Japan May Declare Control of Reactors, Over Serious Doubts
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TOKYO — Nine months after the devastating earthquake and tsunami knocked out cooling systems at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant, causing a meltdown at three units, the Tokyo government is expected to declare soon that it has finally regained control of the plant’s overheating reactors.
On Friday, a disaster-response task force headed by Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda will vote on whether to announce that the plant’s three damaged reactors have been put into the equivalent of a “cold shutdown,” a technical term normally used to describe intact reactors with fuel cores that are in a safe and stable condition. Experts say that if it does announce a shutdown, as many expect, it will simply reflect the government’s effort to fulfill a pledge to restore the plant’s cooling system by year’s end and, according to some experts, not the true situation.
If the task force declares a cold shutdown, the next step will be moving the spent fuel rods in nearby cooling pools to more secure storage, and eventually opening the reactors themselves.
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/12/15/wo....html?ref=asia
Reactor 4 is falling apart
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TOKYO — Nine months after the devastating earthquake and tsunami knocked out cooling systems at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant, causing a meltdown at three units, the Tokyo government is expected to declare soon that it has finally regained control of the plant’s overheating reactors.
On Friday, a disaster-response task force headed by Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda will vote on whether to announce that the plant’s three damaged reactors have been put into the equivalent of a “cold shutdown,” a technical term normally used to describe intact reactors with fuel cores that are in a safe and stable condition. Experts say that if it does announce a shutdown, as many expect, it will simply reflect the government’s effort to fulfill a pledge to restore the plant’s cooling system by year’s end and, according to some experts, not the true situation.
If the task force declares a cold shutdown, the next step will be moving the spent fuel rods in nearby cooling pools to more secure storage, and eventually opening the reactors themselves.
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/12/15/wo....html?ref=asia
Reactor 4 is falling apart
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The wall of the south side is falling apart at reactor 4.
Reactor 4 is in the most serious situation. It is assumed that if another aftershock hits, it will drop the spent fuel pool hung in the building.
On 12/2/2011 (JST), something like “fire” was observed beside reactor 4.
It was confirmed that the wall of reactor 4 was lost on the south side. At least since 12/5/2011, the wall is missing.
http://fukushima-diary.com/2011/12/r...falling-apart/
Reactor 4 is in the most serious situation. It is assumed that if another aftershock hits, it will drop the spent fuel pool hung in the building.
On 12/2/2011 (JST), something like “fire” was observed beside reactor 4.
It was confirmed that the wall of reactor 4 was lost on the south side. At least since 12/5/2011, the wall is missing.
http://fukushima-diary.com/2011/12/r...falling-apart/
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