The
operators of Japan's devastated Fukushima nuclear plant have announced plans to
remove 400 tons of highly irradiated spent fuel from the site, in an unprecedented
operation that began Monday November 18. Nuclear researcher Harvey Wasserman
believes that the highly risky procedure, in fact, the entire plant needs to be
taken out of the hands of the operators- Tokyo Electric Power (TEPCO).
In
this interview with GRITtv, Wasserman explains how the fuel rods at Reactor
Number Four have been stored since the earthquake and tsunami that hit the
Fukushima Daiichi Plant in March of 2011. They can't heat up, be exposed to air
or break without releasing deadly gas, but the cooling pool they've been
resting in is leaky and potentially corroded by seawater and could never
withstand another tremor or quake. The cooling pool is also 100 feet up.
"These
rods have to be brought to the ground. It's never been done under these kinds
of circumstances," says Wasserman. But as a 40-year activist in the field,
Wasserman is especially concerned about the operators, TEPCO.
"I
believe we got better information from the Soviet Union about Chernobyl than
we're getting from TEPCO and the Japanese about Fukushima," he told
GRITtv.
A petition with more than 150,000 signatures
was delivered to the United Nations earlier this November, calling for the
world to take action. But who? As he points out, the International Atomic
Energy Agency" has a mandate to promote nuclear power."
What
does all of this say about the prospect of safe nuclear power and the "new
generation of plants" the Obama administration endorses? And what about
the Tokyo Olympics? Wasserman's answers aren't reassuring.
(For more read; go to the above link.)
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