Fukushima Daiichi: It May Be Too Late Unless the Military Steps In
he highly radioactive spent fuel assemblies at the Fukushima-Daiichi power plants present a clear threat to the people of Japan and the world. Reactor 4 and the nearby common spent fuel pool contain over 11,000 highly radioactive spent fuel assemblies, many of which are exposed to the open air. The cesium-137, the radioactive component contained in these assemblies, present at the site is 85 times larger than the amount released during the Chernobyl accident. Another magnitude 7.0 earthquake would jar them from their pool or stop the cooling water, which would lead to a nuclear fire and meltdown. The nuclear disaster that would result is beyond anything science has ever seen. Calling it a global catastrophe is no exaggeration.
If political leaders understand the situation and the
potential catastrophe, I find it difficult to understand why they remain
silent.
The following leaves little to question:
- Many scientists believe that it will be impossible to remove the 1,535 fuel assemblies in the pool of Reactor 4 within two or three years.
- Japanese scientists give a greater than 90 percent probability that an earthquake of at least 7.0 magnitude will occur in the next three years in the close vicinity of Fukushia-Daiichi.
- The crippled building of Reactor 4 will not stand through another strong earthquake.
- Japan and the TEPCO do not have adequate nuclear technology and experience to handle a disaster of such proportions alone.
Senator Ron Wyden of Oregon wrote a letter to Japan’s
Ambassador to the United States, Mr. Ichiro Fujisaki, on April 16, 2012,
discussing his fact-finding trip to the Fukushima Daiichi site.
Senator Wyden, senior member of the United States
Committee on Energy and Natural Resources, mentioned that “the scope of
damage to the plants and to the surrounding area was far beyond what
[he] expected and the scope of the challenge to the utility owner, the
government of Japan, and to the people of the region are daunting.” He
also mentioned that “TEPCO’s December 21, 2011 remediation roadmap
proposes to take up to ten years to complete spent fuel removal from all
of the pools on the site. Given the compromised nature of these
structures due to the events of March 11, their schedule carries
extraordinary and continuing risk if further severe seismic events were
to occur.”
Many of us echo Senator Wyden’s concerns.
Has the government of Japan and other world leaders
considered the facts above that would lead to a global catastrophe, and
do they have a clear strategy to prevent this worst case scenario? Are
there any means to shorten the period for the completion of removal
spent fuel from all of the pools, in particular of Reactor 4, within two
years or so? Are we able to trust such extraordinary tasks to TEPCO and
the private sector?
I believe that the government of Japan should lead the
way and embrace all means at its disposal in order to prevent a
disaster that would affect our dozens of generations of our descendants.
In this context, I cannot help but consider the role of the military
in addition to the international technical support team. They possess
the technological and logistical capacity that a company such as TEPCO
does not.
Deploying the Japanese self defense force (military)
inside the country’s borders would be an incredibly controversial
political decision, but the political fallout for the government from
this step would pale in comparison to having such an immense global
catastrophe occur on its watch.
For this reason, I flew to Japan from New York in
April to convey my concerns to Japanese political leaders. Ambassador
Mitsuhei Murata and I met with Mr. Fujimura, Chief Cabinet Secretary,
who assured us he would convey our message to Prime Minister Noda before
his departure for Washington to meet with President Obama on April 30.
Both leaders might have discussed the Fukushima nuclear accident issue
at their private meeting, but the idea for an independent assessment
team and international help for the disaster were not mentioned
publicly. I am old enough to understand the politics of the matter, but
I cannot accept them. It will be an irreversible mistake that affects
our population for thousands of years if they do not take action now.
If this catastrophe occurred, regardless of policy and politics, all 440 nuclear power plants throughout the world would be forced to shut down, yet our descendants no matter what will have to carry the risk of radioactive materials in the nuclear waste repository for 100,000 to 200,000 years.
If this catastrophe occurred, regardless of policy and politics, all 440 nuclear power plants throughout the world would be forced to shut down, yet our descendants no matter what will have to carry the risk of radioactive materials in the nuclear waste repository for 100,000 to 200,000 years.
This is a long amount of time to conceive of, so let
me put it in context. It is said that our anscestors might have made
their journey to the rest of the world from South Africa about 100,000
years ago, and crafted our first tools of the Stone Age about 20,000
years ago. We will need the same amount of time that our human species
has existed for in order to safely deposit radioactive material! How
come do we envision the poison to be transferred on to our descendants
for so long and how will we find a way to indicate the location of the
radioactive repository? Are we sure that the hundred radioactive
repositories throughout the world be protected from severe seismic
events for this incredible period of the time?
If this global catastrophe occurs, the best we can
hope is that the memory of our disaster might be passed on to our future
generations in the hope that they might invent the new technology to
prevent them from another such catastrophe.
Akio Matsumura is a renowned diplomat who has
dedicated his life to building bridges between government, business, and
spiritual leaders in the cause of world peace. He is the founder and
Secretary General of the Global Forum of Spiritual and Parliamentary
Leaders on Human Survival with conferences held in Oxford, Moscow, Rio
de Janeiro, Kyoto, and Konya. Akio has proven time again that these
barriers can be transcended, even in the most unlikely circumstances.
Both the power of his ideas and his tremendous organizational ability
were first on display in the Global Forum of Spiritual and Parliamentary
Leaders on Human Survival, which he founded with support from the
MacArthur Foundation after several decades of work within the United
Nations.
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