Perilous
Times
Japan Earthquake: Radiation Leaking After Third Fukushima
Nuclear Plant Reactor Explodes
Japanese PM Expands Evacuation Zone, Tells Others to Remain
Indoors
By DAVID MUIR, JESSICA HOPPER and DEAN SCHABNER
March 14, 2011
Radiation has spread from damaged reactors at the Fukushima
Daiichi nuclear plant following an explosion at one unit and a
fire at another, the Japanese prime minister said early Tuesday.
A spokesman for the government said radiation levels at areas
around the plant are high enough to pose a health risk.
The explosion at unit 2 and the fire at unit 4 of the plant, where
units 1 and 3 also have exploded since the powerful earthquake and
tsunami hit Japan on Friday, have Japanese officials "freaked
out," a senior U.S. official said.
''A worrisome situation remains but I hope to take the lead in
overcoming this crisis,'' Prime Minsiter Naoto Kan said, according
to the Kyodo news agency. ''I will take all measures so that
damage will not expand.''
Kan said most people have left the 20-kilometer evacuation zone
around the plant, and he advised people within a 30-kilometer
(19-mile) radius to stay indoors to avoid possible radiation
poisoning.
While the previous explosions at Fukushima Daiichi reactors Nos. 1
and 3 were hydrogen blasts caused by a buildup of steam in the
reactor units, the new blast at reactor No. 2 has officials unsure
of the cause.
In addition, the fuel rods in the reactor were melting, a senior
U.S. official said, though the situation was not described as a
meltdown.
Half of the fuel rods were exposed, not immersed in water, and the
suppression pool, which holds the water used to keep the rods
cool, seemed to be damaged, according to Tokyo Electric Co., which
runs the plant, and government officials.
The U.S. official said water being pumped in is disappearing
faster than it would if it only were caused by evaporation, which
suggests there may be a leak in the reactor's containment vessel.
But, the official said, it also could be that there is so much
pressure inside the reactor that it is hard to pump in water.
A government official said that though the level of radiation rose
around the reactor, there was no danger.
"The radioactive level near unit 2 has gone up, but at this
juncture, the level is not judged to be immediately harmful to
human bodies," said Noriyuki Shikata, a spokesman in the prime
minister's office.
But Japanese news agency NHK reported that the radiation levels at
the front gate of the Daiichi plant were so high that a person
would receive more in one hour than they would receive naturally
in an entire year.
The explosion, which occurred at 6:10 a.m., came shortly after the
International Atomic Energy Agency announced that the reactors at
the Fukushima Daiichi plant were shut down.
"There is no longer [a] chain reaction of nuclear material," said
IAEA director general Yukiya Amano, according to The Associated
Press. "Reactor vessels and primary containment vessels ... stay
intact. The release of radioactivity is limited."
During a news conference, the agency's deputy chief, Denis Flory,
said that information from Japan "does not show a high increase of
radioactivity outside the containment, which means the containment
seems to play its role -- to contain."
Officials also reported, according to the AP, that radiation
levels around the plant were going down.
Japan Reaches Out to the NRC
The Japanese government formally has asked the U.S. Nuclear
Regulatory Commission for help in stabilizing its troubled nuclear
reactors in the wake of the country's massive earthquake and
tsunami.
The NRC sent two boiling water reactor experts to Japan as part of
a team of aid workers to help in the recovery efforts.
A number of nuclear reactors continue to deteriorate at the
Fukushima Daiichi plant, raising worries of a nuclear meltdown.
Officials had grown increasingly worried about Fukushima Daiichi
nuclear plant Unit 2 after two previous hydrogen explosions in
three days occurred at the plant, and the unit lost its ability to
cool.
"They continue to work hard to raise the water level to cover the
fuel. Let's pray again," Tatsujiro Suzuki, vice chairman of
Japan's Atomic Energy Commission, posted on Facebook today.
The fuel rods on unit 2 became fully exposed for the second time
Monday, a dangerous development in the effort to stop the reactor
from melting down. Japanese officials said a closed steam vent has
caused a dip in the water levels, allowing the rods to be exposed,
The Associated Press reported.
To learn more about nuclear radiation, click here.
The exposure of the fuel rods means that the temperature in the
reactor is likely to rise, allowing steam to form. The steam could
lead to the creation of hydrogen, which is what caused the
explosions at reactors 1 and 3.
Knowing how long the fuel rods have been exposed is key to
understanding if there is a real chance of a meltdown, said Dr.
Peter Hosemann, a nuclear energy expert and professor at the
University of California at Berkeley.
"Having too much of the fuel rods exposed for too long of a time
can lead to the core melt. Again, if a core melt happens, the
reactor pressure vessel and the containment are designed to
contain it," Hosemann said.
Japanese officials acknowledged that the fuel rods appear to be
melting inside all three of the reactors at the Fukashima plant.
"Although we cannot directly check it, it's highly likely
happening," Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano told the
Associated Press.
Experts said that the melting of the fuel rods should not be seen
as an indication of imminent danger.
"The melting of the fuel rods in and of itself is not an immediate
threat to the life and health of the public…there's at least three
layers [of protection]: 1. The fuel is inside cladding; 2. The
fuel and cladding are inside the pressure vessel; and 3. The fuel
and pressure vessel are inside a containment building and that
containment building is holding up well and the pressure vessel is
holding up well," University of California at Berkeley nuclear
engineering professor Edward Morse said.
Officials first became concerned about unit 2 at the plant after
pressure began rising in the reactor. Officials from the Tokyo
Electric Power Co. told NHK News that the explosion at unit 3
might have damaged unit 2's cooling system.
Workers began pumping sea water into the reactor following this
morning's explosion. The system pumping the sea water experienced
a fuel loss, causing a dip in the water levels around the rods,
NHK News reported. This led to the first exposure of the rods.
"They've had trouble with getting the pumps working, with site
power in general," Morse said. "They've shipped in extra diesel
generators and they may have to do some extra retrofit plumbing."
Workers had returned to pumping sea water when the fuel rods were
exposed for a second time.
While unit 1, the first reactor to explode at the plant, appears
to be stable, unit 3, which exploded early Monday morning in
Japan, reportedly has a leak in its bottom.
"We've never encountered this type of situation in history
before," said Joe Cirincione, a nuclear policy expert. "We are
beyond a reactor crisis at this point. This is a nuclear system
crisis. The entire northern part of the Japanese nuclear power
system has been delivered a body blow."
The leak at unit 3 is making it difficult to keep the core of the
reactor covered with sea water, Dr. Michio Kaku, a physicist,
said.
"The situation is getting worse by the hour. We haven't hit bottom
yet," Kaku said. "We now have reports that unit 3 suffered perhaps
a 90 percent uncovering of the core -- this is unprecedented since
Chernobyl."
Japanese officials insist that things are under control at the
nuclear plant and that radiation levels are safe.
"They haven't stabilized the sea water yet," Kaku said. "Remember,
they're hanging in there right there with the fingernails. This is
how close we are to a full-scale meltdown. So it's stable in the
sense that you're stable when you're hanging by your fingernails."
Japan Tests Fukushima Evacuees for Radiation Exposure
A trip to Japan's emergency command center revealed officials
re-watching the explosion at the Fukushima plant. A gray plume of
smoke could be seen rising from unit 3 on the command center's
television.
The explosion of unit 3 injured 11 workers on Monday and could be
felt as far as 25 miles away.
The Japanese government continues to test the nearly 180,000
people evacuated from around the Fukushima plant for exposure to
radiation.
In the town of Koriyama, lines of families waited to be tested
today.
Medical teams wearing white suits used Geiger counters and silver
hand-held scanners to check everyone, aiming the scanners at
little children holding their hands out.
One little girl clung to her Winnie the Pooh toy before being
checked by the medical team.
The mother of the girl told ABC News that her family is OK but
that surviving Japan's worst earthquake and massive tsunami has
been like living through hell.
At least 160 people tested positive for exposure to radiation.
Radiation detected by U.S. helicopters flying 60 miles from the
Japanese shore prompted the repositioning of the USS Ronald Reagan
and seven other U.S. Navy ships, military officials said.
There is growing concern about if radiation released in Japan
could reach the United States. So far, winds blowing around the
Fukushima plant are westerly or southwesterly winds, meaning any
radiation that's released is being blown out to the Pacific Ocean.
The chairman of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission said
officials see "a very low likelihood" and "a low probability" that
there's any possibility of harmful radiation levels in the United
States, Hawaii or any other U.S. territories.
"The lack of any harmful impacts to the U.S. is simply based on
the nature of these reactors and the large distances, obviously,
between those and any U.S. territories. So you just aren't going
to have any radiological material that, by the time it traveled
those large distances, could present any risk to the American
public," NRC chairman Greg Jaczko said.
If a nuclear meltdown were to occur releasing significant amounts
of radiation, it would take at least five to seven days to reach
the west coast of the United States, according to a blog written
by Jeff Masters, the director of meteorology for
WeatherUnderground.com.
By the time the radiation would reach Hawaii or the western coast
of the United States, much of the radiation capable of causing
harm to people would have left the atmosphere or turned into
precipitation and have been "rained out," Masters wrote in his
blog.
Following the 1986 Chernobyl disaster, a cloud of radiation
traveled over Europe. The radiation diffused as it traveled by
wind and did not cause harm. Those closest to the Chernobyl plant
were the ones who suffered the effects of the radiation.
ABC News' Martha Raddatz, Luis Martinez, Lauren Pearle, Sunlen
Miller and The Associated Press contributed to this report.