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posted by cmn32480 on Tuesday April 07 2015, @09:42AM   Printer-friendly
from the worse-than-previously-admitted dept.

Global Voices reports

Large Japanese electricity utility Tokyo Electric Power (Tepco) confirmed on Thursday, March 19 that nearly all fuel in one of four damaged nuclear reactors at Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power plant has melted and fallen into the containment building.

With the design of the Fukushima Daiichi plants, the containment building was a very simple shell protecting the reactor from the elements, but provided no real protection in the event of a nuclear accident. Instead, the nuclear reactor was enclosed in primary and secondary containment vessels, which sat atop a thick concrete pad at the base of the containment building.

In the event of a meltdown, the thick concrete pad is the only barrier between highly radioactive molten fuel and groundwater.

While there has been suspicions that nuclear fuel did melt its way through the containment vessel and to the base of the containment building, until Thursday there was no definitive proof meltdown had occurred.

The implication of the findings is that it will be very difficult to remove the highly radioactive molten fuel from Unit 1. As well, the molten fuel must continue to be cooled with water until it is removed.

Holes and fractures in the concrete base of the reactor building also means that groundwater continues to seep in and become irradiated before draining into the Pacific Ocean, causing an ongoing nuclear disaster.

The official decommissioning plan tells us the plant should be fully shut down sometime after 2022.

 
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  • (Score: 5, Insightful) by VLM on Tuesday April 07 2015, @11:36AM

    by VLM (445) on Tuesday April 07 2015, @11:36AM (#167396)

    This is true in all forms of human activity, not just nuclear power

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  • (Score: 1) by Steve Hamlin on Tuesday April 07 2015, @04:36PM

    by Steve Hamlin (5033) on Tuesday April 07 2015, @04:36PM (#167493)

    No bean counters at all means the only commerce that exists is real-time bartering of goods and services, wealth must be stored in land and physical objects, and human effort is not allocated very efficiently.

    No thank you.

    • (Score: 2) by kaszz on Wednesday April 08 2015, @01:09AM

      by kaszz (4211) on Wednesday April 08 2015, @01:09AM (#167664) Journal

      No it means administrators of resource management. And that they have limited abilities of control. Ie not save $10 screw which causes a $10 000 000 accident because it makes the budget sheet look good. Or any schemes that gets too much out of touch with the real resources that the economy has to reflect.

  • (Score: 2) by mojo chan on Wednesday April 08 2015, @10:52AM

    by mojo chan (266) on Wednesday April 08 2015, @10:52AM (#167794)

    True, but the key difference is that most human activity can't cause trillions of yens worth of damage over a wide area, and take decades to clean up.

    --
    const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)