We are now beginning to get more
creditable data on this disaster and it is certainly unpleasant. I suspect that we have lost more land to
occupation than has yet been understood.
At the very least, any Nuclear
plant with any exposure to excessive flooding needs to implement a crash shut
down protocol and have emergency power situated in a tower. It should not be too expensive to do this and
it allows a plant to survive a disaster.
I do not know what possessed the
engineers to not factor in a major tsunami risk. It would have been cheap to build in the
obvious safe guards I have just described.
A few hundred feet of cable could have placed the backup power well out
of harms way.
In fact back up power should be
placed well away from any power installation anyway as you are unable to
predict the act of God that will destroy part of a plant.
Global radioactivity data challenge Japanese estimates for emissions
and point to the role of spent fuel pools
By Geoff Brumfiel and Nature magazine | October 25, 2011 | 15
The disaster at the Fukushima
Daiichi nuclear plant in March released far more radiation than the Japanese
government has claimed. So concludes a study1 that combines radioactivity data
from across the globe to estimate the scale and fate of emissions from the shattered
plant.
The study also suggests that, contrary to government claims, pools
used to store spent nuclear fuel played a significant part in the release of
the long-lived environmental contaminant caesium-137, which could have been
prevented by prompt action. The analysis has been posted online for open peer
review by the journal Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics.
Andreas Stohl, an atmospheric scientist with the Norwegian Institute
for Air Research in Kjeller, who led the research, believes that the analysis
is the most comprehensive effort yet to understand how much radiation was
released from Fukushima
Daiichi. "It's a very valuable contribution," says Lars-Erik De Geer,
an atmospheric modeler with the Swedish Defense Research Agency in Stockholm , who was not
involved with the study.
The reconstruction relies on data from dozens of radiation
monitoring stations in Japan
and around the world. Many are part of a global network to watch for tests of
nuclear weapons that is run by the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty
Organization in Vienna .
The scientists added data from independent stations in Canada , Japan
and Europe , and then combined those with large
European and American caches of global meteorological data.
Stohl cautions that the resulting model is far from perfect.
Measurements were scarce in the immediate aftermath of the Fukushima accident, and some monitoring posts
were too contaminated by radioactivity to provide reliable data. More
importantly, exactly what happened inside the reactors — a crucial part of
understanding what they emitted — remains a mystery that may never be solved. "If
you look at the estimates for Chernobyl ,
you still have a large uncertainty 25 years later," says Stohl.
Nevertheless, the study provides a sweeping view of the accident.
"They really took a global view and used all the data available,"
says De Geer.
Challenging numbers
Japanese investigators had
already developed a detailed timeline of events following the 11 March
earthquake that precipitated the disaster. Hours after the quake rocked the six
reactors at Fukushima
Daiichi, the tsunami arrived, knocking out crucial diesel back-up generators
designed to cool the reactors in an emergency. Within days, the three reactors
operating at the time of the accident overheated and released hydrogen gas,
leading to massive explosions. Radioactive fuel recently removed from a fourth
reactor was being held in a storage pool at the time of the quake, and on 14
March the pool overheated, possibly sparking fires in the building over the
next few days.
But accounting for the radiation that came from the plants has proved
much harder than reconstructing this chain of events. The latest report from
the Japanese government, published in June, says that the plant released 1.5 × 1016 bequerels
of caesium-137, an isotope with a 30-year half-life that is responsible for
most of the long-term contamination from the plant. A far larger amount of
xenon-133, 1.1 × 1019 Bq, was released, according to official government
estimates. The new study challenges those numbers. On the basis of its
reconstructions, the team claims that the accident released around
1.7 × 1019 Bq of xenon-133, greater than the estimated total radioactive
release of 1.4 × 1019 Bq from Chernobyl. The fact that three reactors exploded
in the Fukushima
accident accounts for the huge xenon tally, says De Geer.
Xenon-133 does not pose serious health risks because it is not absorbed
by the body or the environment. Caesium-137 fallout, however, is a much greater
concern because it will linger in the environment for decades. The new model
shows that Fukushima released 3.5 × 1016 Bq
caesium-137, roughly twice the official government figure, and half the
release from Chernobyl .
The higher number is obviously worrying, says De Geer, although ongoing
ground surveys are the only way to truly establish the public-health risk.
Stohl believes that the discrepancy between the team's results and
those of the Japanese government can be partly explained by the larger data set
used. Japanese estimates rely primarily on data from monitoring posts inside
Japan3, which never recorded the large quantities of radioactivity that blew
out over the Pacific Ocean, and eventually reached North America and Europe.
"Taking account of the radiation that has drifted out to the Pacific is
essential for getting a real picture of the size and character of the
accident," says Tomoya Yamauchi, a radiation physicist at Kobe University
who has been measuring radioisotope contamination in soil around Fukushima.
Stohl adds that he is sympathetic to the Japanese teams responsible for
the official estimate. "They wanted to get something out quickly," he
says. The differences between the two studies may seem large, notes Yukio
Hayakawa, a volcanologist at Gunma
University who has also
modeled the accident, but uncertainties in the models mean that the
estimates are actually quite similar.
The new analysis also claims that the spent fuel being stored in the
unit 4 pool emitted copious quantities of caesium-137. Japanese officials have
maintained that virtually no radioactivity leaked from the pool. Yet Stohl's
model clearly shows that dousing the pool with water caused the plant's
caesium-137 emissions to drop markedly (see 'Radiation crisis'). The finding
implies that much of the fallout could have been prevented by flooding the pool
earlier.
The Japanese authorities continue to maintain that the spent fuel was
not a significant source of contamination, because the pool itself did not seem
to suffer major damage. "I think the release from unit 4 is not
important," says Masamichi Chino, a scientist with the Japanese Atomic
Energy Authority in Ibaraki ,
who helped to develop the Japanese official estimate. But De Geer says the new
analysis implicating the fuel pool "looks convincing".
The latest analysis also presents evidence that xenon-133 began to vent
from Fukushima
Daiichi immediately after the quake, and before the tsunami swamped the area.
This implies that even without the devastating flood, the earthquake alone was
sufficient to cause damage at the plant.
The Japanese government's report has already acknowledged that the
shaking at Fukushima
Daiichi exceeded the plant's design specifications. Anti-nuclear activists have
long been concerned that the government has failed to adequately address
geological hazards when licensing nuclear plants (see Nature 448, 392–393;
2007), and the whiff of xenon could prompt a major rethink of reactor safety
assessments, says Yamauchi.
The model also shows that the accident could easily have had a much
more devastating impact on the people of Tokyo .
In the first days after the accident the wind was blowing out to sea, but on
the afternoon of 14 March it turned back towards shore, bringing clouds of
radioactive caesium-137 over a huge swathe of the country (see 'Radioisotope
reconstruction'). Where precipitation fell, along the country's central
mountain ranges and to the northwest of the plant, higher levels of
radioactivity were later recorded in the soil; thankfully, the capital and
other densely populated areas had dry weather. "There was a period when
quite a high concentration went over Tokyo ,
but it didn't rain," says Stohl.
"It could have been much worse."
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