zolac_no_miko: (all elephants (swim))
zolac_no_miko ([personal profile] zolac_no_miko) wrote2011-03-15 07:44 am

Not out of the woods yet

Explosions, fires and radiation leaks at the Japanese nuclear power plant. Still trying to get the fuel rods cooled down. Not good, guys. Not good.

Aftershocks still shaking the country. Rolling blackouts due to power plant shut-downs. Grocery and convenience stores have been cleaned out. Trains are not running regularly. The effects on the Japanese and global economies should be... interesting.

...In other news, we had a bad storm in the Valley on Sunday. A couple of logs large branches went down on our power lines, and we were out of power for all of Sunday afternoon and into the evening. I read comics by candlelight until the power came back on at 9 p.m. ...Seems we got off lucky. Elsewhere in the County, power is still out, and in some rural communities to the south, power will be out until Wednesday or later. Yikes.

EDIT: Death toll in Japan now up to 3300, may climb as high as 10,000. DDDD:

[identity profile] shichahn.livejournal.com 2011-03-15 05:20 pm (UTC)(link)
Given the populations of the towns that were completely wiped out, and how many people are still missing, it's going to be a lot more than 10,000 dead by the time this is over. :(

I've just got my fingers crossed that the situation with the reactors doesn't end up putting a whole lot of that Cesium into the jet stream because it'll all be headed straight here, argh.

As for that little windstorm, yeah, sounds like it was a lot worse lots of places. We just had a couple small branches come down and that was it. Power didn't even flicker here.

[identity profile] zolac-no-miko.livejournal.com 2011-03-15 05:42 pm (UTC)(link)
From what I'm hearing, we will not be having another Chernobyl... the plant in question wasn't even running when the earthquake happened, we're just dealing with a failure in keeping some spent fuel rods cool... whatever else might happen, we're not looking at a massive explosion sending radioactive material into the upper atmosphere. Thank god.

Yeah, we had branches come down right across the street from us, so we had the whole teal lightning, weirdo creepy buzzing non-explosion sound, showers of sparks, and no power for hours. Fun times!

[identity profile] shichahn.livejournal.com 2011-03-15 05:51 pm (UTC)(link)
This is true, Chernobyl was affected by some very different circumstances that are not even possible of being duplicated at Fukushima. However the fire on the waste pit and the occasional ejections of steam from the reactor buildings are already putting radiation into the atmosphere at a measurable level. Most of that won't go very far (though it still sucks for Japan, especially since Tokyo is starting to be affected) but, you know. We get enough pollution from coal plants in China where adding a few radioactive particles on top of that really isn't something we need.

[identity profile] zolac-no-miko.livejournal.com 2011-03-15 06:53 pm (UTC)(link)
True. Basically, it's not a question of whether it's bad, it's how bad is it going to be.

[identity profile] magusronin.livejournal.com 2011-03-15 07:55 pm (UTC)(link)
Nuclear situation as I understand it. At the moment the highest radiation risk is still to the workers heroically fighting to get this plant back under control.

The situation seems to be as follows: prior to the earthquake three of the six reactors at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant were in operation. When the earthquake occurred the plants were shut down, but attempts effectively cool the fuel rods have so far failed. The fuel rods at all three reactors have now experienced partial exposure and consequently partial meltdowns. Steam from the reactors and other volatile gases have been released from the reactor to relieve pressure and prevent a catastrophic explosion in the primary containment vessels. Yesterday there was an explosion at reactor 2 that damage the primary containment vessel and caused the release of additional radioactive materials. The fire in reactor 4's spent fuel pond probably is not helping with the radiation problem.

In short, the likelihood of anything resembling Chernobyl is almost 0. However, within the next twenty-four hours we should be finding out whether or not containment holds for these reactors, and whether or not they're able to prevent a full meltdown.

As for ambient radiation. You guys in Portland already get many times over background being downstream of Hanford. I'm not terribly worried that we'll see significant levels, whatever happens at these plants. Clean up in Japan, however could be very difficult, if things go badly.

Here's to keeping our fingers crossed.