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ALERT: Collapse imminent at Fukushima! Japan Declare Crisis As Fukushima Reactor on the verge of falling into the ocean
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ALERT: Collapse imminent at Fukushima! Japan Declare Crisis As Fukushima Reactor on the verge of falling into the ocean

Scientists at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant in Japan have declared a state of emergency as one of the reactors is on the verge of falling into the Pacific Ocean.

Lethal levels of radiation have been detected around the site which scientists say stems from a hole caused by melted nuclear fuel.
Rt.comĀ reports:
Radiation levels of up to 530 Sieverts per hour were detected inside an inactive Reactor 2 at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear complex damaged during the 2011 earthquake and tsunami catastrophe, Japanese mediaĀ reportedĀ on Thursday citing the plant operator, Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO).
A dose of about 8 Sieverts is considered incurable and fatal.
A hole of no less than one square meter in size has also been discovered beneath the reactorā€™s pressure vessel, TEPCO said. According to researchers, the apparent opening in the metal grating of one of three reactors that had melted down in 2011, is believed to be have been caused by melted nuclear fuel that fell through the vessel.
The iron scaffolding has a melting point of 1500 degrees, TEPCO said, explaining that there is a possibility the fuel debris has fallen onto it and burnt the hole. Such fuel debris have been discovered on equipment at the bottom of the pressure vessel just above the hole, it added.

The latest findings were released after a recent camera probe inside the reactor, TEPCO said. Using a remote-controlled camera fitted on a long pipe, scientists managed to get images of hard-to-reach places where residual nuclear material

ALERT: Collapse imminent at Fukushima ā€” TV: Officials find large section under reactor is ā€œunstableā€¦ about to collapseā€ ā€” ā€œBad, bad newsā€¦ Time to reconsider that trip to the east coast of Japanā€ (VIDEOS)

ENE News,
3 February, 2017

NHK World, Feb 3, 2017 (emphasis added): The operator of the crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant is examining if it can go ahead with a plan to deploy a robot into one of the damaged reactors at the facilityā€¦ An analysis of the images found that the radiation level inside the vessel was up to 530 sieverts per hour. Officials speculate that fuel debrisā€“a mixture of nuclear fuel andĀ melted parts of the reactorā€™s facilityā€“may be emitting strong radiationĀ inside the vesselā€¦ Last weekā€™s probe found that part of a metal grating just beneath the reactor was missing. The robot was supposed to move around on the grating. Theimage analysis also found that an around one square-meter section near the missing segment is about to collapse.

NHK World transcript, Feb 3, 2017: ā€œ[Tepco] is facing more setbacks.Ā Tepco has found unstable grating near a rector that will make it difficult to conduct further surveillanceĀ to help it decommission the plantā€¦ They foundĀ a section the size of a square meter is about to collapse. They had already found holes in other sectionsā€¦ A nuclear power expert suggests that will make it difficult for workers to locate the fuel.ā€

NHK World transcript, Feb 3, 2017 (at 1:30 in): ā€œEngineers were able to get a glimpse inside Reactor No. 2ā€¦ They found thatĀ a section one meter square is about to collapse. They had already found holes in other sections.ā€

Asahi, Feb 3, 2017: TEPCO said it will consider a different route for the robotā€¦ Fumiya Tanabe, an expert on nuclear safetyā€¦ said the findings show that both the preparation for and the actual decommissioning process at the plant will likely proveĀ much more difficult than expected. ā€œWe have few clues on the exact locations, the sizes and the shapes of the nuclear fuel debris,ā€ he said. ā€œThe planned investigation by the robot needs a rethink. Work to decommission the plant will require even more time.ā€

CNET, Feb 3, 2017:Ā High radiation levels at Fukushima reactor is bad, bad newsĀ ā€” Time to reconsider that trip to the east coast of Japan. A containment vessel at the destroyed Fukushima No. 1 power plant has reached off-the-chart radiation levels, reported the Japan Timesā€¦ Experts believe that escaped melted fuel can account for the spiked reading.

Watch NHKsā€™s broadcast here:Ā #1Ā |Ā #2

 

 

 

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