…And the continuing problems of our own local nuke
By Will Collette
Four years ago, as a result of an enormous earthquake and tsunami in Japan, the Fukushima Nuclear Power Plant melted down and exploded, sending radioactive fall-out high into the atmosphere as well as plume of radioactive water.
Both forms of radiation having been reaching the US and will continue to come for many years in the future.
When things go wrong at a nuclear power plant, things go VERY wrong. That’s why I keep a close eye on Charlestown’s own local nuke, the Millstone Power Station located just 20 miles away to our west right outside New London. That 20 mile distance is significant – the significant health danger zone at Fukushima extended out 50 miles.
The Fukushima nuke blew up when, ironically, the tsunami wiped out the cooling water system that kept the reactors from melting down and the radioactive waste pits from exploding. Without a regular and controlled water flow, the reactors and waste pits went critical…and then KA-BOOM.
Millstone concerns me because they have had a regular drumbeat of problems with their cooling system that no matter how much the Nuclear Regulatory Commission nags at them, they just can’t or won’t fix properly.
Last week, the New London Day reported that, once again, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission needs more regulatory scrutiny because of recurring problems with its pumps. Of particular concern this time are the back-up feedwater pumps for Millstone Unit 3.
It's all good at Millstone, as far as the NRC is
concerned.
|
The NRC's conduct is part of its own recurring pattern, described today as in violation of the 12 recommendations made to it by its own study panel that studied what the NRC needed to learn from the Fukushima disaster. One of the more recent game-changing moments for Charlestown occurred in the 1970s after the US Navy decided to close the Naval Air Station that stood at the current site of Ninigret Park and the federal Ninigret National Wildlife Refuge.
One of the leading choices for the use of that surplus Navy land was not a park or wildlife sanctuary but a nuclear power plant. The plans for that nuke spurred resistance in the community the likes of which has never been seen before and that organized resistance beat the nuke and led to that land’s current use.
Charlestown was also the site of the only industrial death from a nuclear accident, the 1964 death of Robert Peabody at the long-gone United Nuclear plant that has just recently become a new extension of the Nature Conservancy’s Francis Carter Preserve in Carolina.
With that legacy, I just don’t understand why Charlestown seems to pay so little attention to the genuine, life-threatening problems at Millstone.
The last time we saw any significant outpouring of community angst over an energy issue was the NIMBY fight to block the proposed construction of the two Whalerock wind turbines that would have been located at what is the now town-owned Charlestown Moraine Preserve.
A lot has been written about the Fukushima anniversary. Of those available for reprint, I offer you the one I like best for its detail and commentary, written by Ann Werner.
Fukushima
- Four Years and Counting
By Ann Werner
Pre-cancerous thyroid growths were found in 48% of children from the Fukushima danger zone. Click here. |
This
Wednesday, March 11, marks the fourth anniversary of the disaster at the
Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant. To this day, the outpouring of
radioactive waste materials at the damaged facility continues unabated.
In
fact, it was recently reported that the Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO)
has been forced to admit that it failed to report a
new radioactive rainwater leak at the facility.
The leak was discovered last
April, when the company noticed a spike in levels of radiation on the drainage
system at the plant. In a televised press conference, a TEPCO official
explained why the leak wasn’t reported immediately.
“This
was part of an ongoing investigation in which we discovered a water puddle with
high levels of radiation on the roof of the Reactor No. 2 building, and because
this also happens to be one of the sources for the drainage system, we decided
to report everything all at once.”
Cesium
levels in the contaminated water were as high as 23,000 becquerels per liter,
more than 10 times the radiation levels taken from other areas on the roof. The
plan to contain the contamination is decidedly low-tech: sandbags that absorb
radioactive material.
The
governor of the Fukushima prefecture called TEPCO’s failure to disclose the
leak as “extremely regrettable.”
One
of TEPCO’s executive officers, Tsunemasa Niitsuma, met with local fisherman to
apologize, but empty words were not enough to satisfy Masakazu Yabuki, head of
the fishermen’s cooperative in Iwaki City.
“In
order to settle this crisis as quickly as possible, I realized I had to
compromise and to do that, I had to calm our fisherman and that’s because I
trusted TEPCO,” Yabuki said. “But with this one act, they betrayed me.”
Cleaning
up the nuclear disaster at Fukushima is going to take decades. In the meantime,
the operators of the plant still have not figured out a way to stop the leaks
and contain the ongoing rush of contaminants that are daily dumping into the
Pacific Ocean.
There are naysayers and nuclear proponents out there who poo-poo
any concerns over things like dead sea lions washing up on California beaches,
or reports from people like Ivan Macfadyen, an Australian yachtsman who reports
that his 2013 sail to Osaka revealed that sea birds and marine life are gone in
the waters near Japan. ”As you get closer up to Japan they’re all gone, they’re
not there any more … Everything’s all gone, it’s just like sailing in a dead
sea.”
Just
after the event, TEPCO hastily procured storage tanks in which to deposit the
groundwater used for cooling the damaged reactors. It took no time for
thousands of tanks to dot the land surrounding the crippled nuclear
facility. It was then found that the tanks were leaking due to shoddy construction.
In an effort to manage the huge volume of water needed to cool the damaged
reactors, TEPCO has been dumping the waste into
the Pacific Ocean since May of 2014.
Officials for the company say that the
water is within safety limits. Given their record of lies and covering up the
truth, it is difficult to believe anything they say any more.
Nuclear
apologists are quick to point out that we live in radiation emitted from the
sun every day, so what’s to fear?
They fail to take into consideration that the radiation from the sun does
not contain elements like cesium or plutonium or any of the other dirty
by-products of nuclear fission. They fail to take into consideration that most
of the radiation from the sun is absorbed by our atmosphere before it ever hits
us.
Additionally, when one seeks information regarding the effects of the
radioactive output from Fukushima, all of the information saying there is
nothing to fear and all is well has been disseminated by someone attached
to the nuclear industry. They are quick to say that nuclear power is the answer
to dirty fossil fuels and hand out assurances that the nuclear plants of today
are safe.
To
those people I say this: A nuclear power plant is a construct of human beings,
and as such, is subject to error. Forces like earthquakes and tsunamis are
things we cannot control. Nuclear power plants are also great vehicles for a
determined terrorist to wreak havoc and cause mass destruction.
Never mind the
fact that we still have no safe way to dispose of the waste products that are
the by-products of nuclear power. We bury the stuff and adopt an out of sight
out of mind mentality.
Because no one wants to live anywhere near a nuclear
waste disposal site, there are few facilities to store
it and
a lot of it remains above ground, stored near the nuclear facilities that
produced it. One can imagine that it would be a temptation to a terrorist
looking to build a dirty bomb, particularly if that person had religious or
political zeal fueling them and a desire to die for the cause.
But
even without a terrorist threat, one needs to look no farther than the
aftermath of Fukushima to understand what can happen when a nuclear facility
experiences a catastrophic event.
Now many of the same people who suffered the
wrenching loss of family and friends are threatened with the possibility that
the Japanese government may take their land to
store the tons of waste that continues to accumulate.
The
ongoing disaster at Fukushima provides a lesson in how human beings cannot
control some of the forces we have put into play. It is the best and strongest
case against the proliferation of nuclear power. Often touted as “clean”
energy, there is nothing clean about Fukushima and there never will be.
Ann Werner is a blogger and the author of CRAZY and Dreams and
Nightmares. You
can view her work at ARK Stories. Visit
her on Twitter @MsWerner and Facebook Ann Werner