Ether_Snake
å®å®å®å®å®å®å®å®å®å®å®å®å®å®å®
Japan’s government will lead “emergency measures” to tackle radioactive water spills at the wrecked Fukushima nuclear plant, wresting control of the disaster recovery from the plant’s heavily criticized operator, Tokyo Electric Power Co.
“We’ve allowed Tokyo Electric to deal with the contaminated water situation on its own and they’ve essentially turned it into a game of ‘Whack-a-Mole,’” Trade Minister Toshimitsu Motegi told reporters last night in Fukushima. “From now on, the government will move to the forefront.”
[...]
It’s now up to the government to lead management of the contaminated water that is building up in tanks at the plant at a rate of 400 tons a day, and leaking from underground tunnels into the ocean, Motegi said.
[...]
Tepco’s monitoring of the storage tanks was inadequate and it failed to keep records of its inspections, Kinjo said.
The regulator rated the leak as a 3 on the 7-stage International Nuclear and Radiological Event Scale or INES. A 3 rating denotes a “serious incident” making it the worst accident at the plant since the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami caused the meltdown of three reactors. That was rated a 7, the same as Chernobyl.
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-...means-government-takes-over-in-fukushima.html
Two major nuclear catastrophes in just a bit over two decades, for which we will continue to be affected for a very long time. Who is next? And all of this for the sake of protecting the "free market", when nuclear should obviously be first and foremost a nationalized energy production, since private inherently means generating profits which could have remained dedicated to safety, when profit-generation is not outright done at the detriment of safety itself through cost-cutting measures.