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01-15-2018, 12:49 AM | #1 |
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Meanwhile back in Japan....
It's been six years since the triple 100% nuke meltdowns occurred at Fukushima Daiichi d/d March 11th, 2011, nowadays referred to as “311”. Over time, it’s easy for the world at large to lose track of the serious implications of the world’s largest-ever industrial disaster; out of sight out of mind works that way.
According to Japanese government and TEPCO (Tokyo Electric Power Company) estimates, decommissioning is a decade-by-decade work-in-progress, most likely four decades at a cost of up to ¥21 trillion ($189B). The current status, according to Mr. Okamura, a TEPCO manager, as of November 2017: “We’re struggling with four problems: (1) reducing the radiation at the site (2) stopping the influx of groundwater (3) retrieving the spent fuel rods and (4) removing the molten nuclear fuel.” (Source: Martin Fritz, The Illusion of Normality at Fukushima, Deutsche Welle–Asia, Nov. 3, 2017) In short, nothing much has changed in nearly seven years at the plant facilities, even though tens of thousands of workers have combed the Fukushima countryside, washing down structures, removing topsoil and storing it in large black plastic bags, which end-to-end would extend from Tokyo to Denver and back. ...according to Fukushima Daiichi plant manager Shunji Uchida: ”Robots and cameras have already provided us with valuable pictures. But it is still unclear what is really going on inside,” Ibid. Seven years and they do not know what’s going on inside. Is it the China Syndrome dilemma of molten hot radioactive corium burrowing into Earth? Is it contaminating aquifers? Nobody knows, nobody can possibly know, which is one of the major risks of nuclear meltdowns, nobody knows what to do. There is no playbook for 100% meltdowns. Fukushima Daiichi proves the point. “When a major radiological disaster happens and impacts vast tracts of land, it cannot be ‘cleaned up’ or ‘fixed’.” (Source: Hanis Maketab, Environmental Impacts of Fukushima Nuclear Disaster Will Last ‘decades to centuries’ – Greenpeace, Asia Correspondent, March 4, 2016) Meanwhile, the world nuclear industry has ambitious growth plans, 50-60 reactors currently under construction, mostly in Asia, with up to 400 more on drawing boards. Nuke advocates claim Fukushima is well along in the cleanup phase so not to worry as the Olympics are coming in a couple of years, including events held smack dab in the heart of Fukushima, where the agricultural economy will provide fresh foodstuff. https://www.globalresearch.ca/fukush...ldwide/5625847
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01-15-2018, 03:22 AM | #3 |
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01-15-2018, 02:46 PM | #4 |
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could you explain as simple as possible if you're into it, what does it mean to the rest of the world?
i understand that piece of japan land is polluted and it will be very hard if at all possible to remove this pollution, but what does it mean to other countries? does thsi pollution spread or what? i assume that so called china syndrome is only ficitional scenario and can't happend irl, but yet you mention it. just tell more if you have few minutes, i'll be happy to read it's interesting topic.
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01-15-2018, 02:54 PM | #5 |
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I aint reading all that shits
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Compound interest. |
01-15-2018, 03:58 PM | #6 | |
So Fucking Banned
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01-15-2018, 05:13 PM | #7 |
fgfdftre6
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01-16-2018, 02:47 AM | #8 | |
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Quote:
So...if it keeps on doing this for another 70 years....since they can't clean it up....there's a chance that the radiation will kill all the life in the ocean. Eventually. I'm not a bible thumper but in the 1610 King James Version (re-written by 40 or so academics/theologians from Cambridge, Oxford, and Westminster) it reads that a big killer of life at the end times will be "Wormwood", which translates to Chernobyl in Russian. https://www.quora.com/What-does-Cher...nian-languages
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01-16-2018, 04:21 AM | #9 | |
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Quote:
thanks!
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