 pounds of meth
    • Snow, extreme weather threaten 2 million Afghans
    • 'Depressing,' 'manipulative' portrayals damage hunger work in Africa, Oxfam complains
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    135 comments

    ... 'relying on misrepresentations about the situation by TEPCO, the U.S. Navy was "lulled into a false sense of security," believing it was "safe to operate with the waters adjacent to the FNPP, without doing research and testing that would have revealed the problems." The Navy's contamination dete …

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  • 13
    Dec
    2012
    7:12pm, EST

    Non-Japanese firms struggle to get in on Fukushima clean-up

    Kyodo / Reuters file

    The tsunami-crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant No.3 reactor building is seen from atop of No.4 building in Fukushima prefecture on Oct. 7.

    By Reuters

    Nearly two years after a massive earthquake and tsunami caused meltdowns at the Fukushima nuclear plant, Japan is failing to keep a pledge to tap global expertise to decommission its crippled reactors, executives at nuclear contractors from the United States and Europe say.


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    The result, they warn, is that a process expected to take more than 30 years and cost at least $15 billion could take longer and cost more as contracts are channeled through domestic heavyweights such as nuclear reactor makers Toshiba Corp and Hitachi Ltd, and general contractors such as Taisei Corp.


    A review of bidding records by Reuters shows companies from outside Japan have failed to win any of the 21 contracts awarded this year to develop technologies crucial for the unprecedented job of scrapping the four damaged reactors at Fukushima.

    "There appears to be a desire to treat this as a science project and reinvent the wheel," Jeffrey Merrifield, senior vice president of U.S. nuclear engineering firm Shaw Group Inc's power division told Reuters.

    Contracts awarded since January represent only the initial work at Fukushima. But a half-dozen executives at companies with nuclear industry experience raised questions about the Japanese government's and Tepco's oversight of the process.

    Some executives worry that being shut out now risks their ability to tap a growth market, since Japan could scrap dozens of reactors over the coming decades. Most asked not be named for fear of jeopardizing their ability to win future work in Japan.

    Takuya Hattori, president of the Japan Atomic Industrial Forum, a group representing the nuclear industry in Japan, said the government has not been responsive to complaints about the bidding process. "They are shutting that criticism out incredibly deftly," said Hattori, a 36-year veteran of Tokyo Electric Power Co Inc, the operator of the Fukushima plant.

    Fukushima: Before, during and after

    Slideshow: Then and now: The 2011 Japan tsunami

    A 9.0 earthquake on March 11 triggered a 45-foot tsunami that smashed into the 40-year-old seaside Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant, setting off a series of events that caused its reactors to start melting down.

    Hydrogen explosions scattered debris across the complex and sent up a plume of radioactive steam that forced the evacuation of more than 80,000 residents near the plant about 150 miles northeast of Tokyo.

    The repeated failures that dogged the government and Tepco in the months after the disaster undercut confidence in their response to the disaster and dismayed outside experts, given corporate Japan's reputation for relentless organization.

    After that, Japan promised to accept more outside assistance.

    Cold Shutdown
    The Fukushima plant was declared to be in "cold shutdown" a year ago, a stable phase when water used to cool fuel rods remains below its boiling point. That marked the start of a decommissioning process that could take 40 years.

    Under a roadmap drafted by Tepco, radioactive fuel rods will be removed from Reactor No. 4 starting next November. After that, melted fuel inside three other reactors damaged by meltdowns and hydrogen explosions would be extracted. The work is projected to take more than a decade.

    A government oversight panel has estimated it will cost $15 billion to decommission the reactors, not counting the costs of disposing of radioactive waste.

    But large uncertainties hang over the overall cost of the disaster. Tepco recently said compensation for evacuated residents and decontamination of areas outside the boundary of the Fukushima plant could double from previous estimates to almost $125 billion.

    Louisiana-based Shaw Group worked on clean-up projects after the Three Mile Island and Chernobyl accidents and in decommissioning eight U.S. commercial reactors.

    "There seems to be a real desire to rely on Japanese contractors to do this work," Merrifield said. "You can try and do it all yourself, which takes a lot more time without benefit of prior experience, making a lot of mistakes along the way."

    But an executive with a Japanese nuclear firm said that given the long-term nature of the clean-up project, it makes sense to go with firms at home.

    "Foreign firms simply sell their product without providing back-up services or maintenance. We can't sign a contract with a company that we can't get in touch with immediately and one that will rush to deal with any problems right away," the executive said.

    Transparency: 'No. 1 priority'
    The majority of contracts for Fukushima have been awarded directly by Tepco, which outsources decontamination and debris-clearing to general contractors. Decontamination contracts outside of the plant site are handled by Japan's environment ministry and local governments.

    Japan's Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry has so far allocated about $11 million to Toshiba Corp, Mitsubishi Heavy Industries and Hitachi GE Nuclear to fund technology development for the year to March. That includes a project to develop sensing robots that can enter highly radiated areas to pinpoint the site of the meltdown.

    "This is a project we are pursuing with taxpayer funds, so we believe it is our No. 1 priority to be transparent," said Kentaro Funaki, director of the ministry's nuclear accident restoration office.

    Funaki said METI was pushing to double the bidding period to four weeks and pointed to a recent contract offered by Japanese radiation management firm Atox Co Ltd specifically to foreign contractors as a sign of increased openness.

    METI and the heavy manufacturers held workshops in March and April to gather information on foreign technology that could be used at Fukushima.

    British Amec PLC, Areva, Westinghouse and the Idaho National Laboratory pitched technologies that can be used to remotely inspect and repair damaged reactors.

    Japan's three major nuclear companies say they post notices of bids on their websites.

    Hitachi GE Nuclear posts bid notices on its website in both English and Japanese. The company said it was working as quickly as possible to restore and rebuild Fukushima and the short bidding periods were not designed to shut out foreign firms.

    Toshiba said it posted contracts on its website, but deletes them after a vendor is selected. Contracts are awarded by an outside panel of experts with the highest score given to technology and cost. Toshiba declined to comment on the lack of foreign involvement in research contracts.

    Mitsubishi Heavy recently posted a notice on its website that it would soon invite bids for equipment to investigate the pressure containment vessels at the Fukushima Daiichi plant.

    'Doors are open'
    Japan's government and Tepco have emphasized the importance of international involvement in the Fukushima clean-up. In an interview with Reuters in October, Tepco president Naomi Hirose said the utility was seeking expertise from all over the world.

    To be sure, U.S. and European companies have had some success.

    California-based Kurion and French nuclear giant Areva designed the first water purification systems at Fukushima. That was followed by equipment supplied by Toshiba and Shaw that doubled Tepco's ability to process contaminated water. The latest water purification equipment made by Toshiba and Utah-based Energy Solutions was installed earlier this year.

    "I would tell you that if the roles were reversed, Americans would want American firms leading the way," said John Raymont, president and CEO of Kurion. "For companies that have the special know-how that is transferable, the doors are open."

    Shaw's Merrifield said his company was no longer working on any projects in Fukushima. Shaw sold its stake in nuclear plant company Westinghouse Electric Co to Toshiba for $1.6 billion in October.

    Many of Japan's 50 nuclear plants are expected to be decommissioned in the coming years. The Japanese government has pledged to eliminate nuclear power from the energy mix by the 2030s and popular opinion is turning against the industry.

    "At the end of the day, it's not about just Fukushima," said one executive at an overseas engineering company, who asked not to be named because of the company's business interests in Japan. "You get in now, establish a relationship and build trust and there is a lot of work that you can do."

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    1 comment

    That's because their idea of global commerce is mostly exporting finished goods.

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  • 7
    Dec
    2012
    3:51am, EST

    Small tsunami waves hit Japan after 7.3-magnitude earthquake

    A 7.3-magnitude quake strikes off Japan's northeastern coast, temporarily triggering some tsunami waves reaching up to three feet, but there was no concern of a widespread tsunami. TODAY's Erica Hill reports.

    By NBC News staff and wire reports

    Updated at 5:40 a.m. ET: Tsunami waves up to 3 feet high hit the coast of Japan Friday, after a strong earthquake in the sea that shook buildings 300 miles away in Tokyo.


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    The temblor was registered at a magnitude of 7.3 and struck at 5:18 p.m. local time (3:18 a.m. ET), according to the U.S. Geological Survey.

    The earthquake hit in the same area as the devastating quake and tsunami in March last year that killed nearly 20,000 people and triggered the world's worst nuclear crisis in 25 years.

    Friday's quake struck about 200 miles southeast of Kamaishi, the USGS said. The epicenter was 6.2 miles beneath the seabed, according to the Japan Meteorological Agency.

    Buildings in Tokyo swayed for at least several minutes, but there were no early reports of damage or injuries.

    Coastal residents told to flee to higher ground
    NHK television broke off regular programming to warn that a strong quake was due to hit shortly before the impact was felt. Afterward, the announcer repeatedly urged all near the coast to flee to higher ground.

    The quake triggered a tsunami warning for the Miyagi Prefecture, which was at the center of the 2011 disaster. It also sparked tsunami advisories for Pacific Coast areas of several other prefectures.

    But by 5:20 a.m. ET, two hours after the quake, the Japan Meteorological Agency had canceled all tsunami advisories and warnings.

    USGS via EPA

    A handout image released by the U.S. Geological Survey shows the location of Friday's earthquake off the northeast coast of Japan.

    Still, a batch of tsunami waves, measuring about 3 feet tall, hit the town of Ishinomaki, in Miyagi Prefecture, about an hour after the earthquake, according to Japanese television. Another tsunami wave, measuring about a foot tall, was detected at Ofunato.

    Complete World coverage on NBCNews.com

    "I was in the center of the city the very moment the earthquake struck. I immediately jumped into the car and started running away towards the mountains. I'm still hiding inside the car," Ishinomaki resident Chikako Iwai told Reuters.

    "I have the radio on and they say the cars are still stuck in the traffic. I'm planning to stay here for the next couple of hours," Iwai said.

    A 6.2-magnitude aftershock struck at about 3:31 a.m. ET, but no damage or injuries were immediately reported.

    Kyodo News via AP

    People crowd at Sendai railway station in Sendai, Miyagi Prefecture, Japan, on Friday after the 7.3-magnitude earthquake disrupted train services.

    Devastating 2011 quake and tsunami
    The magnitude-9.0 earthquake and ensuing tsunami that slammed into northeastern Japan on March 11, 2011 devastated much of the coast.

    All but two of Japan's nuclear plants were shut down for checks after the earthquake and tsunami caused meltdowns at the Fukushima nuclear plant in the worst nuclear disaster since the 1986 Chernobyl disaster. 

    Worker at tsunami-hit Fukushima nuclear plant: Firm sent crews into danger

    The government declared in December that the disaster was under control, but much of the area is still free of population.

    Tokyo Electric Power, the operator of the Fukushima nuclear plant, reported no irregularities at its nuclear plants after Friday's quake.

    Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda canceled campaigning in Tokyo ahead of a Dec. 16 election and was on his way back to his office, but there was no immediate plan to hold a special cabinet meeting.

    NBC News' Arata Yamamoto, The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

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    103 comments

    I live in Yokohama quite far from the Tohoku area but I felt it. It was quite strong. You just never get used to it. I just turn off the gas stove and open the doors. scarey!!! No casualties please!!!

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  • 1
    Nov
    2012
    6:16am, EDT

    Worker at Japan's tsunami-hit Fukushima nuclear plant: Firm sent crews into danger

    AP, file

    In this photo released by Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency, a Tokyo Electric Power Co. worker looks at gauges in the control room for Unit 1 and Unit 2 at the tsunami-crippled Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant on March 23, 2011.

    By NBC News wire reports

    IWAKI, Japan - The operator of a Japanese nuclear plant that went into a tsunami-triggered meltdown knew the risks from highly radioactive water at the site but sent in crews without adequate protection or warnings, a worker alleges in a legal complaint. 

    The actions by Tokyo Electric Power Co. led to radiation injuries, said the contract worker, who was with a six-member team working at the crippled Fukushima Dai-ichi plant's Unit 3 reactor in the early days of last year's crisis. 

    The worker gave a rare public account of what happened at the plant during the accident. He spoke to The Associated Press on the condition that he was identified only as Shinichi, his given name. 

    Shinichi, 46, described a harrowing scene of darkness and fear, wading with headlamps into a flooded basement through steaming radioactive water that felt warm even through workers' boots.  "It was outrageous. We shouldn't even have been there," he said. 

    He said his six-member team was sent to lay electric cables in the basement of the Unit 3 turbine on March 24, 10 days after its reactor building exploded, spewing massive amounts of radiation into the environment. Their mission was to restore power to pumps to inject cooling water into its overheating spent fuel pool. 

    Shinichi said TEPCO and its primary subcontractor never warned them even though water leaks had been found elsewhere at the plant. 

    Slideshow: Devastation in Japan after quake

    AP

    A 9.0-magnitude earthquake triggers a tsunami, causing enormous damage and killing thousands.

    Launch slideshow

    Asked about Shinichi's allegations, TEPCO spokesman Yoshimi Hitosugi said the plant was aware of water leaks elsewhere but couldn't anticipate the water problem in Unit 3's basement. 

    Shinichi's radiation exposure that day alone exceeded half the government's annual exposure limit, and he had to stop working on plant jobs soon afterward. 


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    Out of fear of harassment of his family due to the tendency of some Japanese to stigmatize those perceived as different or as troublemakers, Shinichi agreed to speak with the AP and several Japanese reporters on condition his face not be photographed.

    On Tuesday, he filed a complaint with a labor standards office in Fukushima, asking authorities to confirm TEPCO's safety violations and issue improvement orders. He also is seeking penalties — up to six months in jail or fines of up to 500,000 yen ($6,250) under the Industrial Safety and Health Act — against the company that supervised him. 

    'Unjust treatment'
    Shinichi's direct employer — the subcontractor for TEPCO — stopped calling him for jobs in March, just telling him to stand by. He now works on radiation decontamination of "hot spots" in Fukushima prefecture. 

    "So I decided I've had enough of this unjust treatment. That's why I decided to come forward," he said. 

    Koji Sasahara / AP

    Shinichi, a contract worker of Tokyo Electric Power Co. (TEPCO), speaks during a press conference in Tokyo on Thursday.

    On the morning of March 24, 2011, Shinichi's team gathered at Fukushima Dai-ichi's emergency command center to be briefed about the day's work. They donned double-layer coveralls underneath waterproof hazmat suits, charcoal-filtered, full-face masks and double-layered rubber gloves. 

    Decline in white blood cells
    Each picked up a pocket dosimeter, with an alarm set to 40 times the dose detected the day before, expecting only a moderate increase of radioactivity. The actual reading was 400 millisieverts that day — high enough to cause a temporary, but not life-threatening, decline in white blood cells. 

    More Japan coverage from NBC News

    The March 11, 2011, earthquake and tsunami destroyed power and crucial cooling systems at the plant, sending three reactors into meltdowns and releasing massive amounts of radiation. Tons of cooling water were pumped into the overheated and damaged reactors and leaked right out, pouring into the basements of the buildings housing them and nearby facilities. 

    Shinichi recalled a simple instruction: Just go in and connect the first floor and basement electrical switchboards. The radioactivity might be a bit high, but shouldn't be a problem. 

    "There was no mention of the water," Shinichi said. 

    Three of Japan's top nuclear officials will be fired in the wake of the crisis at the Fukushima nuclear plant. Japan's prime minister has promised a complete overhaul of nuclear safety and a shakeup in the country's energy policy. John Sparks of Channel 4, Europe reports.

    So the men wore whatever boots were available — only two wore knee-high rubber boots, and four others, including Shinichi, wore short ones. 

    With only headlamps on their helmets to light the way, they entered the building from a hole cut into the wall, since the electric door was still inoperable. Three men hired by two other contractors went into the basement, while Shinichi and his two colleagues waited on the first floor. Looking down, he saw water, with steam rising from the surface, and heaps of debris and mangled equipment. 

    "It was eerie," he said. "If you're a nuclear plant worker, you know that water on the floor is bad news. You just don't touch it." 

    The dosimeter alarms — set to beep five times before reaching a maximum — sounded several times shortly after they entered the site. 

    Alarms sound
    Seconds after the three workers started going into the basement, the dosimeters began ringing loudly and then went silent, a sign the intended limit was exceeded, though the team's leader said it must be an error. The three workers in the basement waded through the ankle-deep water to check the wall-mounted switchboard and came back up, saying the water felt warm through their rubber boots. 

    Another team sent in to do other tasks rushed back out without doing any work, ignoring Shinichi's team, after measuring dangerously high radioactivity in the basement. 

    Slideshow: Triple tragedy for Japan

    An earthquake, a tsunami, a nuclear meltdown -- residents of Japan's northeast coast suffered through three intertwined disasters after a massive 9.0 magnitude temblor struck off the coast on March 11, 2011.

    Launch slideshow

    But his group stayed, making several more trips into the flooded basement. Two workers wearing short boots got their feet soaked and suffered beta-ray burns which were not life threatening. The three men who stayed there the longest were exposed to about 180 millisieverts — nearly four times the annual safe limit, according to a government report released in July. Shinichi refused to help tie up the dangling cable in the basement because of his short boots, and a colleague wearing long boots volunteered to do it instead, saving Shinichi from injury. 

    Where to put Fukushima's radioactive water?

    TEPCO spokeswoman Mayumi Yoshida said the team leaders later told officials that they decided to stay because they took their mission very seriously and that they might have been too occupied to think carefully about the water. But TEPCO should have thought more carefully given the unpredictable plant conditions, she said. 

    Shinichi's radiation exposure from 13 days of working at the plant was just over 20 millisieverts, not considered a serious health risk, though he still worries. 

    'Lacked consideration' for workers
    His lawyers, who are representing several nuclear plant workers in other cases, say TEPCO and its top contractor Kandenko illegally sent him and five other men into areas with radioactivity far exceeding the allowable limit without full protection. 

    "Just sending the workers into the harsh environment and putting them at risk of exposure to dangerously high radiation is a labor safety violation," said Taku Yamazoe, a lawyer representing Shinichi. "Even if TEPCO didn't anticipate the consequences of all that water it had pumped in, it clearly lacked consideration for the workers' safety." 

    The area surrounding the Fukushima Daiichi plant is a hotspot of radiation nearly a year after the Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO) plant suffered a triple meltdown in the wake of the powerful earthquake and tsunami that ravaged Japan.  TEPCO Communications Manager Hiro Hasegawa says the power company has been cleaning up radioactive waste and providing compensation to those who were affected by the disaster.  However, lawyer and activist Ito Kazuku says TEPCO's compensation is not enough for the people who have lived in the exclusion zone.

    Shinichi's experience was typical of the inadequate protection received by workers laboring in the extremely harsh conditions at the plant, though Yamazoe said the multi-tiered subcontracting system used at nuclear plants can obscure who is directly responsible in case of an accident. 

    Investigations by the government, parliament and private groups have faulted TEPCO for inept crisis management, inadequate emergency training and miscommunication with authorities. 

    More international coverage from NBC News

    The parliamentary investigation took TEPCO to task for failing to deal with leaking contaminated water until the two workers suffered beta-ray burns in Unit 3, concluding that the operator was fully aware of the consequences of massive spraying and pumping of water into the reactors and spent fuel pools from the very beginning. 

    Shinichi said that when he finished work at the nuclear plant each day, he would take off his clothes before entering his home to minimize the risk of radiation exposure for his 5-year-old son. He would toss the clothes into the washing machine and immediately rush into a bath. 

    Officials in Japan use an unmanned helicopter to measure radiation levels near Japan's damaged Fukushima nuclear power plant, which was nearly destroyed by a tsunami and earthquake in 2011. NBC's Richard Lui reports.

    Many other nuclear workers face the same worries, he said. 

    "I don't have education, and I'm already over 40. There is little choice," he said. "I was dumped. I worked hard, sacrificed my family and my child and this is how I ended up."

    The operator of the Fukushima nuclear power plant last week said it could not rule out the possibility that it may still be leaking radiation into the sea.

    The comment by TEPCO follows a U.S. academic journal Science article that said high radiation levels in bottom-dwelling fish caught off Fukushima prefecture indicate continued radiation leaking from the plant.

    Fishing off Fukushima prefecture, north of Tokyo, is prohibited except for test fishing for a few species such as certain types of octopus and squid, which are shipped only when they are found to be safe.

    The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

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    48 comments

    As if this should come as a surprise to anyone.

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