Source: Reuters
Date: 7/6/2011 upload date
July 6 - Israel's Electric Corp say that the swarms of jellyfish coming from the Mediterranean Sea could cause the electric plant to shut down. Elly Park reports.
Other jellyfish stories:
Attack of the jellyfish: Sea creatures shut down ANOTHER power station amid claims population surge is due to climate change, UK Daily Mail
(Photos) Jellyfish can cause a nuclear power plant meltdown, International Business Times
(Video) Jellyfish force Torness nuclear power station closure, BBC News (Scotland)
Wednesday, July 6, 2011
7/6/2011 (Video) Jellyfish invade Israeli power plant
7/6/2011 How the first 24 hours shaped Fukushima nuclear crisis
Source: AP via The Japan Times
Date: Thursday, July 7, 2011 JST
Chaos, inadequate preparation, indecision, lack of forthrightness
AP
Fukushima — When unit 2 began to shake, Hiroyuki Kohno's first hunch was that something was wrong with the turbines. He paused for a moment, then went back to logging the day's radioactivity readings.
...
Read full article here
Date: Thursday, July 7, 2011 JST
Devastated: An aerial photo taken March 20 by an unmanned drone shows the crippled Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power plant in Fukushima Prefecture. From left are reactor buildings 1 (partially seen), 2, 3 and 4. AIR PHOTO SERVICE/AP |
Chaos, inadequate preparation, indecision, lack of forthrightness
AP
Fukushima — When unit 2 began to shake, Hiroyuki Kohno's first hunch was that something was wrong with the turbines. He paused for a moment, then went back to logging the day's radioactivity readings.
...
Read full article here
Labels:
First 24 hours,
Fukushima,
Fukushima Daiichi,
reactor 2
7/6/2011 Waste catches fire at Tokai No 2 Power Station disposal facility
Date: 7/6/2011
The following quote from the sourced Monsters & Critics article is really a side note to the main topic of the article which is stress tests to be performed on the nuclear power plants in Japan:
I really would have liked to see more detail on this fire at the Tokai No 2 Power Station, such as the nature of the materials which caught on fire. Were the materials which caught on fire radioactive? If you burn radioactive stuff doesn't it release radiation in to the environment?
The only other article I could find on the fire was this two-liner by AGI News:
Sources:
[1] Japan to stress-test nuclear plants to reassure public, M & C (Monsters and Critics)
[2] BLAZE IN NUCLEAR POWER PLANT IN TOKAI, JAPAN, AGI News
The following quote from the sourced Monsters & Critics article is really a side note to the main topic of the article which is stress tests to be performed on the nuclear power plants in Japan:
...As the financial bank stress tests Timothy Geithner is famous for touting were designed to reassure the financial markets, the nuclear power plant stress tests are designed to reassure the Japanese public so that nuclear power plants can be restarted, which were shut down due to the earthquake/tsunami.
Also Wednesday, a fire broke out briefly at a waste disposal facility of the Tokai No 2 Power Station in Ibaraki prefecture, 120 kilometres north-east of Tokyo. No radiation was been released, the government said.
At the plant, run by the Japan Atomic Power Co, waste materials caught fire when workers tried to drop them into a melting furnace. They extinguished the blaze with water and reported the incident to a local fire department, Kyodo News reported citing local officials.[1]
...
I really would have liked to see more detail on this fire at the Tokai No 2 Power Station, such as the nature of the materials which caught on fire. Were the materials which caught on fire radioactive? If you burn radioactive stuff doesn't it release radiation in to the environment?
The only other article I could find on the fire was this two-liner by AGI News:
09:23 06 LUG 2011
(AGI) Tokyo - Almost four months after the Fukushima disaster, a fire started in the nuclear waste disposal plant near reactor No. 2 in Tokai, in the East of Japan. Official sources reported that the blaze is now under control and that no radiocative material leak occurred. The power plant is run by the Japan Atomic Power and is situated in the Ibaraki province, North of Tokyo. . .[2]
Sources:
[1] Japan to stress-test nuclear plants to reassure public, M & C (Monsters and Critics)
[2] BLAZE IN NUCLEAR POWER PLANT IN TOKAI, JAPAN, AGI News
7/5/2011 Spike in B.C. sudden infant deaths concerns coroner
Source: The Canadian Press
Date: Jul 5, 2011 2:41 PM PT
B.C.'s chief coroner is urging parents to use safe sleep practices in light of a spike in the number of sudden infant deaths across the province this year.
There have been 21 sudden infant deaths in B.C. so far this year, while there were 16 sudden infant deaths for all of 2010, Lisa Lapointe said Tuesday.
Lapointe said that in most of this year's deaths, risk factors included babies sleeping with an adult, on a couch or a soft bed.
Babies should be placed on their back in a crib with a fitted sheet, without a lot of puffy blankets or toys that could obscure their face, Lapointe said.
"We know there's been a spike in the first six months and we know it's related to unsafe sleep practices. Why so many of those [deaths] have come up this year, we don't know," Lapointe said.
She said the reason for the increased number of deaths is all the more mysterious because health authorities, family doctors and public health nurses have kept up efforts to educate parents.
The B.C. Coroner's Service is continuing to investigate the 21 deaths.
Date: Jul 5, 2011 2:41 PM PT
B.C.'s chief coroner is urging parents to use safe sleep practices in light of a spike in the number of sudden infant deaths across the province this year.
There have been 21 sudden infant deaths in B.C. so far this year, while there were 16 sudden infant deaths for all of 2010, Lisa Lapointe said Tuesday.
Lapointe said that in most of this year's deaths, risk factors included babies sleeping with an adult, on a couch or a soft bed.
Babies should be placed on their back in a crib with a fitted sheet, without a lot of puffy blankets or toys that could obscure their face, Lapointe said.
"We know there's been a spike in the first six months and we know it's related to unsafe sleep practices. Why so many of those [deaths] have come up this year, we don't know," Lapointe said.
She said the reason for the increased number of deaths is all the more mysterious because health authorities, family doctors and public health nurses have kept up efforts to educate parents.
The B.C. Coroner's Service is continuing to investigate the 21 deaths.
7/4/2011 Nuclear Power Subsidies: The Gift that Keeps on Taking
Source: Union of Concerned Scientists
Date: 7/4/2011
...
Read full article here
Date: 7/4/2011
Download: Nuclear Power: Still Not Viable without Subsidies (2011) | Nuclear Power Subsidies: Executive Summary (2011)
Government subsidies to the nuclear power industry over the past fifty years have been so large in proportion to the value of the energy produced that in some cases it would have cost taxpayers less to simply buy kilowatts on the open market and give them away, according to a February 2011 report by the Union of Concerned Scientists. The report, Nuclear Power: Still Not Viable without Subsidies, looks at the economic impacts and policy implications of subsidies to the nuclear power industry—past, present, and proposed. |
Read full article here
7/5/2011 Japan eyes first nuclear restart since quake
Source: Reuters
Date: Tue Jul 5, 2011 8:14am EDT
by: Chikako Mogi
(Reuters) - Japan edged closer to its first nuclear power plant restart since the March earthquake following approval from a Japanese city mayor, but concerns about summer power shortages remained as it was unclear when other plants would follow suit.
...
Read full article here
Date: Tue Jul 5, 2011 8:14am EDT
by: Chikako Mogi
(Reuters) - Japan edged closer to its first nuclear power plant restart since the March earthquake following approval from a Japanese city mayor, but concerns about summer power shortages remained as it was unclear when other plants would follow suit.
...
Read full article here
Labels:
Genkai,
Kyushu Electric Power Company,
Saga Prefecture,
Sendai #1,
Sendai #2,
Yasushi Furukawa
7/6/2011 Japan Has Two Reactors Without Approval as Fukushima Raises Safety Concern
Source: Bloomberg
Date: Jul 6, 2011 12:04 AM CT
by: Tsuyoshi Inajima and Chisaki Watanabe
Kansai Electric Power Co. and Hokkaido Electric Power Co. are operating two nuclear reactors without approvals, four months after the Fukushima disaster raised concern atomic power in Japan may not be safe.
...
Read full article here
Date: Jul 6, 2011 12:04 AM CT
by: Tsuyoshi Inajima and Chisaki Watanabe
Kansai Electric Power Co. and Hokkaido Electric Power Co. are operating two nuclear reactors without approvals, four months after the Fukushima disaster raised concern atomic power in Japan may not be safe.
...
Read full article here
Labels:
Hokkaido,
Hokkaido Electric Power Company,
Kansai,
Kansai Electric Power Company,
nuclear reactors,
Ohi,
Osaka,
Tomari,
unsafe
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
ShareThis
Radiation News Archive
- ► 2012 (202)
-
▼
2011
(683)
-
▼
Jul 2011
(111)
-
▼
Jul 06
(7)
- 7/6/2011 (Video) Jellyfish invade Israeli power plant
- 7/6/2011 How the first 24 hours shaped Fukushima n...
- 7/6/2011 Waste catches fire at Tokai No 2 Power St...
- 7/5/2011 Spike in B.C. sudden infant deaths concer...
- 7/4/2011 Nuclear Power Subsidies: The Gift that Ke...
- 7/5/2011 Japan eyes first nuclear restart since quake
- 7/6/2011 Japan Has Two Reactors Without Approval a...
-
▼
Jul 06
(7)
-
▼
Jul 2011
(111)