BenBurch
Gatekeeper of The Left
Again there is a difference between NOEN, ZERO, and NEGLIGIBLE. Learn the difference.
And the impact to human health of any of those?
Again there is a difference between NOEN, ZERO, and NEGLIGIBLE. Learn the difference.
This is getting better...
http://nei.cachefly.net/newsandeven...anese-earthquake-and-reactors-in-that-region/
So there was a suitable emergency generator available. Did it have to take a week to get it there?
Perhaps they've been a little preoccupied.
Correct. In fact, if you check this page from the United States' EPA, you'll see that the average person receives a radioactive dose of approximately 40 mrem/year simply from eating food & consuming water (no matter what the source).
Bottom line: if you want to ensure that you receive no radiation at all from food, stop eating.
Now I'm not going to say that there is no milk without both present, but the blind testing done across both North America and Europe show that both elements are still present in very trace amounts (about 0.05-0.30 becquerels) along with I-131 as well (similar extremely low levels.) This has been shown to be true for both domestic and wild milk.
I have to say that the last few pages have been a great laugh thanks to r-j. I did a search and discovered that while most of the obvious literature dates from the 60's, there have been studies over the past decade looking at Cs-137 and St-90 levels in milk.
Now I'm not going to say that there is no milk without both present, but the blind testing done across both North America and Europe show that both elements are still present in very trace amounts (about 0.05-0.30 becquerels) along with I-131 as well (similar extremely low levels.) This has been shown to be true for both domestic and wild milk.
I also know that they are present in extremely low levels in milk from NZ, mostly due to the French atmospheric and underground testing in the Pacific through to the 70's and 80's, and it doesn't seem to have harmed our dairy industry.
Thanks for the laughs r-j. Oh, and you might want to look up e-coli sometime too....
So there was a suitable emergency generator available. Did it have to take a week to get it there?
This tread is weird, I am becoming less hostile to nuclear power than I have been since kindergarten.![]()
Apparently.
Unless the workers were spending most of the week goofing around, having tea breaks and reading the paper instead of working.
(Drawing and connecting cables that size takes a while, these appears to be 6.6KV, they take longer to strip and connect than 440V ones.)
This tread is weird, I am becoming less hostile to nuclear power than I have been since kindergarten.![]()
Yes, I guess it is the "sounds like rational people" thing.The shills are doing a good job.
Same here.I am more educated about the plants now, and am noticing the same effect - but then, I honestly cannot judge how big the various risks are.
It is possible the management screwed up, but there are also limits to how many people can work at a given task without stumbling on each other.Like I said before, all they had to do was ask for help. There are plenty of people out there willing to help prevent a level 6 emergency.
Mitsuko’s blog was first posted on Tuesday on the Japanese social networking site Miki (it has since been taken down) then picked up and translated by Singapore’s Straits Times, which has published her harrowing account:“In the midst of the tsunami alarm (last Friday) at 3am in the night when we couldn’t even see where we were going, we carried on working to restore the reactors from where we were, right by the sea, with the realisation that this could be certain death.
“The machine that cools the reactor is just by the ocean, and it was wrecked by the tsunami. Everyone worked desperately to try and restore it. Fighting fatigue and empty stomachs, we dragged ourselves back to work.
“If we could not recover the cooling system, the second plant would have exploded as the first one. But we, TEPCO (Tokyo Electric Power Co.) could manage to prevent it.
“All of us have been working hard without thinking of their own lives.”
Low indeed. A Bequerel is a single radioactive decay event in a second; a single beta or alpha emission per second. A Curie of radiation is 37 GBq. It's not a unit of concentration or density, so such a measurement leaves out the quantity of milk involved; it it is a liter or a micromL makes a lot of difference.
The Government in general learned from the Kobe quake that is OK to bring in outside help, but this lesson learned does not appear to have sunk in at TEPCO.
Like I said before, all they had to do was ask for help. There are plenty of people out there willing to help prevent a level 6 emergency.
Again, this is post hoc reasoning. Let’s let the event stand by itself. The safest place to be during this event was inside the nuclear plant. So far one person has died and not as a result of radiation. By what logic do you consider this unsafe? It is fair to compare nuclear with other sources of electricity. Coal, natural gas and oil have all caused many more deaths as has been pointed out and are far more polluting considering this event and others.
Based on your posts, you really don't understand what has been included in the design of these plants or how design is done in general. There is no "belief" in what could happen when designing a plant. All nuclear plants are designed assuming worst case scenarios which include missle protection, earthquake, flooding, hurricanes and tornadoes. You seem to assume that every possible natural disaster is predictable and there can't be an unseen event. Are you a lawyer?
glenn
"Alright, folks. We need to replace the power station. I'm sure no one will object to a 5% increase in income tax. Anyone ? Yes, mister Java Man has his arm raised..."