Wednesday, March 16, 2011

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The nuclear crisis, the minute




S and aggravate the conditions at the plant in Fukushima

- The computer system to measure the spread of radioactivity stops working or the plant has stopped working.
- The work to cool the reactors have been stopped temporarily.
- Authorities say radiation levels around the plant are not harmful to health. No evacuation plans to more than 20 miles of the plant.
- Despite this, the operator can not continue cooling the reactor by the risk of radiation. The remaining 50 operators had to leave the plant, but returned mid-morning.
- The No. 3 reactor suffered an explosion on Monday. Has serious problems of cooling, its core has suffered a partial meltdown. This is not everything, its containment system is badly damaged and radioactive particles being ejected.
- The number 4 is "critical," according to TEPCO. Has experienced two fires. At present, the cooling pool is empty. Emergency crews will try to cool using water cannons.
- The reactor number 1, the first burst, is without refrigeration, there has been a partial core melt and vessel damage.
- The 2, one of the most affected, have practically no cooling, while the containment vessel was damaged after an explosion on Tuesday.
- reactors 5 and 6 also also have cooling problems.
- have failed plans to pour water on the reactor from helicopters.
- The government is considering requesting the intervention of the U.S. military.
- Up to 70% of fuel rods from the reactor 1 and a third of the 2 may have been impaired, according to the Tokyo Electric Company, TEPCO.
- In the city of Tokyo, on 15 it was to measure radiation levels of 0.14 microSv / h today, the values \u200b\u200bshown are the normal (0.045 microSv / h). According to the latest weather information received on the wind, in Fukushima, heads toward the Pacific Ocean and that would explain these variations, reports the CSN. Tokyo, in conclusion, is still a safe city.
- France says Japan has lost control and calls on its nationals to leave the country, and sent two planes from Air France to Japan's capital.
- The Nikkei has taken a break, and after losing more than 16% in two days, the worst streak since the 1987 crash, the index of the Tokyo Stock Exchange closed today with a rise of 5.68% .
- The Bank of Japan (BOJ) today injected another 3.5 trillion yen (U.S. $ 43.165 million or 30.878 million euros) to expand the guarantee of liquidity in the economy after the severe earthquake on November 11.
- The official toll of victims of the earthquake and subsequent tsunami has now reached 3,676 dead, which are divided into twelve governorates, and 7,558 missing, a which tries to locate in six others, according to the National Police Agency.
- Tokyo begins to resemble a ghost town, according to Reuters.

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Correspondents in Japan: "I do not pay enough for this!"


Some are veterans of a dozen wars, revolutions newcomers from the Middle East or those like this reporter has covered five major earthquakes and two tsunamis.


A nuclear crisis? No one has lived or knows how to respond. The bullets are heard or at least pass, sometimes from a distance unwise. But radiation is not seen or smelled. May or may not be. It is this uncertainty that has been losing his temper even the most experienced reporters.


There are those who left the epicenter of the disaster yesterday in a panic attack, traveling all night to find the first airport open and leave the country soon. Others have opted to move to safer areas west and north. Some have accumulated provisions and refuse to leave his hotel room, afraid of being contaminated.


journalists who remained in Sendai last night exchanged messages and calls, there were meetings and telephone discussions with leaders in Madrid, London or New York decide whether it was time to put land in the middle. Richard Jones, an experienced British photographer who lives in Japan, described the atmosphere:


"Some have entered a state of hysteria, others are reasonably concerned and one that is not troubled." There is an unwritten rule when it comes to cover a natural disaster: do not complain about your situation, do not wash in days, sleep anywhere or chronic interrupt each time a replica of the earthquake moves you from the chair. We are surrounded by thousands of people who are much worse than you, who have lost loved ones and have no home. You, after all, you finish your work and go home.


They are
But last Friday's earthquake and tsunami that followed it have degenerated into a serious nuclear threat and the reporter's hand was upside down. The news that two photographers who came over to nuclear power have been exposed to radiation levels above normal but not harmful to health, has led many to take the decision to leave.


Hong Kong Journalists have been examined on their return home to check levels of radioactivity, but were worrying. The star of the CNN anchor, Anderson Cooper, now runs the news from Akita, as far north as possible. Radio France has retired six of seven correspondents ...


The feeling of anxiety for the special has increased because the paralysis in Japan is not guaranteed to leave in a hurry at the last minute, if necessary. No trains or planes. The service stations are closed for lack of gasoline and those who have asked her a fortune to get from one city to another.


A message from the correspondent of The Guardian Jonathan Watts on Twitter reveal the challenges this uncharted territory newspaper: "Reviewing the latest information on radiation levels and wind direction before deciding to go out to gather information."


There was a time-that is, a week ago, a special envoy to expect that your newspaper will send you some extra cash and a satellite phone. 'The New York Times sent its reporters to Japan displaced material to measure radioactivity and drugs to minimize their effects.


"I long, you should do the same," he said an American colleague while loading the computer, camera and the packages in the car to take you away from here. "I do not pay enough for this."


Source: Mundo.es

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

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Video of the explosion in reactor number 3 of Fukushima Daiichi

problems are increased in central Japan's Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power in Japan affected by the earthquake and tsunami. If

exploded Saturday in the structure of the building that houses the nuclear reactor plant number 1, has exploded Monday in the structure of the nuclear reactor building number 3.


The explosion would have the same cause that produced in the nuclear reactor 1, ie an accumulation of hydrogen, and as a result of the 11 people were injured.

also appears that the number 2 reactor of the plant have also lost its cooling system so it could enter into similar problems to those found on reactor number 1 and number 3, risk of entering the reactor core between the melt.

also has detected a certain increase in radiation levels in the floor above the safety limit to 751.2 microsievert per hour, when the normal is 500



Friday, March 11, 2011

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Earthquake in Japan




A 8.9 magnitude earthquake struck degrees northern Japan on Friday generating tsunamis and causing massive displacement of water with boats and debris, including remains of houses.


The epicenter was 373 kilometers away from the capital, Tokyo, the U.S. Geological Survey, but residents of the city felt the tremors.
The quake shook buildings and caused an unknown number of cars to rush the bridges into rivers.
waves pushing the waste flowed shipwrecks and trailer homes to the roads.
In Tokyo, thousands of people gathered in the street tried to find his family via cell phone.
Scenes in office buildings showed papers strewn on the floor and people clung to their seats and desks.
An earthquake so big and so little depth, creates a lot of energy, Chen said spokesman Shenz U.S. Geological Survey.
Following the quake caused a blackout that affected nearly 4 million households in Tokyo and its surroundings.
A tsunami in the Pacific is moving closer to the coast in other countries, said Ivan Cabrera, meteorologist CNN.
added that have been issued tsunami warnings for several countries, and that earthquakes of this size can generate potentially dangerous tsunamis on the coast outside the region of origin.
This earthquake was the latest in a series in the region this week.
the early hours of Thursday, an earthquake with a preliminary magnitude of 6.3 struck the coast of Honshu. A day earlier, an earthquake of 7.2 magnitude struck the same area