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Nuclear crisis fuels radiation debate

Amplify’d from www.ydr.com

Nuclear crisis fuels radiation debate

The Fukushima plant and TMI Unit 2 event share similarities. Two nuclear experts disagree about how severe the damage in Japan might be.
York, PA -
A former Three Mile Island Unit 2 supervisor has projected that not one person will die as a result of radiation exposure from the damaged Fukushima Dai-ichi Nuclear Power Station in Japan.


The number of workers struggling to cool the plant's three crippled reactors and pool filled with spent fuel assemblies are limited, reducing the number of people exposed to the most harmful radiation, said Dick Dubiel, who now consults for the nuclear industry.


Also, most of the people in the area around the plant have either evacuated or died from either the earthquake or tsunami that struck Japan on March 11, he said.


"If there would still be people, that would mean that the tsunami didn't wipe out the whole area," Dubiel said. "That would mean they would have likely been able to get some kind of help in there such as generators to keep the pumps going."


At the time of the TMI Unit 2 partial meltdown on March 28, 1979, Dubiel supervised the plant's radiation, protection and chemistry program.


Joseph Mangano, executive of the New York-based Radiation and Public Health project, said he agrees radiation levels are highest near a reactor and that the threat of serious contamination does decrease the farther away a person stands from the plant.


"Radioactive gases do dissipate the farther they travel," Dubiel said.


However, that's where the two men stop agreeing.


"Without a doubt, I believe that people will become sick and die from radiation exposure because of this event," Mangano said. "All doses of radiation carry a risk. The workers at the plant are in considerable danger."


Workers at the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant are now limiting their radiation dose to an amount that would equal 25 rem per year, or a dosage that humans are typically subject to only in emergency situations, said Dubiel, co-owner of Atlanta-based Millennium Services Inc., a firm that provides radiation safety consulting services to the nuclear industry.


In United States, plant workers are usually subject to five rem a year, according to the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission. A rem is a measure of radiation, and a single dose of 500 rem would kill a human.


Since the earthquake and tsunami, experts from around the world have offered different takes on the long-term effects of radiation dangers posed by the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant.


"At this point, there is still no evidence that there's been significant radiation spread beyond the immediate zone of the reactors themselves," stated Michael O'Leary, a representative of the World Health Organization, in a Reuters article Friday.


The International Atomic Energy Agency posted to its website Friday that "contrary to several news reports, the IAEA to date has not received any notification from the Japanese authorities of people sickened by radiation contamination."


No power


In the case of Fukushima Dai-ichi, the plant seemed to have survived the earthquake, Dubiel said.


However, the powerful tsunami that followed destroyed the plant's infrastructure that it used to pull in offsite power -- energy needed to run the coolant pumps that circulate water through the reactor, he said.


The plant's back-up diesel generators took on water and soon failed. The plant was able to run on battery back-up for roughly 10 hours.


"That should have been more than enough time" to get a generator to the site, Dubiel said. "However, the damage from the quake and tsunami prevented plant workers from getting any back-up generators. Now, you're starving cooling water to the core. You are doing that to three operating reactors."


During the 1979 accident at TMI Unit 2, when about half of the reactor's fuel liquefied, the plant never lost offsite power, Dubiel said.


"At TMI, we had all of our instrumentation to tell us what the pressure was inside the reactor vessel," he said. "We knew that we wouldn't over pressurize and lose integrity of the vessel."


At Fukushima Dai-ichi, the lack of power has prevented workers from monitoring pressure, Dubiel said.


"You walk into control room, and everything is dead," he said.


To relieve the pressure of the buildup of steam and gases in the reactor, workers at the plant in Japan vented the vessel -- an action that eventually caused hydrogen to mix with oxygen, resulting in at least of the site's recent explosions.


Lessons are 'months away'


Exactly how much energy companies, domestic and foreign, take away from the crisis in Japan is largely unknown.


"All of the lessons that are going to be learned are months away," Dubiel said. "There will be lessons learned on topics such as emergency equipment and design."


Mangano said it's possible that the nuclear emergency happening in Japan could befall a reactor in the United States.


"It's impossible to anticipate an unprecedented severity in acts of nature," he said. "There should be a thorough review of our plants' preparedness for extreme acts of nature and our ability to respond to them."


David Tillman, spokesman for the Peach Bottom Atomic Power Station, said his plant and all Exelon Nuclear plants, including TMI, are designed to American seismic and flood standards that reflect their local geography.


"The plants are equipped with numerous and redundant safety systems designed to protect the sites from earthquake, flooding and other natural disasters," he said.




More requests for KI pills


More people are calling the Pennsylvania Health Department to obtain a pill that could ward off thyroid cancer in the event of exposure to radiation, officials said.


The pill, potassium iodide, protects only the thyroid from radioactive iodine, said Dr. Glenda Cardillo, public health physician for the department.


The tablets serve no other purpose, she said.


The department usually hands them out to people who live within 10 miles of Peach Bottom Atomic Station and Three Mile Island. Residents there have to call 1-877-PA-HEALTH to receive their medication, said Jeff Blystone, acting director of community health studies.


Usually, the department gets about five to 10 calls a week requesting the pills. Since the tsunami damaged the Fukushima Daiichi power plant in Japan on March 11, the agency had received about 85 calls about potassium iodide as of Wednesday, Blystone said.


Many of the calls came from people who have discovered their supplies had expired, Blystone said.




Japan plant hits TMI level


An international agency rooted in nuclear safety standards and technology has ranked the crisis at the Fukushima Dai-ichi Nuclear Power Station in Japan to be on par with the 1979 partial meltdown at Three Mile Island in Dauphin County.


Japanese authorities have notified the International Atomic Energy Agency that core damage at Fukushima Dai-ichi's Unit 2 and Unit 3 reactors now ranks as a level 5 on the agency's international nuclear and radiological event scale.


A level 5 event means that an accident with wider consequences has occurred, according the agency's website, www.iaea.org.


In terms of the effect on the public, the plant in Japan is releasing a limited amount of radioactive material that is likely to require the country's emergency operations to take countermeasures. The agency ranks TMI Unit 2's partial meltdown as a level 5 based on the fact that the accident resulted in "severe" damage to the reactor's core.


Also of interest


· Three Mile Island emergency indelibly written into memories.

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Woman found shot to death in PA

Amplify’d from www.ydr.com

Woman found in eastern Pennsylvania nature preserve shot to death

The Associated Press
COPLAY, Pa.—Authorities in eastern Pennsylvania say a woman whose body was found in a nature preserve was the victim of a homicide.

Lehigh County Coroner Scott Grim said 27-year-old Jennifer Snyder of Lower Macungie Township died of multiple gunshot wounds.

Grim said Snyder's body was found at about 9:45 a.m. Friday in a wooded ravine in Trexler Nature Preserve in North Whitehall Township. Police were called to the area by a report of a bloodied car in a parking lot behind a professional building.

Snyder had been a veterinary technician for the past four years at Maple Hills Veterinary Hospital. Police said she was last seen at 11:30 p.m. Wednesday near her apartment.






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TMI York County residents know the drill

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Near TMI, York County residents know the drill

When a nuclear crisis occurs, they'll get questions about it.
By LAUREN BOYER
Daily Record/Sunday News
Jesse Dellen Jr., left, talks with friend Shannon Hoover in the driveway of Dellen's Goldsboro home, which offers a view of the Three Mile Island cooling towers. (Daily Record/Sunday News -- Jason Plotkin)
York, PA -
Talk to Goldsboro residents about Three Mile Island and, guaranteed, they've heard it all before. They can probably finish your sentence.


Each time nuclear news breaks, the curious descend on the modest riverside town, and nearby landings, to garner reaction from those living in the shadow of TMI's cooling towers.


"It brings so many people down here," said resident Jesse Dellen Jr. "They come down my driveway, instead of staying on the road."


Usually, he said, they stop to snap pictures of the plant, the site of a 1979 partial meltdown that now, according to news reports, sits on par with the Japan disaster.


Despite it all, Dellen pays little attention to the four massive towers across

Goldsboro resident Natalie Hoke talks about Japan's nuclear issues in relation to nearby Three Mile Island. (Daily Record/Sunday News -- Jason Plotkin)
the Susquehanna River from the waterfront property he purchased in 2009.


He keeps busy, renovating his 100-year-old cottage next to the Goldsboro Marina. He worries more about flooding, he said, than the possibility of another accident at the plant.


That attitude echoes down the street, where Mike Baker, 63, says he doesn't own any anti-radiation iodine tablets.


"Yeah, God's gonna take care of me," he said, adding that he never thought twice when he moved to Goldsboro from Mechanicsburg 11 years ago.


Lessons learned in Japan, he said, will keep him even safer.


"Whatever's happening over there will fit us over here," he said. "We'll learn what not to do."


And if nuclear plants suit your fancy, Ron Stambaugh, 73, of Newberrytown, can help. He's looking to sell his 150-year-old building, once home to the Goldsboro post office.


He doesn't expect TMI, the "probably the safest nuclear plant in the world," he said, to deter potential buyers for the space, which features a storefront and several apartments.


"It's practically forgotten," Stambaugh said. "Anybody that's going to buy that building for commercial purposes realizes that what's happening in Japan isn't going to happen at TMI again."


Up the street, Natalie Hoke, 65, moved to Goldsboro from East York 25 years ago. She, too, watches TMI's billowing steam from her porch.


The threat, she said, is in the back of her mind, but "not now more than any other time."


"The older you get," she said, "the less you're afraid of it."


Also of interest


· In the shadow of disaster: York County and its newspaper tested 30 years ago

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Protect Yourself From Radiation 3 ways

3 Ways To Protect Yourself From Radiation NATURALLY

Amplify’d from theintelhub.com

3 Ways To Protect Yourself From Radiation NATURALLY

By Mary Hickcox, R.N.

Activist Post

March 20th, 2011

Radiation is something that we all come into contact with on a daily basis. It generally comes in two forms: terrestrial and cosmic.

Terrestrial radiation elements are found all over; in soil, water, air, and even in the food that we eat, particularly if it is grown in the ground. The largest contributor to radiation in the natural world, though, is radon which is a decaying product of Uranium, released from rocks and soil. This gets into our air, as well as our water supply, and we are usually completely unaware of its presence. Cosmic rays of radiation are another source that we get everyday. Most of it is blocked by our atmosphere, but not completely.

Then of course there are the ways in which humans are creating more radiation.

Smokers inhale a form of radiation; the rocks, cement, and bricks we use in building often times contain uranium ores; and increase in air travel has contributed to our exposure of cosmic rays. The medical field also contributes via dental X-rays, CT scans, MRI, radio isotope injection to diagnose cancer and radiation therapy to treat cancer.

While these are generally necessary, the TSA has introduced dangerous backscatter devices to airport security, which is set to be rolled out in neighborhood security vans, on buses, trains and in malls as well. This additional radiation exposure has no place in our daily lives. Meanwhile, our modern conveniences such as microwaves, radio towers, cell phones, wireless routers and the vast spectrum of electromagnetic pollution contribute to the bombardment.

The escalating crisis in Japan has led many of us to start thinking about serious radiation exposure from the worst threat of all — nuclear fallout, which has resulted in a lot of impulse buying of the most common treatment, Potassium Iodide, to the point that it is disappearing all together. But fear not, there are many other natural ways to protect ourselves from radiation poisoning that we should be taking on a regular basis to combat all forms of daily radiation.

Herbs There are several easy-to-obtain herbs that can be used for your protection. One of the best herbal protectors against radiation is Rosemary which contains Carnosic and Rosmarinic acids.  According to Natural News, two different studies were done in Spain showing the positive effects of using Rosemary.

It fights radiation damage to cells and rids the body of DNA damaging free radicals. It is readily available at any grocery or health food store, or can be grown in a windowsill herb garden, while being a wonderful addition to many meals. Herbs such as Cilantro help to remove heavy metals from the body, while others such as Dandelion help to rid the body of free radicals and protect the liver. 

Key Foods Obviously a healthy diet is a great start for having a body capable of removing some of the toxins related to radiation, as well as to strengthen the immune system.  Some foods, though, are more helpful in the event of excess radiation.  Any food containing caffeic acid, such as apples, citrus fruits, broccoli, cauliflower, and cabbage offer support.

In a study done in India, caffeic acid was injected into cells and then those cells were subjected to varying degrees of radiation, while the control group was not. In all of the cells injected with the acid, there was no damage to the cells at all. The control group showed various degrees of genetic damage.  Another food source of great protection is seaweed (kelp, spirulina, brown algae), due to its natural iodine content and ability to slow the accumulation of nuerotoxic metals.   Buckwheat, tumeric, ginko, and any potassium-rich foods are also great ways to protect yourself.

Vitamins and supplements Simple vitamins receive very little attention for their anti-radiation benefits. The British Journal of Radiology reports that Vitamin C, E, and beta carotene are all effective tools for protection against radiation. Vitamin C can protect against radiation as well as repair damage done to cells from previous exposure. Calcium, magnesium, and bee pollen are also key supplements that should be added to a healthy, balanced diet.

Don’t let anyone fool you.  Radiation exposure on any level is not OK. Radiation disrupts our cellular growth, can make our cells grow abnormally, or even die off completely. Some of the cells will be mutated and reproduce; this is the process leading us to cancer. Obviously the more exposure we receive the worse the situation is as the cells do not have time to replace the ones killed off by the radiation, but any level is bad.  Do yourself a favor: regardless of what happens in Japan, or at any of the other countless nuclear facilities, start taking action now with the products listed above, and prevent exposure in any way that you can.

Read more at theintelhub.com
 

Just South of Fukushima - Momiyama Hokota City Japan 1144 (nGy/h) = approx. 35.00 microsievert/hour http://amplify.com/u/bvlbr

Realtime radiation data

Amplify’d from www.bousai.ne.jp
 •Environmental radioactivity and radiation information
Realtime radiation data collected via the System for Prediction of Environment Emergency Dose Information(SPEEDI)
Read more at www.bousai.ne.jp
 

Another Japanese Reactor In Trouble?

Amplify’d from theintelhub.com

Another Japanese Reactor Facility In Trouble?

Shika/Ishikawa

The Intel Hub

By Shepard Ambellas

March 20, 2011

In the last week the environment has taken a beating that may take months or even years to recover from.

The nuclear disaster in Japan continues to worsen, a new 100 mile oil slick has been found in the waters of the Gulf of Mexico, and radioactive begin fallout hitting the mainland US as of early Friday, yet the corporate media continues to focus on a scripted war as yet another media cover-up is underway.

Not only are the events in Libya being falsely portrayed to the American people as justification for another regional grab, it serves as a great cover story for one of the worst (if not the worst) world environmental disasters of all time (Japan’s Reactor Crisis of 2011).

New details are emerging rapidly regarding the Japanese governments credibility and radiation levels in Japan.

The Disaster Prevention and Nuclear Safety Network for Nuclear Environment’s website has alway posted realtime radiation data collected via the System for Prediction of Environment Emergency Dose Information (SPEEDI).

The readings displayed on the website are measured in nGy/hr or nanogrey’s.

Nuclear Facilities In Japan

The website (known for accurate real-time readings) is now displaying a pink dot in three areas around Japan signifying that the area is under survey (off-line).

Two of the areas under survey of course are right around the Fukushima Reactor (Fukushima & Miy agi) while another is in the region of the Ishikawa nuclear reactor on the west side of Japan raising concern of an independent problem with the Ishikawa reactor.

The Shika/Ishikawa plant has 2 reactors, it is unknown at this time if one was still under construction.

Radiation levels in Japan outside the boundaries of the areas marked “Under Survey” are reading above 700 nGy/hr.

Read more at theintelhub.com
 

Japan: disinfo campaign now underway

Mainstream media halts accurate reporting on Japan’s worsening nuclear catastrophe; disinfo campaign now underway

Amplify’d from www.infowars.com

Mike Adams

Natural News

March 19, 2011

(NaturalNews) Almost as if on cue, the mainstream media today halted nearly all accurate reporting of the worsening situation in Japan, writing off the whole thing as a “non issue.” This all happened in a seeming coordinate effort following President Obama’s speech on Wednesday that urged Americans to NOT prepare for anything. The American people, Obama insisted, should simply watch television to “stay informed.” Shortly after, mainstream television news returned to its regularly-scheduled sports and entertainment programming, barely touching on the reality of the worsening situation at the Fukushima nuclear power plant in Japan.

Nuclear experts that were on mainstream news channels two days are now nowhere to be found today. Scary (but accurate) news stories about Fukushima have now been all but completely banned from the MSM. The word from the top is clearly that media outlets should start downplaying this nuclear accident, which even now ranks as the second worst nuclear accident in the history of human civilization (right after Chernobyl).

The Asian media, for its part, simply started fabricating completely fictitious news. The press in China and Taiwan, for example, reported last night that grid power had been restored to the Fukushima reactor #2 and that the entire disaster had now been completely averted. This was a total fabrication: The truth is that power plant workers were pulled out of the area before they could even connect grid power, due to rising levels of extremely dangerous radiation near the plant.

Even if grid power were restored to reactor #2, that would not help reactors #3 and #4, where the really dangerous plutonium MOX fuel is stored. It’s 2,000,000 times more toxic than enriched uranium.

And even if they could restore power to all the reactors, there’s no guarantee that the cooling pumps will even work there. They were very likely damaged in the explosions and may not be functioning at all.

Time to start lying to the people

What to do in such a crisis? If you’re the government, the important action is to just lie to the people as much as possible, telling them everything’s fine. Even Japan’s own political leaders are fed up with it. One Mayor of a Japanese province says his own government abandoned his people and lied to everyone .

In the United States, the nuclear power industry is now in total spin mode, trying to make sure people don’t question the future of nuclear power. General Electric, which manufactured the reactors in the Fukushima power plant, experienced huge stock losses over the last few days. Now, it seems the orders from the top are to tell people nuclear power is “still safe.” GE, of course, is a huge asset holder in NBC , one of the major media players in this whole charade. I very much doubt NBC openly discloses to its viewers that its news reporting may be entirely biased because it is largely owned by the very same corporate conglomerate that earns money from the construction of nuclear power plants.

Even the radiation reporting from U.S. authorities appears to be a whitewash, as detectors in the U.S. are only reporting radiation leaked days ago out of Japan, not the new radiation headed our way.

We are now witnessing the complete transition of this entire story from the “honest reporting” phase to the new “disinformation” phase which seeks to ensure that the people of the world have no real clue what’s going on in Fukushima. Don’t prepare. Don’t worry. Don’t think for yourself. Just do whatever the government tells you to do… which is right now nothing.

It’s an amazing plan, eh? Sadly, pretending that Fukushima is not a problem does not reverse the laws of nuclear physics at work there. If a massive cloud of radiation bursts into the atmosphere in the coming days, will they also pretend nothing happened? Will the American people be given no warning as a massive radiation cloud approaches?

We must now seriously begin to question the agenda of the Japanese and American governments in all this. Are they actually trying to get more people killed? If not, then why aren’t the people being advised to take prudent precautionary measures?

Here at NaturalNews, we urge everyone to get prepared, just in case. Have a preparedness kit. Have a plan. Get informed. Fuel up your vehicles. Boost your iodine intake. Be calm and prepared, folks, so that you don’t panic and become part of the problem when things go wrong.

Why can’t Obama utter those words, I wonder? Why is the only real leadership on this whole issue coming from the alternative media and not the elected “leaders” of our nation?

Read more at www.infowars.com
 

Downstream Effects From Fukushima

Amplify’d from www.infowars.com

Tyler Durden

Zero Hedge

March 20, 2011

As the world awakes, Japan discloses another round of good news/bad news about the Fukushima crisis. The good news: Reactors 5 and 6 went into stable condition on Sunday, after a successful cold shutdown, authorities said. The reactors at the power plant went into cold shutdown following restoration of cooling functions late Saturday. Alas, 5 and 6 were never the issue to begin with. The same came not be said about reactors 1 through 4, where the bad news comes from this morning. According to the Japan Times, a risky venting of Reactor 3, which saw its pressure rising yet again, was being considered, which would see another release of radioactive gas into the environment. “Pressure within the No. 3 reactor at the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant was rising at one point and Tepco considered releasing more radioactive gas into the environment to avert serious damage to the containment vessel, the nuclear safety agency said Sunday afternoon. Tokyo Electric Power Co. had considered releasing the contaminated steam directly into the environment, not through a “suppression pool” as it did earlier in the crisis. The pressure needs to be lowered to protect the structural integrity of the reactor, and the first step is to open the valve on a pipe connected to the suppression pool. By going through the suppression pool, the reactor’s gas would liquefy and thus lower the pressure.” And here is where the recent Operation Irrigation is now backfiring: “But if the pool is already filled with water, a valve on the reactor itself would need to be opened and the radiation level of the released gas would be higher than with the first method, explained Hidehiko Nishiyama of the Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency. “Without water, there would be more radioactive substances in the gas released into the environment.”" In other words, the attempt (which some say is futile) to fill the containment pool with water is about to lead to another round of irradiation of the environment. And while all that is going on, here is what the already certain chain of downstream events is going to look like for the region, for Japan, and for the world.

From Reuters, the following is a roundup of the effect on the energy and commodities sector of the devastating earthquake and tsunami that struck the northeast coast of Japan.

UTILITIES

  • Japan saw some success in its race to avert disaster at a tsunami-damaged power plant, though minor radiation leaks underlined perils from the world’s worst nuclear crisis since Chernobyl 25 years ago.
  • Japan may have reached a turning point in winning its week-long battle to prevent a massive radiation leak when it succeeded in connecting a power transmission line to the disabled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant.
  • Japan is considering whether to halt sales of food products from near a crippled nuclear plant because of contamination by a radioactive element which can pose a short-term health risk, the U.N. atomic agency said.
  • Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin proposed freeing up energy for Japan by increasing gas supplies to Europe and offered Japanese companies a slice of Siberia’s gas industry.
  • Japan has raised the severity rating of the nuclear crisis to level 5 from 4 on the seven-level INES international scale, putting it on a par with the Three Mile Island accident in Pennsylvania in 1979.
  • Power blackouts can be avoided in the Tokyo area if demand stays at the current level, the trade ministry said.
  • TEPCO has announced rolling blackouts after its power generation was cut.
  • Japanese utility Tohoku Electric declares force majeure on its near-term thermal coal shipments due to port damage.

REFINERIES

  • Japan’s demand for oil, refined products and gas will increase in the medium term, but this will not have a significant impact on global supply and demand, Saudi Aramco CEO Khalid al-Falih told Reuters.
  • Showa Shell Sekiyu KK said on Friday that it has started full output at its four group refineries as part of efforts to ease a severe supply shortage after a powerful quake hit northeast Japan a week ago.
  • Showa Shell, 35 percent owned by Royal Dutch Shell and 15 percent by Saudi Aramco, said its four group refineries with total capacity of 655,000 barrels per day have been making both surface and marine shipments.
  • JX Nippon Oil & Energy Corp, an oil refining unit of JX Holdings , boosts oil product output at two refineries in western Japan by 30,000 barrels per day in the wake of a supply shortage in the east of the country.
  • It is also taking other emergency measures, including importing oil from South Korea, buying from other refiners and cancelling exports.
  • Long lines have been forming at gasoline stations in Tokyo while many JX Nippon stations have been forced to close after running out of fuel.
  • Oil product output in Japan will recover to 3.4 million barrels per day by the end of March, a level above domestic demand, as idled refineries resume operations, said an oil industry body.
  • The government has asked 13 refineries in operation in West Japan to boost their running ratio to help ease the supply shortage.
  • JX Holdings is in talks with South Korea and China on oil products imports to help Japan meet its energy needs.
  • AOC Holdings says its refiner Fuji Oil Co has increased runs at the two fluid catalytic cracking units at its 140,000 bpd Sodegaura refinery after briefly reducing operations after the earthquake .
  • Three Japan-bound naphtha shipping fixtures from the Middle East, totalling 205,000 tonnes, fails to be completed due to the shutdown of several Japanese crackers.
  • Valero Energy said it is ready to supply refined products, such as gasoline and diesel, from its U.S. West Coast refineries to Japan.
  • JX Holdings says the refinery of subsidiary Kashima Oil Co remains shut.
  • JX Holdings declares force majeure on its refined product supplies as its stocks are depleted and distributions disrupted. The company is working to boost output at its refineries that are still operating and diverting products to domestic use instead of exports to meet a supply shortfall.
  • Maruzen Petrochemical Co Ltd shuts its sole naphtha cracker in Chiba, east of Tokyo, with capacity to produce 480,000 tonnes per year of ethylene.
  • Kyokuto Petroleum has restarted its 175,000 barrels per day (bpd) Chiba refinery.
  • JX Holdings shuts its 404,000 tonnes per year Kawasaki naphtha cracker near Tokyo.
  • Japan’s Exxon Mobil group refiner TonenGeneral Sekiyu KK prepares to restart its 335,000 barrels per day Kawasaki plant, near Tokyo.
  • Mitsubishi Chemical halts two naphtha crackers at its Kashima plant after a power outage.

METALS

  • China’s term shipments for refined copper from Japan may stay normal in March and April, though May and June remain a question mark after a massive quake forced some Japanese copper producers to stop production
  • Toho Zinc Co stops operations at its 139,200 tonnes per year Annaka zinc smelter and Onahama plant, which is used to treat zinc for smelting.
  • Japanese steel mills divert metallurgical coal cargoes due to plant outages. Possible destinations for the coal include South Korea and China.
  • Production at JFE Steel Corp’s 10-million-tonne per year Higashi Nihon plant is still halted due to power outages. JFE Steel is the world’s No. 5 steelmaker. Fourth-ranked Nippon Steel has suspended operations at one small plant.
  • Sumitomo Metal Industries Ltd , Japan’s No. 3 steelmaker, says production at its main Kashima plant in Ibaraki prefecture remains suspended.
  • Sumitomo Metal’s main Kashima plant has a fire in a gas holder, which has been extinguished but the company says it does not know yet when the plant will resume operations. Sumitomo Metal has a total capacity of 14 million tonnes a year and the Kashima plant produces 8.3 million tonnes.
  • Nippon Steel’s small Kamaishi plant, which had produced 60,000 tonnes a month of downstream steel products, remains shut. The company has resumed operations at a small seamless steel plant in Tokyo after briefly shutting it on Monday due to rolling power outages.

PORTS

  • Shipping companies are confident of keeping goods moving through Japan’s ports, using spare capacity at the largest to deal with cargo displaced from those devastated in last week’s earthquake and tsunami.
  • Japanese ports handled 19 million units — measured in twenty foot boxes — of container shipments last year. As much as 7 percent of that had been shut off after the quake and tsunami hit northern Japan.
  • Two piers at the medium-sized Onahama seaport in Fukushima prefecture are now available for 30,000 tonne vessels.
  • Two smaller seaports further up the coast, Miyako in Iwate prefecture and Hachinohe in Aomori prefecture, will restore functions by the end of Thursday.
  • Japan’s Sendai Gas says it will likely take more than a month to restart its Shinminato liquefied natural gas facility. All the remaining LNG terminals in Japan are in operation.
  • Three Japan-bound naphtha shipping fixtures from the Middle East, totalling 205,000 tonnes, fail to be completed after last week’s quake forced the shutdown of several Japanese crackers.
  • The northeast coast ports of Hachinohe, Sendai, Ishinomaki and Onahama are so severely damaged that they are not expected to return to normal operations for months.
  • Hachinohe handles a wide variety of goods, including fuel products to the local fishing fleet and U.S. military installations in Japan and South Korea. Other ports handle goods ranging from coal and rubber to LNG and machinery.
  • The large container and oil port of Kashima is also closed, but officials expect four out 11 berths to resume operations in two weeks.
  • Other damaged ports include Hitachinaka, Hitachi, Soma, Shiogama, Kesennuma, Ofunato, Kamashi and Miyako. The ports handle products ranging from sugar and non-ferrous metals to cars and wood products.

LNG

  • Analysts say Japan may need to import about an extra 1 billion cubic feet of liquefied natural gas per day to make up for its lost nuclear power. Asian spot prices have risen by around 10 percent since the quake on expectations of higherdemand.
  • Royal Dutch Shell (RDSa.L) said on Friday two extra shipments of LNG from a Brunei plant have unloaded in Japan.
  • Indonesia may export surplus LNG to Japan. Energy officials could not say how much gas was available from a fieldoperated by Total (TOTF.PA), but one government minister said the decision would go up to the president, given Indonesia is trying to conserve LNG for its own growing domestic demand but also please Japan, a major infrastructure investor.
  • South Korea said on Friday Korea Gas Corp (036460.KS), the world’s top corporate buyer of LNG, would supply 400,000 to 500,000 tonnes to Japan.
  • Top exporter Qatar says it is ready to increase shipments to Japan, its long-term buyer.
  • Energy trading house Vitol has offered two cargoes of LNG to Japan’s Tokyo Electric Power Co (TEPCO) (9501.T).
Read more at www.infowars.com
 

Food, water now radioactive

Food, water now radioactive in Japan; sales halted while governments play the radiation doublespeak game

Amplify’d from info-wars.org

Food, water now radioactive in Japan; sales halted while governments play the radiation doublespeak game

by Mike Adams, the Health Ranger

NaturalNews.com

March 19, 2011

(NaturalNews) As the situation in Fukushima continues to deteriorate, radiation levels keep rising. Now the food and water near (and inside) Tokyo is becoming irradiated. Reuters reports that the water in Tokyo is now contaminated with radioactive iodine (http://www.reuters.com/article/2011…).

AP is also reporting that both spinach and milk from Fukushima is radioactive, and a few officials are slowly admitting that the level of radioactivity is “beyond safe levels” for human consumption.

The IAEA is also confirming now that Japan has halted the sale of food products from the Fukushima area (http://www.reuters.com/article/2011…), although official seem to be saying that the food will be safe to eat if you just “wait a little while” for the radiation levels to fall. Sounds scrumptious.

The radiation game

What we’re seeing now with the food reports, the radioactive water and even news from the Fukushima nuclear plant itself is a desperate attempt to downplay the dangers from radiation.

The Japanese government, for starters, has maintained a complete blackout on reporting accurate radiation levels from Fukushima. Those levels are obviously too high for the public to see, and that alone should be worrisome. (http://www.naturalnews.com/031758_F…)

As radiation recently started falling on California, U.S. authorities practically stampeded over each other to see who could say “No danger!” the quickest.

It’s a line straight out of the Mad Max films: “What’s a little fallout, eh?”

Now in Japan, they’ve been playing the radiation game with their descriptions of danger there, too. At first, when the early radiation became detectable, it was described as the same amount as “a chest X-ray.” Don’t worry! It’s just like going to the doctor’s office.

Now, in a charming quote published this morning, chief cabinet secretary Yukio Edano is upping the ante from chest X-rays to CT scans, saying:

“Even though you continue to consume these [foods] for a year, a total radiation level that will be taken inside the body will be comparable to one run of CT scan.”

What he’s not saying, of course, is that a CT scan can deliver from 100 – 600 times the radiation of a chest X-ray. And CT scans actually cause 29,000 cancers a year (http://www.naturalnews.com/028621_C…).

To now say that Japan’s radioactive food is “as safe as a CT scan” isn’t exactly comforting.

I can’t wait to see what they’re going to compare the radiation to next. “Don’t worry, eating this food is as safe as getting twenty mammograms!”

Or better yet, when the radiation levels get really high, they might say, “It’s as safe as a radiation treatment for cancer!” You know, the kind that makes your hair fall out and leaves burn marks across your skull.

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