2011 Japanese Earthquake and Tsunami - News and Analysis

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somnath
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Re: 2011 Japanese Earthquake and Tsunami - News and Analysis

Post by somnath »

arnab wrote:So IMO Japan will not stop its existing nuke reactors. They will tinker with the 'cottage industry' options for a while
Arnab, that is precisely what the Japanese govt has said..

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/05/11/world ... ss&emc=rss
On Tuesday, Mr. Kan said Japan would retain nuclear and fossil fuels as energy sources, but vowed to add two new pillars to Japan’s energy policy: renewable energy and conservation.
Further,
http://www.hindustantimes.com/Japan-dec ... 95519.aspx
Despite the crisis in Japan, Kan indicated Sunday that his government was not rethinking the nation’s energy policy. Kan told reporters on Sunday that he would not seek to close any more of Japan’s 54 nuclear reactors aside from the Hamaoka plant which was “a special case
For a country alreayd getting 30% of its power through nuclear, public opinion today will force a reaction like this..To conclude therefore that Japan has "abandoneed" nuclear power is just wrong..
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Re: 2011 Japanese Earthquake and Tsunami - News and Analysis

Post by arnab »

somnath wrote:For a country alreayd getting 30% of its power through nuclear, public opinion today will force a reaction like this..To conclude therefore that Japan has "abandoneed" nuclear power is just wrong..
Exactly - let India get to 30 % nuke or let Japan come down to 3% nuke (India's current mix) before folks start chirping :)
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Re: 2011 Japanese Earthquake and Tsunami - News and Analysis

Post by GuruPrabhu »

viv wrote:Will remove after response...I've to be in Yokohama later this month (about 200+ kms from Fukishima) . My colleagues are buying KI; it has been that we wear full sleeves at all times (not sure how it helps if there is radiation but might help with particles I suppose), stay indoors as much as possible etc.. It seems to me that is unnecessary on my reading but would appreciate advice from gurus here.
Make sure that there is no coal fired plant nearby and you will be safe. Also, watch the banana content of your diet.
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Re: 2011 Japanese Earthquake and Tsunami - News and Analysis

Post by Yayavar »

^^ thanks :). And thanks Arnab.
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Re: 2011 Japanese Earthquake and Tsunami - News and Analysis

Post by Sanku »

arnab wrote: Exactly - let India get to 30 % nuke or let Japan come down to 3% nuke (India's current mix) before folks start chirping :)
Not all are constrained to be hit by a truck before they realize that its coming.
Tch tch - thank you for admitting you look for trends rather than facts (which explains your penchant for Daily Stars) :) But facts do not change like fashion :)
Trends rather than facts? I thought collection of facts made trends. But then people believe that trends can exist independent of facts I guess. In Alice in wonder land.
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Re: 2011 Japanese Earthquake and Tsunami - News and Analysis

Post by arnab »

Sanku wrote: Trends rather than facts? I thought collection of facts made trends. But then people believe that trends can exist independent of facts I guess. In Alice in wonder land.
Yes and one such fact would be data relating to the number of deaths due to nuke radiation (if one did not read the daily star) :)
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Re: 2011 Japanese Earthquake and Tsunami - News and Analysis

Post by Sanku »

As the picture from Japan emerges more clearly as the dust settles down, it is clear that Japanese Govt and people have realized that they have dug themselves into a big hole and are now working hard to get out. Of course they wont go back to low levels of use of NPPs soon, since there is tremendous effort to free itself of the plants, with each plant decommissioning itself being a protracted difficult expensive and manpower intensive process, along with issues if suddenly the established power sources all went blink together.

However the direction has been set, Japan is drawing back -- why did they do that? After all Fuk-D disaster was not as bad as it could have been, I mean the place barely survived getting into a raging fire in Nuclear plant spewing the radiation through air (rather than drawing it out through water and dumping it in sea) -- so people should actually consider it a proof that NPPs can be handled even in difficult situations?

The answer to the above question has been answered to a unequivocal no by stake holders despite that.

Why?

1) It became clear to Japanese Govt that the Nuclear industry experts, despite all the bravado, had basically no clue as to what was happening, what to do to solve it etc.
2) Spray and pray as a solution to Nuclear disasters was not considered scientific enough, despite the "expert" opinion.
3) The govt realized that the Nuclear industry was deeply incestuous and therefore, trusting it was very difficult. They could not take Nuclear industry at its face value on any projections and calculations they have made, their credibility is reset to real levels now, that the carefully manufactured ballon has burst, reality not caring about "KEEP OUT" signs that the self proclaimed guardians of knowledge and created to hide behind.

I congratulate PM Nato Kan on real leadership, strength under fire, and wish a Japanese people all the best in their future free from Nuclear and other externally imposed shackles.
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Re: 2011 Japanese Earthquake and Tsunami - News and Analysis

Post by Sanku »

arnab wrote:
Sanku wrote: Trends rather than facts? I thought collection of facts made trends. But then people believe that trends can exist independent of facts I guess. In Alice in wonder land.
Yes and one such fact would be data relating to the number of deaths due to nuke radiation (if one did not read the daily star) :)
Must you be childishly simplistic?
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Re: 2011 Japanese Earthquake and Tsunami - News and Analysis

Post by arnab »

Sanku wrote: Must you be childishly simplistic?
Nope we leave that to the Sanku jis and the Uddhav Thackerys of this world.
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Re: 2011 Japanese Earthquake and Tsunami - News and Analysis

Post by Sanku »

arnab wrote:
Sanku wrote: Must you be childishly simplistic?
Nope we leave that to the Sanku jis and the Uddhav Thackerys of this world.
Keep on the monkey business with banana's and DHMOs. This continues to thoroughly expose the reality to more and more people.

Now everyone knows that Chernobyl will be measured only by the fact that it caused 30 deaths.

Fukushima will be measured by the fact that it caused 0 deaths (just like Chernobyl)
'
Since a car crash kills more, Cars are more dangerous than nuclear plants.

I am sure some one must have told Japanese PM Nato Kan, similar reassuring logic causing him to blow up and go hammer and tongs.
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Re: 2011 Japanese Earthquake and Tsunami - News and Analysis

Post by arnab »

Since we are looking at trends, here is one from China. Do read it all - overwhelming clarity.
Meng Si: The Fukushima radiation leak prompted a variety of reactions around the world. In China, a number of government departments stressed that the incident would not change the country’s determination or plans to press ahead with nuclear power. What’s your view?

Jiang Kejun: There will be a short term impact, but not a long term one. In the short term, nuclear approvals will slow down, and it could be several months before the current moratorium is lifted. I think the public focus on nuclear power is a good thing – the Fukushima incident has brought everything out into the open, helping everyone to develop a better understanding of the energy they use. In the end, people will realise that nuclear power is the safest energy source.

MS: How do you reach that conclusion?[/b]

JK: It’s not my conclusion – you only need to look at the data. The Japanese government is extremely conscientious, and if we haven’t yet been told of workers suffering radiation exposure on a large scale, then it hasn’t happened.The Three Mile Island accident in the United States caused very few deaths, some illnesses. There are huge variations in the figures for Chernobyl: the International Atomic Energy Agency says fewer than 50 people had died [by 2005] as a result of the incident, while some environmental groups put the figure at 90,000 or even well over 100,000. But even if you use the higher figures, when you average it out, nuclear power is still extremely safe.

I remember a report by a journalist who, after researching nuclear power in depth, came to the conclusion that it was the only source of energy he could trust, because it has the strictest approval and monitoring standards. It’s like trains and planes – you’re much less likely to die on a plane, but when there is an air crash it gets lots of attention.

Compare nuclear power with other energy sources. When it comes to chronic diseases, coal is the worst. Mining disasters aside, each year sees more than a thousand cases of silicosis, and the numbers get even worse if you add in related cancer cases. There are issues like this with all fossil fuels.

Even around Fukushima, the radiation impact is limited. Some of the numbers might sound bad, but the situation is still some way from the worst case scenario.

MS: There is a view that if this can happen even in cautious Japan, then there is a huge question mark over China’s nuclear management. What would you say to that?

JK: The technology Japan uses is somewhat outdated, while the nuclear technology now being used in China is the most advanced in the world. When the Daya Bay plant was built, with extensive safety measures, it was the best in the world.

I think the problems in Japan have more to do with where the authorities decided to locate the plant in the first place than whether Japan was or wasn’t careful. And actually it’s not just Japan – globally, those deciding the location for major projects often fail to take into account all sorts of factors. For example, dams in China are thought to be designed to withstand the sort of disaster that only occurs once every few centuries. But the 9.0 magnitude earthquake in Japan shows just how hard it is to predict the severity of such an event.

When we talk about nuclear safety, it’s important to remember that it’s essentially a technological matter, and that standards for the nuclear industry are among the highest of any industry in China. China’s nuclear technology can be said to be very safe.

MS: But isn’t that based on a relative concept of safety? As our knowledge increases, isn’t it true that what is considered safe today might not be in the future?[/b]

JK: It is a relative concept, yes, but personally I’m in favour of nuclear power. It isn’t that I particularly like nuclear, but I like coal and hydropower less because the problems with those energy sources are bigger. And even wind power, for example, which is widely considered a clean technology, can also have a negative impact on birds and ecosystems.

Today there are many NGOs opposing nuclear power, but they don’t have the data to support their position. Nobody wants accidents to happen, but what else are we going to use if not nuclear power? If you look at the whole process, fatalities caused by nuclear power per unit of electricity generated are one hundredth those caused by hydropower, and about one twentieth those caused by coal power – and that’s just fatalities, the differences in other areas can be even larger.

MS: Why do you think the public were so alarmed by the Fukushima accident?[/b]

JK: I think the media performed badly in this case. First, they failed to go out and get the basic facts about nuclear power. To discuss this subject, you need a very strong technical background – you can’t just talk about it in the same terms as anything else. But at the start, journalists just repeated what they heard, throwing in all sorts of different opinions, and the reports made the situation sound terrifying. The average member of the public is unable to differentiate between them.

One error, at the very start, was that it was often reported that radiation levels were “10,000 times” over the legal limit. Actually they weren’t, they were 10,000 times higher than background radiation levels. What does that mean? The media didn’t explain that, in Tokyo and where the plant is located, background radiation is 0.04 microsieverts, and so 10,000 times is 400 microsieverts. Just compare that with the radiation caused by an X-ray. [One X-ray causes exposure of 1,000 microsieverts, according to the China Center for Disease Control and Prevention].

In fact, radiation levels around nuclear-power stations tend to be comparatively low – levels of radioactive substances around coal-fired power plants are 10 times or more those near nuclear plants. Europe has plenty of money and doesn’t want to use coal. Have any of these anti-nuclear environmental groups asked people whether they would be more willing to live near a nuclear-power plant or a coal-fired one? Personally, I would opt for nuclear.

So when the media reports these sorts of stories, they need to think about their own role and responsibilities, acquire the necessary background knowledge and provide the public with accurate information.

MS: Disregarding government subsidies, what are the market prices for nuclear, coal and hydropower, and what will the future trends be?[/b]

JK: Currently nuclear power doesn’t really need to be subsidised. The order of expense is: photovoltaic solar power as the most expensive, then offshore wind, onshore wind, natural gas, nuclear, coal and hydropower. The costs of nuclear already include waste handling and safety management.
Coal will become more expensive in the future, due to pollution issues – nitrogen and sulphur scrubbers will be needed in power plants. There won’t be much change in nuclear-power prices, though the cost of the safer third-generation reactors are likely to fall by about 20%. There is huge potential for solar power to get cheaper, maybe by 50% over the next 10 to 20 years. However, there is not much scope for wind power to get cheaper – by the end of 2010 it had already fallen to a little over 3,000 yuan (US$462) per kilowatt.

MS: Does handling nuclear waste account for much of the cost of nuclear power? There is public concern that this will turn into a permanent burden.

JK: Nuclear-waste storage today is very safe. There are still some problems that need to be worked out, but they are all within a controllable and acceptable range. Fourth-generation nuclear reactors will increase fuel usage rates by several dozen times and at that point very little waste will be produced. Actually, we are already capable of processing nuclear waste, it’s just the cost is high, and so we store it.

MS: Germany has announced closure of seven nuclear power plants and many expected a power shortage – but no large scale power cuts seem to have happened.
JK: Since the shutdown, many industrial sectors have complained that this is a blow for them. Germany is already preparing to import coal from the United States, which is tantamount to exporting pollution and fatalities to a different country. I think Germany has not made a wise choice, and in the long term, this will damage the competitiveness of the nation as a whole.


http://www.chinadialogue.net/article/sh ... le/en/4281
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Re: 2011 Japanese Earthquake and Tsunami - News and Analysis

Post by Sanku »

China is a data point in safe environmentally friendly practices? And Saudi Arabia should be used as role model for religious tolerance. Not even worth reading for more than a sec.
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Re: 2011 Japanese Earthquake and Tsunami - News and Analysis

Post by arnab »

Sanku wrote:China is a data point in safe environmentally friendly practices? And Saudi Arabia should be used as role model for religious tolerance. Not even worth reading for more than a sec.
It does burst the 'non-expert' bubble doesn't it (specially the 10,000 times over the legal limit stuff) :) and reliance on coal is environmentally safer - how? :)
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Re: 2011 Japanese Earthquake and Tsunami - News and Analysis

Post by abhishek_sharma »

Japan tears up nuclear plans in energy review - May 10, 2011

http://blogs.nature.com/news/2011/05/ja ... s_i_1.html
Japan’s prime minister Naoko Kan says the country will abandon existing plans to build new nuclear plants, and needs to “start from scratch” in creating a new energy policy.

The announcement, made at a press conference today (10 May), ditches Japan’s target to build nine nuclear plants over the coming decade, and 14 by 2030, so that nuclear power would provide 50% of the country’s electricity. (Fifty-four reactors currently supply about a quarter of Japan's electrical energy needs - this 'Nuclear landscape' graphic shows where they are).

Image
Japan's energy mix - and the plan it's just scrapped.

That pre-Fukushima enthusiasm for nuclear, as Nature’s reporter Jeff Tollefson explained in his April examination of the country’s energy policy (‘Japan faces power struggle’), was because it seemed the best way to reduce dependence on fossil fuel imports, and to meet the country’s ambitious goals to cut carbon emissions – 25% from 1990 levels by 2020, and 80% by 2050.

According to the Guardian, Kan said Japan would have to compile its new energy policy in a report for the International Atomic Energy Agency in June. The prime minister didn’t provide any details, but said the country needed to look more at renewable energy (like solar, wind, and biomass), and on conserving energy – though Japan’s streamlined economy is already among the most energy-efficient in the world.

The New York Times notes that the energy review is “the second time that Mr. Kan has suddenly announced big changes in Japanese nuclear policy without the usual endless committee meetings and media leaks that characterize the country’s consensus-driven decision making.”

Last week, Kan requested that the Hamaoka nuclear plant be shut down; after which utility Chubu Electric Power suspended operations at the plant, which sits in an area considered overdue for a large earthquake.

Kan also said he was preparing for a commission that would undertake an “independent, open and comprehensive” investigation into the Fukushima disaster, and added that, from June, he would return his prime ministerial salary until there was prospect of a resolution at Fukushima. (Financial Times).
Japan to shut down ‘dangerous’ Hamaoka nuclear reactors - May 09, 2011

http://blogs.nature.com/news/2011/05/ja ... s_h_1.html
Japan is to shut down a nuclear power station branded the world’s most dangerous, despite fears that the closure could affect local industry.

The Hamaoka plant in Omaezaki, south-west of Tokyo, sits near a major fault line and concern about the plant has spiked in the wake of the Fukushima disaster. Japan’s prime minister Naoto Kan last week said there was an 87% chance of an 8.0 quake in the area in the next 30 years, and requested that owners Chubu Electric shut down reactors at the site.

Today the company said it would stop the operation of reactors 4 and 5 at Hamaoka. Reactor 3 was already closed and operation will not be resumed, it added. Reactors 1 and 2 were already shut down.

Restarting the reactors will wait at least until the company has built additional defences against natural disaster, including a sea wall.

The Hamaoka plants supply much of the electricity to the local region and some are worried that power outages stemming from the shut down could affect production in Japan’s industrial sector.

“This news is triggering uncertainty not just about Chubu Electric, but the whole utility sector,” Yoshinori Nagano, a senior strategist at Daiwa Asset Management, told the BBC. “Investors are concerned that on the back of this news, other reactors currently under inspection may not resume operations soon.”

Japan’s government may step in to compensate Chubu, which has already warned that the plant closure could hit its finances hard (Reuters 1, Reuters 2).
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Re: 2011 Japanese Earthquake and Tsunami - News and Analysis

Post by Sanku »

arnab wrote:
Sanku wrote:China is a data point in safe environmentally friendly practices? And Saudi Arabia should be used as role model for religious tolerance. Not even worth reading for more than a sec.
It does burst the 'non-expert' bubble doesn't it (specially the 10,000 times over the legal limit stuff) :) and reliance on coal is environmentally safer - how? :)
Shanghai statistics. and sample of one.

There are other more believable data sets (already posted)
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Re: 2011 Japanese Earthquake and Tsunami - News and Analysis

Post by arnab »

Sanku wrote: Shanghai statistics. and sample of one.

There are other more believable data sets (already posted)
What statistics? he is just explaining how the non-expert media did not understand what the '10,000 times over the limit' meant. He is not providing his own data :)
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Re: 2011 Japanese Earthquake and Tsunami - News and Analysis

Post by Sanku »

Sorry no mood for one liners....
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Re: 2011 Japanese Earthquake and Tsunami - News and Analysis

Post by chaanakya »

Sanku wrote: 2) Spray and pray as a solution to Nuclear disasters was not considered scientific enough, despite the "expert" opinion.
3) The govt realized that the Nuclear industry was deeply incestuous and therefore, trusting it was very difficult. They could not take Nuclear industry at its face value on any projections and calculations they have made,

.
Spray and Pray. :rotfl:
High technical new clear stuff.
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Re: 2011 Japanese Earthquake and Tsunami - News and Analysis

Post by chaanakya »

viv wrote:- delete -
Are you going to YKC or JICA at Yokohama? There is no need to worry. It is far off from the centre of trouble and a nice place. KI would be ok.Worry more about food taste ( looks good), unless you have developed liking for that.If you ask they would provide indian food. Be punctual .they feel offended if one is not in time.
Last edited by chaanakya on 11 May 2011 12:05, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: 2011 Japanese Earthquake and Tsunami - News and Analysis

Post by chaanakya »

No plan to dump N-waste overseas'
KYODO
The government has no plans to dispose of spent nuclear fuel in a foreign country, State Secretary for Foreign Affairs Chiaki Takahashi said following a media report about a Japan-U.S. proposal to set up a storage facility in Mongolia.

Sources said informal talks were held between Japan, the United States and Mongolia to build an international storage and disposal facility in Mongolia, but the idea didn't materialize after negotiations faltered.

Asked if there is a plan to dispose of nuclear fuel overseas, Takahashi denied Monday at a news conference that there is such a plan and said Japan has "no intention" to do so.

The Mainichi Shimbun reported Monday that the three nations started talks on a plan last September to build the world's first international storage and disposal facility for spent nuclear fuel, citing negotiators from each country.
Good that Japanese Govt has clarified.
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Re: 2011 Japanese Earthquake and Tsunami - News and Analysis

Post by Sanku »

chaanakya wrote: Good that Japanese Govt has clarified.
I wonder if Japanese Govt will now go slow on import from the Nuclear industry it owns? Are they as brazen as Americans in selling tech outside which they dont consider safe enough for their country? Or will the East show that civilization is not dead yet?
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Re: 2011 Japanese Earthquake and Tsunami - News and Analysis

Post by arnab »

chaanakya wrote:No plan to dump N-waste overseas'
KYODO
The government has no plans to dispose of spent nuclear fuel in a foreign country, State Secretary for Foreign Affairs Chiaki Takahashi said following a media report about a Japan-U.S. proposal to set up a storage facility in Mongolia.

Sources said informal talks were held between Japan, the United States and Mongolia to build an international storage and disposal facility in Mongolia, but the idea didn't materialize after negotiations faltered.

Asked if there is a plan to dispose of nuclear fuel overseas, Takahashi denied Monday at a news conference that there is such a plan and said Japan has "no intention" to do so.

The Mainichi Shimbun reported Monday that the three nations started talks on a plan last September to build the world's first international storage and disposal facility for spent nuclear fuel, citing negotiators from each country.
Good that Japanese Govt has clarified.
And you may want to retract your statement regarding this in the other thread. I don't want you to get into the 'not in the mood' frame of mind :)
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Re: 2011 Japanese Earthquake and Tsunami - News and Analysis

Post by chaanakya »

Sanku-san I am not sure about the Govt, but public had opposition to Nuclear plant from the very beginning due to its experiences. The situation changed in 1973 when Oil crisis plunged Japan in deep energy trouble. Their plants were mostly relied on Oil imports. At that point they decided to go for Nuclear Power.
With time lot of restrictions were relaxed and plants came up in areas where it should not have come.The corporate-govt lobby nexus is very strong there and Govt can not survive without their support. Top level is always mired in scandals and changes are too often. Nato Kan would not survive once this crisis is over. Public opinion seems to be gaining ground against Nuclear power but too early to say if TEPCO and other companies would not try to resuscitate despite odds.

So it is too early to say if Japanese would follow East or West. I think despite all westernization they are deeply Asian and religious and remember history, proud of that as well.
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Re: 2011 Japanese Earthquake and Tsunami - News and Analysis

Post by chaanakya »

Amber G. wrote: 3. It is really odd that you are still making vague references to "US doctors (don't know their affiliations)" criticizing this and that and "paediatrics use was relaxed strontium" ityadi.... you are right, that is OT, at least, when your focus is on "1 mSV law"

What to me, seems odd that, despite all these posts and links, you are still asking questions like "Does your country follow these or something else.." and have implied more than once that behind all of my posts, there is a "spin".. a spin I am using to radiation-poison nice people in BRF.. (You did say something to the effect making BRF "dine with 1000 mSV dose)

Here is the reference to US doctors. Physicians for Social Responsibility

Here is the link to Amit's postwhere he quotes the same group regarding Coal

So reference is hardly vague as you try to make it out. I am not surprised that your comments come first before reading the post in full.

Of course , you would like to believe everyone that this 1mSv thing from NRC or Congress whoever is competent and authorised to regulate the doses is not there at all. And don't know what spin you are putting into that. I genuinely believe that you hold certain viewpoints based on your interpretations and studies or relevant materials and that no spin( at least from you) is involved. Can't say for few others. What we discuss here is important and each idea should have its say.

reg. Chatur Ramalingam, he was classmate of Funsuk Wangdoo. :D
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Re: 2011 Japanese Earthquake and Tsunami - News and Analysis

Post by Sanku »

The troubles at Fukushima-Daiichi continue

http://af.reuters.com/article/energyOil ... BB20110511

Japan nuclear operator suspects new radioactive leak into sea
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Re: 2011 Japanese Earthquake and Tsunami - News and Analysis

Post by arnab »

A quick query - why does Russia with all her gas /oil/coal reserves want to increase its share of nuclear power to 25% over the next 2 decades? Even after Chernobyl and tainted breast milk?

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-04-3 ... -says.html
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Re: 2011 Japanese Earthquake and Tsunami - News and Analysis

Post by Sanku »

arnab wrote:A quick query - why does Russia with all her gas /oil/coal reserves want to increase its share of nuclear power to 25% over the next 2 decades? Even after Chernobyl and tainted breast milk?

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-04-3 ... -says.html
Perhaps they have "safe" locations where NPPs can be constructed a large distance from habitation etc? That should take care of many concerns?

Plus they want to keep the hydrocarbon for exports elsewhere, earning forex.

Plus they are doing it all domestically, i.e. does not involve import of either uranium and technology to support it. So yes, they can do it, since their conditions are substantially different from others.

A whole bunch of conditions. However why are we discussing Russia in Japan thread? I should get discussed in the international nuke thread.
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Re: 2011 Japanese Earthquake and Tsunami - News and Analysis

Post by arnab »

Sanku wrote: Perhaps they have "safe" locations where NPPs can be constructed a large distance from habitation etc? That should take care of many concerns?

Plus they want to keep the hydrocarbon for exports elsewhere, earning forex.

Plus they are doing it all domestically, i.e. does not involve import of either uranium and technology to support it. So yes, they can do it, since their conditions are substantially different from others.

A whole bunch of conditions. However why are we discussing Russia in Japan thread? I should get discussed in the international nuke thread.
safe locations like Chernobyl? Domestic technology that caused chernobyl? Why should anyone trust it? Considering they have more than adequate gas / oil reserves why?

So they are greedy for forex by selling safer oil/gas to europe and endangering their own citizens by relying more on nukes?
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Re: 2011 Japanese Earthquake and Tsunami - News and Analysis

Post by Sanku »

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Re: 2011 Japanese Earthquake and Tsunami - News and Analysis

Post by UBanerjee »

arnab wrote:
Sanku wrote: Perhaps they have "safe" locations where NPPs can be constructed a large distance from habitation etc? That should take care of many concerns?

Plus they want to keep the hydrocarbon for exports elsewhere, earning forex.

Plus they are doing it all domestically, i.e. does not involve import of either uranium and technology to support it. So yes, they can do it, since their conditions are substantially different from others.

A whole bunch of conditions. However why are we discussing Russia in Japan thread? I should get discussed in the international nuke thread.
safe locations like Chernobyl? Domestic technology that caused chernobyl? Why should anyone trust it? Considering they have more than adequate gas / oil reserves why?

So they are greedy for forex by selling safer oil/gas to europe and endangering their own citizens by relying more on nukes?
If Russia does it, there must be a very good reason. Others, they are fools and sell outs!

How curious!
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Re: 2011 Japanese Earthquake and Tsunami - News and Analysis

Post by Sanku »

UBanerjee wrote:
If Russia does it, there must be a very good reason. Others, they are fools and sell outs!
!
Who said that?
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Re: 2011 Japanese Earthquake and Tsunami - News and Analysis

Post by chaanakya »

arnab wrote:
And you may want to retract your statement regarding this in the other thread. I don't want you to get into the 'not in the mood' frame of mind :)
What is there to retract? A news and a clarification. US is still in. Please read Sanku's comment about Japan and my reply to it. They are afterall traditional not settlers.
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Re: 2011 Japanese Earthquake and Tsunami - News and Analysis

Post by chaanakya »

TEPCO seeks public funds to help pay damages bill
The Yomiuri Shimbun
Tokyo Electric Power Co. President Masataka Shimizu on Tuesday asked the government for financial support to help the utility make compensation payments for damage caused by the ongoing crisis at its Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power plant.

Shimizu visited the Prime Minister's Office in the morning and lodged a formal written request for financial assistance.

In talks with top government officials, Shimizu explained the utility's restructuring plan in an attempt to win support from the government.

Shimizu proposed eight TEPCO executives, including Chairman Tsunehisa Katsumata and himself, be required to forgo all remuneration for the time being.

"Although as a prerequisite [for government support] we have to maximize our cost-cutting efforts, we hope the government will support us," Shimizu said in a meeting with government officials, including Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano and Economy, Trade and Industry Minister Banri Kaieda.

TEPCO's written request stated that as a result of the nuclear crisis, the utility would depend more heavily on thermal electric power generation this fiscal year, which would cost the company close to 1 trillion yen in additional fuel and other expenses.

The document also said TEPCO would have to raise about 750 billion yen to redeem corporate bonds it has issued and to repay some of its debt.

Shimizu asked the government to swiftly map out a framework for providing financial support to TEPCO.

"It's a matter of time until we run short of money, and that could adversely affect not only our payment of compensation but also our efforts to ensure a stable power supply," he said.

The president said TEPCO would raise as much funds on its own as possible by selling assets, including marketable securities and real estate.

As for the salaries of executive directors, Shimizu said the firm would slash them by 60 percent, rather than 50 percent.

Kaieda told reporters Tuesday: "We were informed about TEPCO's detailed self-restructuring plan. But there are several more [points] we want TEPCO to include."

The government is hammering out an outline for the compensation plan, and Kaieda said the draft might be finished by Friday.

===

Govt may acquire stock

The government may acquire shares of Tokyo Electric Power Co. so as to increase its involvement in the utility's management in connection with its compensation payments to those affected by the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant accident, a high-ranking government official has told The Yomiuri Shimbun.

By holding TEPCO's stock and carrying out a management reshuffle, the government aims to oversee the implementation of the compensation payments.

To be specific, a new institution, which the government is considering establishing to deal with the compensation payments, would underwrite the utility's new shares to be issued in the form of preferred stock.

Under this scenario, the government will acquire the right to have the preferred stock converted into common stock with voting rights in the future.

The government held a meeting to discuss the framework of the compensation payments on Monday, for the fourth day in a row. As there has been a succession of critical voices raised over the inadequate efforts of corporate restructuring by TEPCO, the meeting failed to reach a consensus.

Should the decision on the framework of TEPCO's compensation payments be put off further, some fear it could trigger credit insecurity in the utility and may bring about ill effects on the stock and corporate bond markets. By having the state get involved in TEPCO's management, it may be able to fend off this credit uneasiness.

(May. 11, 2011)
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Re: 2011 Japanese Earthquake and Tsunami - News and Analysis

Post by chaanakya »

Suspension of Hamaoka nuke plant sparks battle between common sense and outdated thinking
The suspension of operations at the Hamaoka Nuclear Power Plant in Shizuoka Prefecture, which is widely regarded as vulnerable to a powerful earthquake and tsunami, will adversely affect production and employment in central Japan. Moreover, the move will certainly contribute to public opinion against nuclear power generation and spark demands that other nuclear power stations be also closed.

However, is the decision to shut down the plant really a reckless move? Rather, calls for the continued consumption of electric power by all means should be called irresponsible.

Nearly 100,000 residents near the tsunami-hit Fukushima No. 1 Nuclear Power Plant have been evacuated from their hometowns and deprived of their jobs, and are at a loss what to do. Those who are remaining in their neighborhoods around the plant fear possible contamination of the air, water and soil from radiation leaking from the crippled plant.

Agricultural products from Fukushima and fish caught off the prefecture are not selling well because groundless rumors that such products are contaminated with radiation have spread throughout the country. Moreover, the nuclear reactors at the plant are still out of control.

The accident at the Fukushima plant is very different from the Chernobyl nuclear crisis. The Chernobyl accident occurred while nuclear fission was under way but the Fukushima crisis took place after nuclear fission had been stopped.

The Fukushima accident is merely the result of the inability to remove the remaining heat from nuclear fuel. However, this remaining heat has caused such a serious crisis.

Tokyo Electric Power Co. (TEPCO), the operator of the plant, claims that it can place the power station under control if the external electric power grid to cool down the reactors is restored. TEPCO and the government's Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency (NISA) share the view that the biggest lesson learned from the crisis at the Fukushima plant is that the loss of external power sources to cool down reactors can cause such a serious situation.

In the meantime, the public has learned another lesson from the accident -- how much damage can be caused by radioactive waste generated at nuclear power plants and the difficulties in bringing such troubled power stations under control. These issues had been common knowledge among those opposing nuclear power plants, but only became widely known to the public following the accident.

A documentary film titled, "Into Eternity," about a final radioactive waste burial facility in Finland called "Onkalo," is now being screened in Japan. It was released following the crisis without any prior advertising, but theaters where the film is being shown are full almost every day -- a far stronger reaction than its distributor had expected.

Onkalo is the only final radioactive waste disposal facility under construction in the world. Finland, which relies heavily on Russia for energy, needs nuclear power plants, and public consensus has been formed on the need to build a permanent nuclear waste burial site.

However, it will take 100,000 years before high-level radioactive waste becomes harmless. No structure has lasted for such a long period. No one can guarantee that the burial site will never be damaged by war, crustal changes or floods.

Moreover, the advancement of civilization and languages hundreds of years into the future is beyond people's imagination. The film raises questions on how people can tell their children and grandchildren about the risks that buried radioactive waste poses to the environment and whether the project is feasible or not.

Japan is pursuing a nuclear fuel cycle and a method for the final treatment of waste generated in that process, but has been unable to draw a clear roadmap toward that end. Japan is far more irresponsible than Finland in that its prospects for treating radioactive waste are unclear. Still, it has been generating a massive amount of nuclear waste. One cannot help but wonder whether Japan's practice is justifiable.

It is true that Prime Minister Naoto Kan's announcement that the government would ask Chubu Electric Power Co. to stop operating the Hamaoka plant came very suddenly. Some political analysts describe Kan's actions as a populist performance while others call it a surprise move aimed at containing his political foes. However, these comments fail to get to the heart of the issue.

The point here is the tug-of-war between those who aim to continue generating and using electric power by all means and those who are attempting to change the trend of the times.

Everybody knows it would be unrealistic to immediately stop all nuclear power plants. Nevertheless, it is unjustifiable to demand that the operation of the Hamaoka Nuclear Power Plant continues because there are also other dangerous nuclear power stations in Japan. The operation of all other dangerous nuclear power plants should be restricted from a mid-term perspective.

It is a battle between the common sense of those who look straight at the crisis in Fukushima Prefecture and review Japan's reliance on nuclear power generation and the outdated thinking of those who disregard the plight of Fukushima residents and want to continue the current energy policy merely by force of habit. (By Takao Yamada, Expert Senior Writer)

(Mainichi Japan) May 11, 2011
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Re: 2011 Japanese Earthquake and Tsunami - News and Analysis

Post by chaanakya »

Disastrous pattern of academic-gov't collusion must not be allowed to continue
I am struck with a sense of deja vu as the crisis at the Fukushima No. 1 Nuclear Power Plant continues. National policy founded on a thirst for economic growth that has put the interests of industry first, and actions taken by politicians who have only lent their ears to experts whose views support their goals, has caused much irreparable damage over the years. If this destructive chain of action is not stopped, we are bound to face further tragedy.

A group of 16 pro-nuclear scientists led by a former president of the Atomic Energy Society of Japan (AESJ) and former members of the Nuclear Safety Commission (NSC) of Japan held a press conference on April 1. In it, they said that the amount of radioactive material stored in the reactors at the Fukushima plant far exceeds that which was stored at Chernobyl, and that even if we are to avoid immediate dangers, the Fukushima plant would require close monitoring for many years to come. These remarks, which were coming not from anti-nuclear activists but from pro-nuclear experts, were evidence that nuclear energy proponents were finally acknowledging the seriousness of the current situation.

It was
14 years ago that Kobe University professor emeritus and seismologist Katsuhiko Ishibashi wrote a paper warning of the possibility of a nuclear accident, like the current one, triggered by a massive quake or tsunami. In the May issue of the monthly magazine Sekai, Ishibashi mentions how NSC Chair Haruki Madarame and Toshisho Kosako -- a radiation expert and professor at the University of Tokyo who resigned from his post as a senior nuclear advisor to the government on April 30 over the government's handling of the crisis -- reacted to his paper at the time.{not unlike what we see here and still some want to call it black swan event, probably they are in love with the phrase}

According to Ishibashi, Madarame disputed the various concerns that were raised, and characterized Ishibashi as a nuclear layperson, saying, "We've never heard of Ishibashi at the AESJ." Kosako also lambasted Ishibashi's claims, saying, "There is absolutely no possibility of massive amounts of radiation being released... When publishing papers, it is common for academics to be cautious about covering subjects on which they lack expertise. In his paper, Ishibashi makes unfounded statements about a topic outside his specialty." {similar to responses we see here}

There are countless examples of seals of approval given to scientists' views that support the implementation of government policy, while those challenging the government are dismissed and silenced.

Take the case of Minamata disease. In 1956, a research team at Kumamoto University determined that the disease afflicting local residents was caused by ingesting heavy metals that had accumulated in seafood from Minamata Bay. Three years later, a research team at the then Ministry of Welfare compiled a report concluding that the disease was caused by eating seafood tainted with methylmercury.

The government, however, citing scientists who offered various theories on the cause of the disease, including spoiled fish, refused to acknowledge that environmental pollution was the culprit. This allowed chemical company Chisso Corp.'s acetaldehyde factory to continue releasing toxic effluvia into local waters, while Minamata Bay area residents continued to eat poisoned fish, giving rise to an explosion of Minamata Disease patients. In 1965, a similar factory operated by Showa Denko Corp. in Niigata Prefecture caused a "second Minamata Disease crisis."

The government officially admitted in September 1968 that the disease was caused by methylmercury, but by then factories similar to the ones in Kumamoto and Niigata were already obsolete and out of operation. In other words, Minamata disease was recognized as the cause of the tragedy only after industry no longer had any use for the factories emitting the toxins.

The time when asbestos contamination was making headlines all over the country fits the same pattern. The Environment Ministry appointed an academic to chair an asbestos health hazard committee -- an academic found later to have served as an advisor to the Japan Asbestos Association for 13 years, during which time he'd questioned restrictions on asbestos use in a promotional video. He subsequently stepped down from the committee post.{some scientists having incestuous relationship is not a news, we heard how one scientist did research to help company against claims of coal miners and in the process he also found radon raidation had no effect or omething like that, why do we trust such interested parties?}

It was also not too far in the past that major public works projects such as the construction of a small dam at the mouth of the Nagara River and the Isahaya Bay reclamation project were promoted by the government citing backing of experts who claimed the environmental impacts of such projects would be "minimal," only to see major destruction being wreaked on the ecosystem. { there are experst who will always GUBO for petty benefits and compromise public trust posed in them}

The crisis we currently face with the Fukushima power plant is the direct result of the collusive relationship between industry, government and academia.

Mitsuhiko Tanaka, a science journalist and former nuclear engineer, points out in Sekai that based on data of the Fukushima plant's water levels and pressure, it is possible the No. 1 reactor lost its coolant due to quake damage to pipes in the pressure vessel. {there are few here who hold that plant survived quake, full facts are yet to emerge}Tanaka also speculates that the reason for the explosion at the No. 2 reactor after hydrogen accumulated near the pressure suppression pool at the bottom of the reactor building -- despite the gas being lighter than oxygen -- is that hydrogen leaked into the pool through pressure-suppression pipes, and was released through cracks in the pool caused by the quake, eventually reacting with surrounding oxygen.

In other words, Tanaka believes the nuclear reactor had suffered major damage even before the tsunami hit. While nothing has been done to verify or dispel such possibilities, there already have been murmurs within the industrial community that Japanese nuclear power plants will be safe as long as anti-tsunami measures are implemented.

Are we going to maintain our dependence on nuclear energy? Are we going to stop the nuclear reactors beginning with the riskiest ones, or get rid of them all at once? It is time for every Japanese citizen to ask themselves these questions and take action. By now, we know all too well how dangerous it is to leave these questions to government. (By Kensei Fukuoka, Kyushu News Department)
Its just an opinion piece published in Japanese news media both in English and original in Japanese
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Re: 2011 Japanese Earthquake and Tsunami - News and Analysis

Post by Amber G. »

chaanakya wrote:
Amber G. wrote:Chaanakya - Curious, please answer.

You have posted *many* times posts about "1mSV limit". Do you now, assuming that you have had time to read those and other sources, understand these units?
..........
...........
..........
Seriously ...

Folks, make no mistake, some of the arguments given by Praful Bidwai and some posts here (about how "haram"/harmful even a low dose of radiation is) feeds on ignorance.
All patriots should make it a point to educate themselves so that they such people do not take advantage.

Jai Hind. Jai Swayam Pragya.
This was posted in an earlier post. and that should have been enough. /Smile/
§ 20.1301 Dose limits for individual members of the public.
Now is it not a personal attack or something like ad hominem ?

To know about effects of radiation is now equated with patriotism. I would only point to Samuel Johnson on 7.4.1775 that sound so apt in this case. Thank you.

Anyway I am enjoying the exchange with B'j. Same trickery is visible there as well.
Chaanakya,
I asked you, in clear terms, 2 questions. You, of course, obfuscated, and called it "trickery", and as you have done before, dishonestly, did not even quote me correctly with full context.

Let me for the record, repeat those two questions.
Amber G. wrote:Chaanakya - Curious, please answer.

You have posted *many* times posts about "1mSV limit". Do you now, assuming that you have had time to read those and other sources, understand these units?

Long ago you have brought LNT hypothesis by quoting one paper where you were giving credence to millions of deaths taken as fact (vs just a theory). Hundreds of studies have been quoted, here and some papers, you said you look at those. I am just curious, if you are still misunderstanding the hypothesis as fact.
(Rest of the post was not addressed to you, it was a general comment to all)

I have seen you posts, and just have to say that I misjudged your integrity. I took time, and gave you respect, to explain what I was saying in clear terms, gave many links. Yet all you can come out is through insults at me.

(How difficult, it is to read those links, and then understand the difference between hypothesis and facts .. if few mSV dose was really causing cancers, as you were claiming, it would have shown up, at least in one study)

And NO,
§ 20.1301 Dose limits for individual members of the public.
Now is it not a personal attack or something like ad hominem ?
This is not a personal attack.
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Re: 2011 Japanese Earthquake and Tsunami - News and Analysis

Post by chaanakya »

Gov't, experts must release criteria for radiation safety around nuke plant
University of Tokyo Professor Toshiso Kosako is pictured during a press conference held at the Diet building on April 29, 2011, following his resignation as a special nuclear advisor to the Cabinet. (Mainichi)
"Resigning was the worst choice, wasn't it?" says an e-mail I received from one of my colleagues late last week. It referred to the resignation of University of Tokyo professor and radiation expert Toshiso Kosako as an adviser to the Cabinet Secretariat.

Kosako tearfully criticized the government for what he calls its "lax" response to the crisis at the tsunami-hit Fukushima No. 1 Nuclear Power Plant when he announced his departure at a news conference. My colleague fears that Kosako's abrupt and emotional announcement could fuel local residents' concern about radiation leaks from the crippled power station.

There are two kinds of health hazards that radioactive material can cause -- immediate tissue damage from high levels of radiation, and chromosomal damage that increases the risk of cancer in the future even if the amount of radioactive material is small.

Radiation in areas dozens of kilometers away from the plant is far below the level that could immediately damage tissues. Therefore, the government asserts that the radiation "will not pose an immediate threat to human health."

On the other hand, if people are exposed to even a small amount of radiation, experts say it will slightly increase the risk of cancer in the future. Children in particular are vulnerable to radioactive substances. This is what residents of Fukushima Prefecture are worried about.

However, if children living in Fukushima Prefecture suffer from cancer in the future, it will be impossible to prove a causal relationship between their exposure to radiation and the disease. Even experts are divided over whether and how far the Chernobyl nuclear crisis will affect the health of nearby populations from a long-term perspective. In short, health hazards that radiation can cause have not been clarified.

We need to consider how to deal with such a slight rise in health hazards caused by radiation, but there is too little information available to make that judgment.

Professor Kosako voiced objections to the government's repeated assertions that the situation is safe. However, his warning that the situation is dangerous without showing clear evidence also fuels the public's anxiety.

Both the government and experts like Kosako are required to show the public clear criteria for judging whether the situation is safe or dangerous. It is Fukushima Prefecture residents, rather than Kosako, who really want to cry over the ongoing nuclear crisis. (By Etsuko Nagayama, Tokyo Science and Environment News Department)
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Re: 2011 Japanese Earthquake and Tsunami - News and Analysis

Post by chaanakya »

Amber G. wrote:.....................
And NO,
§ 20.1301 Dose limits for individual members of the public.
Now is it not a personal attack or something like ad hominem ?
This is not a personal attack.[/quote]

That was in response to you 1mSv query /sigh/

Folks, make no mistake, some of the arguments given by Praful Bidwai and some posts here (about how "haram"/harmful even a low dose of radiation is) feeds on ignorance.
All patriots should make it a point to educate themselves so that they such people do not take advantage.
and I think this constituted personal attack against some posters. And do explain what patriotism has to do with radiation discussion and why you thought it is an insult when you resorted to same by talking about pauli as if I don't understand. Please stop being childish. I do respect you and don't accuse you of any spin. We can talk like a mature and adult member of brf and not like some juvenile writings.
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Re: 2011 Japanese Earthquake and Tsunami - News and Analysis

Post by Amber G. »

chaanakya wrote:
Amber G. wrote: <snip>
Seriously ...

Folks, make no mistake, some of the arguments given by Praful Bidwai and some posts here (about how "haram"/harmful even a low dose of radiation is) feeds on ignorance.
All patriots should make it a point to educate themselves so that they such people do not take advantage.

Jai Hind. Jai Swayam Pragya.
This was posted in an earlier post. and that should have been enough. /Smile/
.
Unfortunately, it seems, that it is not enough, as we are still seeing ignorant statements ("dangerous.. high." adjectives to doses which are really not dangerous). True, they are now coming only from one or two members here in Brf, but mainstream media is still making heroes of people like Helen Caldicott (who calls people like me and all other Indian scientists as "idiots on a pill" - and her NY times article is lionized by Jwalamukhi..)

Just like "anti-vaccine" ignorance, if not challenged, can cause harm to our children

So it is VERY important for people to educate themselves.

What will be helpful will be for Brf janata to read up and develop their own swayam pragya and challange ignorant statements.
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Re: 2011 Japanese Earthquake and Tsunami - News and Analysis

Post by chaanakya »

Kaleidoscope of the Heart: The importance of telling our citizens the truth

Interesting thoughts
Rika Kayama
There's something that struck me during a television debate program I was recently on. A researcher who had spent many years studying nuclear power said, "The fact is no one really knows what's going on inside the Fukushima nuclear reactors." According to that researcher, it's possible that a great deal of the nuclear fuel in the reactors has already melted, which would mean the situation is even more serious than what the Tokyo Electric Power Co. has reported.

In response to that researcher's comments, a politician speaking for the government said, "I wish you wouldn't say things on television that could make people needlessly worried." Indeed, I think we should avoid doing things that make people watching television feel needlessly anxious or afraid.

However, was the worry the politician referred to really "needless"? Among our worries, are there not sometimes ones that we cannot avoid confronting, or that are even necessary to our lives?
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