Source: Reuters
Date: Thu Jul 28, 2011 5:46pm EDT
(Reuters) - Ex-servicemen who say they were made ill as a result of being exposed to radiation during British nuclear weapons tests in the 1950s won the latest stage of their battle for compensation on Thursday.
The Supreme Court gave the 1,011 veterans permission to further argue their right to seek damages, the Press Association reported.
Veterans blame ill health -- including cancer, skin defects and fertility problems -- on their involvement in British nuclear tests in Australia, on Christmas Island and in the Pacific Ocean between 1952 and 1958.
The Ministry of Defense acknowledges a "debt of gratitude" but denies negligence.
On Thursday, the Supreme Court gave the veterans the go-ahead to appeal against a lower court ruling that the cases were brought too long after the events to be heard.
Their solicitor Neil Sampson told reporters after the hearing: "This is a significant step forward but it is by no means the end of the road."
He said an average of 3-1/2 of the veterans were dying each month as the case drags on.
Thursday, July 28, 2011
7/27/2011 Whistleblowers Say Nuclear Regulatory Commission Watchdog Is Losing Its Bite
Source: Scientific American
Date: July 27, 2011
by: John Sullivan, Cameron Hickey and ProPublica
Byron Nuclear Power Plant Image: U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission
Three former members of the NRC's Office of the Inspector General charge that the independent watchdog no longer challenges the industry
When he retired after 26 years as an investigator with the Nuclear Regulatory Commission's Office of the Inspector General, George Mulley thought his final report was one of his best.
...
Read full article here
Date: July 27, 2011
by: John Sullivan, Cameron Hickey and ProPublica
Byron Nuclear Power Plant Image: U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission
Three former members of the NRC's Office of the Inspector General charge that the independent watchdog no longer challenges the industry
When he retired after 26 years as an investigator with the Nuclear Regulatory Commission's Office of the Inspector General, George Mulley thought his final report was one of his best.
...
Read full article here
Labels:
NRC,
Nuclear Regulatory Commission,
watchdog,
whistle-blower
7/27/2011 Voices From Fukushima
Source: Safecast.org
Date: Wednesday July 27th, 2011
by: Ed M Koziarski
This video was presented at the Institute for Strategic Leadership‘s “Carry On Fukushima” program in Tokyo on 7/21/11. It includes voices from food producers in the area around the still-leaking Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant:
ISL(institute for strategic leadership)の主催で開かれた「頑張っぺ福島」フォーラムで上映した映像。これまでアップしてきた映像をまとめ、銀嶺食品の大橋雄二さんの話を加えました。この映像はこれまで撮影してきたものほんの10%です。今後も編集、撮影を継続し、福島の声を残します。
Date: Wednesday July 27th, 2011
by: Ed M Koziarski
This video was presented at the Institute for Strategic Leadership‘s “Carry On Fukushima” program in Tokyo on 7/21/11. It includes voices from food producers in the area around the still-leaking Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant:
- Ohashi may need to look outside Fukushima now for organic suppliers for his bread. He says we need to learn to coexist with radiation.
- Suzuki and Fukumoto are leaving the idyllic farming community of Kaidomari to live in balance with nature elsewhere.
- Hongo won’t sell his potentially contaminated rice this year, but he’s eating it himself.
- Yoshizawa wants to save his 300 irradiated dairy cows from a death sentence.
- Yamamoto was a farming intern when the disaster struck. She decided to stay and volunteer at an evacuation center.
- Yoshida is committed to stay and continue farming on the land his family has cultivated for 200 years.
ISL(institute for strategic leadership)の主催で開かれた「頑張っぺ福島」フォーラムで上映した映像。これまでアップしてきた映像をまとめ、銀嶺食品の大橋雄二さんの話を加えました。この映像はこれまで撮影してきたものほんの10%です。今後も編集、撮影を継続し、福島の声を残します。
7/26/2011 Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station Unit 3 Reactor Building 26
Source: Cryptome1 YouTube channel
Date: 7/26/2011 Upload date
Video by Quince Robot within Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station Unit 3 reactor building (video dated July 26, 2011). Released by Tokyo Electric Power Company on 28 July 2011.
Date: 7/26/2011 Upload date
Video by Quince Robot within Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station Unit 3 reactor building (video dated July 26, 2011). Released by Tokyo Electric Power Company on 28 July 2011.
Labels:
Fukushima,
Fukushima Daiichi,
Quince,
reactor 3,
robots
7/28/2011 12 prefectures step up voluntary checks on beef
Source: NHK World
Date: Thursday, July 28, 2011 19:38 +0900 (JST)
Twelve prefectures in Japan have voluntarily stepped up radiation checks on beef before shipment in a bid to alleviate consumer concerns over meat safety.
About 3,000 beef cattle are suspected of having been shipped out after being fed rice straw contaminated with radioactive cesium from the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant.
In Yamagata Prefecture, northwest of the plant, testing equipment is being used to measure radiation levels of meat from slaughtered cattle.
The beef is shipped only when its radiation levels are confirmed to be lower than the government safety limit.
In Shizuoka Prefecture, 350 kilometers southwest of the plant, local agricultural cooperatives are asking private laboratories to check all beef shipped from meat-processing plants run by the cooperatives.
Despite difficulties in tightening voluntary checks due to lack of testing equipment and financial burdens, more prefectures are expected to follow suit.
Date: Thursday, July 28, 2011 19:38 +0900 (JST)
Twelve prefectures in Japan have voluntarily stepped up radiation checks on beef before shipment in a bid to alleviate consumer concerns over meat safety.
About 3,000 beef cattle are suspected of having been shipped out after being fed rice straw contaminated with radioactive cesium from the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant.
In Yamagata Prefecture, northwest of the plant, testing equipment is being used to measure radiation levels of meat from slaughtered cattle.
The beef is shipped only when its radiation levels are confirmed to be lower than the government safety limit.
In Shizuoka Prefecture, 350 kilometers southwest of the plant, local agricultural cooperatives are asking private laboratories to check all beef shipped from meat-processing plants run by the cooperatives.
Despite difficulties in tightening voluntary checks due to lack of testing equipment and financial burdens, more prefectures are expected to follow suit.
Labels:
cattle farms,
cesium,
Fukushima,
Fukushima Daiichi,
radioactive beef,
Shizuoka Prefecture,
Yamagata Prefecture
7/28/2011 Water treatment system running below capacity
Source: NHK World
Date: Thursday, July 28, 2011 11:48 +0900 (JST)
A water decontamination system at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant has been operating below its target capacity, resulting in delays to the firm's timetable of about 2 months.
Tokyo Electric Power Company started running the decontamination system in late June to remove radioactive substances from water pooled in reactor buildings' basements. Treated water is sent back into the reactors as coolant.
TEPCO says the system operated at 63 percent capacity from June 17th until Tuesday, though it aimed to run it at 70 percent capacity.
The company was planning to decrease the amount of contaminated water to a safe level by early August. But, it now says the timetable is likely to be pushed back until late September.
The failure to reach the target is mainly attributed to the fact the system's working capacity is at about 30 percent below designed levels. The system has also stopped repeatedly due to various operational problems.
TEPCO says problems seen in the early stages of the operation have been solved, and that it will try to increase the system's treatment rate from now.
Date: Thursday, July 28, 2011 11:48 +0900 (JST)
A water decontamination system at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant has been operating below its target capacity, resulting in delays to the firm's timetable of about 2 months.
Tokyo Electric Power Company started running the decontamination system in late June to remove radioactive substances from water pooled in reactor buildings' basements. Treated water is sent back into the reactors as coolant.
TEPCO says the system operated at 63 percent capacity from June 17th until Tuesday, though it aimed to run it at 70 percent capacity.
The company was planning to decrease the amount of contaminated water to a safe level by early August. But, it now says the timetable is likely to be pushed back until late September.
The failure to reach the target is mainly attributed to the fact the system's working capacity is at about 30 percent below designed levels. The system has also stopped repeatedly due to various operational problems.
TEPCO says problems seen in the early stages of the operation have been solved, and that it will try to increase the system's treatment rate from now.
Labels:
Areva,
decontaminate,
Fukushima,
Fukushima Daiichi,
Kurion,
radioactive water,
SARRY,
TEPCO
7/27/2011 TEPCO seeks new ways to reduce contaminated water
Labels:
Areva,
cooling system,
decontaminate,
Fukushima,
Fukushima Daiichi,
Kurion,
radioactive water,
reactor 3,
SARRY
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