It's in the article linked to. I guess you didn't read it.
I thought that was common knowledge at this point? CNN had interviews with Americans at the plant when the quake struck. They reported extensive damage to the buildings before the tsunami.
You would have to be in denial to still defend Tepco at this point.
TEPCO pretty well deserves it. My industry contacts have been far less impressed with TEPCOs performance in the wake of the quake and tsunami than they have with the reactors they built 30 and 40 years ago.
Speaking of denial... have you heard about Fukushima TWO? Or do you intend to keep pretending it doesn't exist?
Fukushima disaster: residents may never return to radiation-hit homes
Japanese government will admit for first time that radiation levels will be too high to allow many evacuees to return home
Nuclear material. From reactors and spent fuel rods.
Cesium seems to be the worst offender, but there is no doubt other material. Any news story should fill you in on these basic facts.
This is why ignoring and avoiding discussing the worst nuclear disaster in history can be problematic. Ignoring it means not knowing anything about it.
The reson he is asking is *because* cesium is expected to be the worst offender, but within a few decades the radioactivity due to cesium would not drop significantely (only by 50% in 30 years).
So contamination can't be cesium significantely if they expect only to leave the home a few decades. Unless they remove the material (as opposed to wait radioactivity to drop) in which case... Why a few decades ?
Cesium seems to be the worst offender, but there is no doubt other material. Any news story should fill you in on these basic facts.
This is why ignoring and avoiding discussing the worst nuclear disaster in history can be problematic. Ignoring it means not knowing anything about it.
The other plant that was damaged and flooded by the quake and tsunami?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fukushima_II_Nuclear_Power_Plant#2011_earthquake_and_tsunami
Yes, someday they will get rid of the 3000 tons of contaminated water there. They may even someday start the reactors again. Doubtful but they might.
Cesium seems to be the worst offender, but there is no doubt other material. Any news story should fill you in on these basic facts.
This is why ignoring and avoiding discussing the worst nuclear disaster in history can be problematic. Ignoring it means not knowing anything about it.