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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
  • 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
    • Warm glow of Berlin's 'beautiful' gas streetlights set to fade

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

    Follow Kari Huus on Facebook

    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 …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: japan, radiation, nuclear-power, tokyo, u-s-navy, fukushima, kari-huus, daichi, u-s-s-ronald-reagan
  • 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. 


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    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.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Analysis: Israel, Iran name checks illustrate America's twin obsessions
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    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    48 comments

    As if this should come as a surprise to anyone.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: japan, nuclear, worker, radiation, power-plant, featured, fukushima
  • 14
    Aug
    2012
    6:55am, EDT

    Study: Japan nuclear disaster caused mutated butterflies

    Joji Otaki / EPA

    This handout photo, released Tuesday, shows a healthy adult pale grass blue butterfly (top) and a mutated variety (bottom). Severe mutations were found in butterflies collected near Japan's Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant.

    By Arata Yamamoto, NBC News

    TOKYO -- Researchers in Japan have found signs of mutation in butterflies, signaling one of the first indications of change to the local ecosystem as a result of last year's nuclear accident in Fukushima, according to one of the first studies on the genetic effects of the incident.

    Joji Otaki from the University of the Ryukyus in Okinawa, who led the research, collected 144 commonly-found pale grass blue butterflies two months after the March 2011 accident at the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant.


    Initial results indicated that roughly 12 percent of the butterflies showed signs of abnormalities, such as disfigurement in their antennas, smaller-sized wings, change in color patterns and indented eyes, Otaki said.

    Even more alarming, when he collected another 238 samples six months later he found that those abnormalities had increased to 28 percent and the mutations had doubled to 52 percent in their offspring.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    To see the effects of internal exposure to radiation, unaffected clean butterflies were also fed cesium-coated leaves collected from Fukushima. The result was a reduction in the size of those butterflies, as well as a lower survival rate.

    In Japan, a nuclear ghost town stirs to life

    The Fukushima disaster occurred after a 9.0-magnitude earthquake knocked out a power line at the plant and generated a tsunami that flooded the facility's emergency generators, destroying the plant's cooling system. Catastrophic meltdowns occurred in three reactors, releasing radiation that has tainted the surrounding environment.

    Five nuclear plants in total suffered some level of damage from the earthquake and tsunami; all but Fukushima Dai-ichi were shut down safely.

    Story: What are the odds? US nuke plants ranked by quake risk

    'Something has gone wrong'
    Otaki, who has been studying these butterflies for 10 years to analyze the effects of global warming, said that butterflies are the best environmental indicators because they are widely found in almost any environment.

    "But since we've seen these effects on butterflies, it’s easy to imagine that it would also have affected other species as well. It’s pretty clear that something has gone wrong with the ecosystem,” he said.

    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

    However, at the same time, he also warns that because each species’ sensitivity to radiation varies, it was too early to immediately apply these finding to humans.

    NYT: For new nuclear chief, concerns over plant safety

    But what is clear, said Otaki, is that the genetic changes found in these butterflies indicate a disruption in Fukushima's ecosystem and that more study is needed to learn the full scope of the effects of the radiation released into the environment.

    At Hiroshima memorial, Japan leaders vow to listen to citizens in revamp of nuke policy

    "Effects of low level radiation is genetically transferred through generation, which suggests genetic damage. I think it’s clear that we see the effects passed on through generations," Otaki added.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Will world inaction help al-Qaida gain foothold in Syria?
    • Analysis: Egypt's Morsi shows he's a force to be reckoned with
    • Vatican says the 'butler did it,' orders trial
    • Olympic heroes turn tourists as London 2012 end nears
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    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    436 comments

    Next up: Mothra.

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    Explore related topics: japan, earthquake, tsunami, radiation, featured, okinawa, butterflies, fukushima
  • 22
    Jul
    2012
    4:20am, EDT

    Reports: Workers told to underplay Fukushima radiation dosage

    Handout / Reuters

    Workers wearing protective suits remove unused nuclear components stored in the spent fuel pool of the tsunami-crippled Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant No. 4 reactor building on Thursday.

    By NBC News staff and wire services

    A subcontractor urged workers at Japan's stricken Fukushima nuclear power plant to put lead around radiation detection devices in order to stay under a safety threshold for exposure, according to reports. 

    An executive in his mid-50s told the workers in December to attach the lead plates to the alarm pocket dosimeters that plant owner Tokyo Electric Power (TEPCO) had given them with to monitor exposure, sources close to the matter said, according to a report by Kyodo News on Saturday. 


    Dosimeters can be worn as badges or carried as devices around the size of a smart phone to detect radiation. 

    Protesting as Japan regains nuclear power

    Nine workers wore the lead plates around the devices once after the executive's request, public broadcaster NHK said, citing the subcontractor's president. 

    Japan's disaster at the Fukushima nuclear power plant in March 2011 contaminated the land around it so badly that the area was effectively a write-off. Today the radiation-infected area is known by a name Ray Bradbury would like: "the exclusion zone." NBC News Chief Foreign Correspondent Richard Engel reports from inside the zone, part of his report for Rock Center with Brian Williams airing Wednesday, Mar. 7, at 10pm/9c on NBC.

    Japan's health ministry said on Sunday it would investigate the reports, Reuters reported. 

    Japanese law has set an annual radiation exposure safety threshold of 50 millisieverts for nuclear plant workers during normal operations. 

    Study: Japan feared 'devil's chain reaction' at nuke plant


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    But a massive earthquake and tsunami that crippled the Fukushima plant in March 2011 led to a breach of containment structures that released radiation, keeping large areas around the plant off limits more than a year later.

    A Tokyo Electric Power spokesman told Reuters the company was aware from a separate contractor that Build-Up made the lead shields, but that they were never used at the nuclear plant.

    Build-Up could not be reached for comment, Reuters reported. 

    Reuters contributed to this report.  

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Explosion, fire shuts down Turkey-Iraq oil pipeline; PKK blamed
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    Follow World News on NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    182 comments

    That is some sick business. Endangering other workers all in pursuit of the mighty yen.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: radiation, featured, build-up, fukushima, tepco
  • 5
    Jul
    2012
    1:15pm, EDT

    Japanese panel calls Fukushima meltdowns a 'manmade disaster'

    Kyodo News via AP

    The rubble is removed Thursday from the damaged No. 4 reactor building at Tokyo Electric Power Co.'s tsunami-crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in northeastern Japan.

    By NBC News' Arata Yamamoto

    Follow @msnbc_world

    Japan’s Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant meltdowns were a “manmade disaster,” a parliamentary panel of experts concluded Thursday, when it issued a final report 15 months after the nation’s nuclear accident.

    The scathing dossier based on over 900 hours of interviews with 1,167 participants blamed the operators of the plant, Tokyo Electric Power Co., and also the government's nuclear regulatory agencies for their opaque relationship and their tendency to collude with one another for self-protection.


    Asahi Shimbun via Reuters

    Medical staff use a Geiger counter to screen a woman for possible radiation exposure at a public welfare centre in Hitachi City, Ibaraki, March 16, 2011, after she evacuated from an area within 12.4 miles of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant. The woman was tested negative for radiation exposure.

    In particular, the panel said that even though both Tokyo Electric and the regulatory agencies recognized as early as 2006 the potential dangers of a giant tsunami causing a complete loss of power at the Fukushima plant, no safety measures were adopted out of fear that a renovation might disrupt the reactors' operation.

    Japan returns to nuclear power after shutdown

    Also, the experts accused the government of then Prime Minister Naoto Kan of failing to inform local residents in a timely manner of the severity of the nuclear accident, causing panic and confusion during the evacuation 150,000 people from their homes after the March 11, 2011, earthquake and ensuing tsunami crippled the Fukushima plant. Three nuclear reactors went into meltdown and spewed radiation.

    While the panel recommended a complete restructuring of the nation's disaster management policies, it also recommended a new regulatory agency that is transparent and independent of both the government and the nuclear industry.

    The details for this new agency are being debated in the parliament and are expected to be inaugurated later this year.

    Cleanup continues after last year's 9.0 earthquake and tsunami destroyed the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant in northern Japan. The government is still trying to establish its role in TEPCO and people in Tokyo, who felt the tremors, are concerned the c...

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    16 comments

    this whole planet is becoming a man made disaster

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    Explore related topics: japan, earthquake, accident, nuclear, tsunami, radiation, fukushima
  • 19
    Apr
    2012
    6:39pm, EDT

    Fewer female birds after Chernobyl, study finds; same true at Fukushima?

    A year after Fukushima, the government has asked residents to bury radiated soil in their own backyards. But how dangerous is the dirt and where should it go? NBC News Chief Foreign Correspondent Richard Engel reports.

    By Miguel Llanos, NBC News

    Scientists are focusing on Japan's Fukushima area after a study published this week found an alarming development at another nuclear disaster site -- Chernobyl.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    The proportion of female birds has fallen off since the 1986 disaster at Chernobyl, the study found, and that appears to be causing male birds to increase their chirping in efforts to find a mate.

    "The Chernobyl zone is a population sink, or an ecological trap, that brings in new birds each year but these birds suffer lower survival," co-author Tim Mousseau, a University of South Carolina biologist, told msnbc.com.


    "In other words," he said, "the Chernobyl zone is not an eden for wildlife" as some have claimed.

    Mousseau, who's leading a team along with Anders Pape Moller of the University of Paris-Sud, is now in the Fukushima area preparing to test birds there for radioactivity from the nuclear reactors hit by the tsunami after the March 11, 2011, earthquake.

    NBC's Richard Engel visits the exclusion zone surrounding Japan's damaged Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant.

    "We will be placing small dosimeters on birds and measuring body content of radionuclides," he said. That will also be done this summer around Ukraine's Chernobyl area, where earlier testing focused on counting birds.

    For the Chernobyl study "we collected 1,080 birds using mist nets in forested areas that were highly contaminated but also in areas that were effectively 'clean' and sites in between," Mousseau explained.

    "In the more contaminated areas, most birds were yearlings, suggesting that survival rates were significantly lower in these areas than in clean ones."

    "Sex ratios in the contaminated areas were significantly skewed towards males, reflecting higher mortality rates for females," he added. "In birds, females invest heavily in making large eggs, and these data suggest this investment comes at a cost of lower life span."

    Tim Mousseau

    A Geiger counter is used to test soil in the Fukushima area last year as part of a study on birds.

    As for the chirping, "males in contaminated areas tend to sing more than in clean areas," Mousseau said, "presumably reflecting the greater challenges of attracting and acquiring a mate when sex ratios are skewed."

    Courtesy of Tim Mousseau

    Biologist Tim Mousseau holds a bird caught around the Chernobyl area.

    He's expecting even worse results at Fukushima.

    A team did an initial survey last summer, counting 1,929 birds from among 45 species.

    "Our expectation was that it would take many years and many generations of exposure for the cumulative effects" to show as they have in Chernobyl, Mousseau said.

    "However, once we started our field work we realized that contamination levels were much higher than expected, even in July when we did our surveys," he said, "and it is likely that doses to these birds were very high in March and April when many of the birds were arriving to the area to initiate breeding."

    22 comments

    I wonder if the same results could be achieved with human females.

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    Explore related topics: birds, radiation, environment, chernobyl, fukushima
  • 14
    Dec
    2011
    9:25pm, EST

    Wild monkeys to help detect radiation from crippled Fukushima nuclear plant

    By msnbc.com staff

    Wild monkeys fitted with collars containing detectors and GPS transmitters will help researchers at Fukushima University measure radiation in the forests surrounding a nuclear power plant crippled last March by a powerful earthquake and tsunami.

    The monkeys will wear the collars for a month and they will be remotely detached, says a team of scientists led by Professor Takayuki Takahashi.

    "We decided to use monkeys for this project because the territory they cover is very well known to us," Professor Takahashi told the Telegraph of London. "It's the first time such an experiment has been carried out with monkeys."

    The collars will contain a dosimeter, which measures radiation levels, as well as an altimeter to measure height above the ground, and a GPS tracking device, Takahashi said, according to a report in Life's Little Mysteries.  As soon as February, the collars will be fitted on as many as three wild monkeys living in a forest in the Fukushima Prefecture.

    Kyodo News via AP

    Members of Japan's Self-Defense Force scrape the surface of a lawn while working on a decontamination operation around Iitate town hall in Fukushima prefecture on Dec. 7.

    Analyzing the data collected by the collars will reveal the impact of radioactive material that spewed into the environment since the March 11 magnitude-9.0 earthquake and tsunami knocked out the cooling system at the Fukushima Dai-ichi power plant, leading to the meltdowns of three of its nuclear reactors.

    Scientists have relied on air samples, mostly taken by helicopter above the Fukushima forests.

    The monkeys will allow scientists to discover radiation levels from the forest floor to the treetops.

    The project will launch in Minamisoma, around 16 miles north of the power plant.

    As many as 14 groups of monkeys are believed to reside in the mountains forests to the west of Minamisoma city, which is where the study will focus.

    In April, scientists estimated that the total amount of radioactivity released was approximately one-tenth the amount released during the Chernobyl disaster. In the months since, scientists have continued to monitor radiation levels from the air, but they say using monkeys as "research assistants" will clarify the conditions on the ground.

    "We would like to know how much impact (the radiation has) on the natural world, such as forest, river, underground water and ocean," Takahashi told reporters. "We will draw the map to show the movement of radioactivity."

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    38 comments

    If the monkeys are already inhabiting the area, they're already being exposed. To be able to gather that information by placing a collar on them for a month does nothing to further harm them. It's not like they're being transported inside the failed plants and forced to be radiated to death.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: japan, earthquake, tsunami, radiation, environment, nuclear-power, featured

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Kari Huus

Reporter Kari Huus joined msnbc.com at launch in 1996 after 7 years reporting from China. In recent years, she has focused on domestic issues, playing a key role in msnbc.com series including The Elkhart Project, Gut Check America, and Rising from Ruin--on the recovery of two Mississippi towns after Hurricane Katrina. Huus has also covered a wide array of international stories, including China's 2008 earthquake, the Asian economic crisis, the fal …

Miguel Llanos

I'm the environment and weather editor for msnbc.com, and hope to discuss issues and events with the newsvine community as well as to invite experts into those discussions.

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