Monday, April 11, 2011

Land Of The Rising Core Temperature, Part 25

It keeps getting worse in Japan, folks as the other shoe drops on that evacuation story.  Now the Japanese government is considering raising the official estimate of the Fukushima Daiichi disaster to a Chernobyl-like seven out of seven on the INES scale.

The Nuclear Safety Commission of Japan released a preliminary calculation Monday saying that the crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant had been releasing up to 10,000 terabecquerels of radioactive materials per hour at some point after a massive quake and tsunami hit northeastern Japan on March 11.

The disclosure prompted the government to consider raising the accident’s severity level to 7, the worst on an international scale, from the current 5, government sources said. The level 7 on the International Nuclear Event Scale has only been applied to the 1986 Chernobyl catastrophe.

The current provisional evaluation of 5 is at the same level as the Three Mile Island accident in the United States in 1979.

According to an evaluation by the INES, level 7 accidents correspond with a release into the external environment radioactive materials equal to more than tens of thousands terabecquerels of radioactive iodine 131. One terabecquerel equals 1 trillion becquerels.

Haruki Madarame, chairman of the commission, which is a government panel, said it has estimated that the release of 10,000 terabecquerels of radioactive materials per hour continued for several hours.

The commission says the release has since come down to under 1 terabecquerel per hour and said that it is still examining the total amount of radioactive materials released.

It seems every day we learn something new about how the situation at Fukushima Daiichi is worse that officials thought, and even the Japanese government is ready to admit this catastrophe has now reached Chernobyl level proportions, and let's not forget the humanitarian crisis that the quake and tsunami has caused.  Hundreds of thousands are homeless, and hundreds of thousands more may not be able to return to their homes for a very, very long time.

It's heartbreaking.

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