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Jumat, 18 Maret 2011

A walk across the Scottish Highlands

The stone obelisk and huge banner that marked the start of the trail would have been obvious on their own, but the dozens of backpackers surrounding them made them impossible to miss. I’d been told that the West Highland Way was the world’s most popular hiking trail. And suddenly, I believed it.

I’d set out to walk the 169 miles from the suburbs of Glasgow to the city of Inverness, across the West Highlands of Scotland. With two of the biggest lakes and some of the wildest country in Europe, it was a hike that seemed right for someone with two or three weeks to spend on the trail.
My route might have been long, but it was clearly marked and well documented. Starting in suburban Milngavie, I would walk the West Highland Way 96 miles to the town of Fort William. There, I’d pick up the Great Glen Way for the final 73 miles to Inverness. I planned to cover 10 to 12 miles a day.
The first mile was a paved path with streetlights; you could follow it night or day, fair weather or foul. Soon, though, the streetlights stopped, the pavement became gravel, and then the gravel became dirt. It was the same for trail markers; the first was that stone obelisk. But a few miles farther on, the markers became fewer, and as the afternoon rolled by, they pretty much faded to small, stylized arrows on wooden posts. It wasn’t a problem, though. All I really needed to do was to follow the bootprints. There were seemingly hundreds of them.
Though the West Highland Way is a footpath, it’s not always a wilderness trail. In fact, my first stop was the Glencoe Distillery. Entering the crowded tasting room with my backpack, I was given a free shot of whisky. And later in the day — after miles of walking through pastures filled with grazing livestock — I had a slice of chocolate cake at a trail-side tea shop.
On stretches like these, you don’t just barge across fields and through herds of animals; instead, you have to open and shut gates and follow the marked and well-trod way across whatever landscape it leads you through.
This British walking is as addictive as crack cocaine: the cool, soothing air; stops at rural pubs and tea shops; hostels filled with backpack-bearing hikers; B&B rooms with a candy bar left as a gift for you; and footpaths that bring you in close touch with mountains, lakes, fields and villages. Walking in Great Britain always has an upside; a rainy day on a Scottish trail is better than a sunny day at your desk. You don’t have to camp (although many people do), so you don’t have to lug around any camping gear. And if you’re still lugging too much, popular trails like these have bag-carrying services that will move your pack from place to place for you.
For the first night, I’d reserved a room at a bed-and-breakfast inn near the town of Drymen. It was classically British: clean, with a hot shower and, on top of the dresser, my own private kettle with tea bags, instant hot chocolate and milk. Breakfast the next morning was the “full Scottish,” with eggs, black pudding, potato scone, cooked tomato and toast. It was so huge that it nearly put me right back to sleep.
After another day of agriculture, pastures full of sheep, managed tree farms and fields of heather, the trail reached Loch Lomond, hugging the lake’s shore for more than 20 miles. Scrambling over rocks and roots, spending one night in a hostel bunk and another in a luxury hotel (with a plastic tray in my room for muddy boots), I made my way past Britain’s largest lake and was soon climbing into the mountains and wishing that the trail would make up its mind about how challenging it was going to be.
Sometimes, it would be level and well graded for a mile or two, then shoot almost straight up. Or maybe it would run through fields of grazing animals, then suddenly enter a forest. A mile of gravel could easily become mud, and there were those moments when you’d think that somebody had artfully surfaced the footway with manure.
I was never alone on the trail. Hikers from every corner of the world were on it with me, and by the end of the first week, I’d come to know quite a few of them. Margret, an Australian doctor, was impeccably fit and had hiked all over the world, while two Dutch sailors with cheap gear and no preparation managed to keep up, offering explanations such as, “We don’t need water bottles, we take all our hydration in the form of beer in the evenings.” This, of course, horrified the doctor.
Sometimes, I’d see somebody once and never again. And then there were the people who wound up in the same pubs, shops and even hostel bunkrooms as I did, day after day. We were an ad hoc caravan making our way across the countryside.
There was always a fairly wide assortment of accommodations available. Backpackers’ hostels are cheap, cramped and cheerful. Official Scottish Youth Hostel Association hostels are a bit more spacious (but still reasonably priced), bed-and-breakfast inns are the most common, and luxury hotels are an occasional treat.
Few small-town overnights were as interesting as the one I spent at Bridge of Orchy. The village is well-named; it has a pub, a train station, an informal campground — and the bridge. Those seeking a bed have the choice of a hostel in the train station, lodging at the pub or a historic hotel. I chose the train station; meals were served in the ticket office, and the coed bunkroom was done up like an old European sleeping car, with a built-in reading light and curtains for each bed. As is typical at hiker hostels around the world, we thought we were staying up late talking gear and comparing blisters, but actually everybody was asleep before 10.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/travel/a-walk-across-the-scottish-highlands/2011/03/12/ABCINzT_story.html

Kamis, 17 Maret 2011

17 state enterprises suffered losses in 2010

Seventeen state-owned enterprises suffered losses in 2010, a legislator says.

The deputy chairman of House of Representatives' Commission XI overseeing finance and national development planning, Achsanul Qosasi, said the figure showed an improvement from previous years, but added that less would suffer losses by the end of 2011.

Achsanul was addressing a discussion on the politicization of state enterprises, on Thursday in Jakarta.

In 2006, he said, 36 state enterprises suffered from financial losses, and 24 suffered losses in 2009.

“Four or five [out of the 17] state enterprises, however, are beyond salvation. It would be better to shut them down, unless somehow the managements can be reformed.”

He added that among the loss-ridden enterprises were those whose businesses were in the manufacturing and service sectors.

Achsanul further added that overlapping businesses with other state enterprises and company executives’ salaries being too high despite their companies’ poor financial performance were among other causes of continuing losses.

Malaysia gov't accused of desecrating 5,000 Bibles

Malaysia's main Christian grouping accused the government Thursday of desecrating 5,000 imported Bibles seized by custom authorities in this Muslim-majority country.

The accusation aggravates a dispute over the distribution of Malay-language Bibles containing the word "Allah" as a translation for God. The government has banned the use of "Allah" in non-Muslim texts, saying it could confuse Muslims or even be used to convert them.

The dispute has caused authorities to hold 5,000 Indonesian-made Bibles at a Malaysian port since March 2009. The Prime Minister's Department agreed earlier this week to release those Bibles as well as 30,000 others at another port on Borneo island.

However, Christian leaders said the 5,000 Bibles have been stamped with serial numbers, government seals and warnings that the books are meant for Christians only.

"The Christian community in Malaysia is deeply hurt that the government has desecrated and defaced the Bible," the Christian Federation of Malaysia, which represents most of the country's churches, said in a statement.

Home Minister Hishammuddin Hussein acknowledged that the Bibles were stamped, but insisted this was standard practice and not meant to deface the books.

Hishammuddin voiced frustration that Christian leaders were unwilling to accept the matter. But the Christian federation said it has been patient in trying to resolve religious disputes, claiming that its "good faith has not been reciprocated by the government."

The Prime Minister's Department said Tuesday that it was releasing the Bibles to help ease religious friction. But it also assured Muslims that the announcement would not undermine their interests in an ongoing court case on whether non-Muslims have the constitutional right to use "Allah."

The government is appealing a December 2009 court ruling that religious minorities - mostly Christians, Buddhists and Hindus - have the right to use "Allah." The verdict caused a brief surge in tensions last year, when 11 churches were attacked by firebombs amid anger among some Muslims.

 www.thejakartapost.com

Japan steps up cooling operation

The aircraft dumped four loads before leaving the site in order to minimise the crews' exposure to radiation. On Wednesday, the helicopters were forced to abort a similar operation amid concerns over high radiation levels.
The BBC's Chris Hogg in Tokyo says the helicopters can carry an enormous amount of water but given the high winds it is difficult to know whether it has been dropped accurately.
Japanese government spokesman Yukio Edano said at a news briefing that nuclear experts were now investigating how effective the operation was.
Meanwhile, water trucks are on standby to spray more water on the reactors.
The operation was intended to help cool the reactors and also to replenish water in a storage pond with spent fuel rods.
Officials also said they were hoping that later on Thursday they would restore the power supply to the plant, which is needed for the cooling system and backup generators.
"If the restoration work is completed, we will be able to activate various electric pumps and pour water into reactors and pools for spent nuclear fuel," a spokesman for Tokyo Electric Power Company, which runs the plant, told the AFP news agency.
US President Barack Obama spoke to Prime Minister Naoto Kan on Thursday local time amid increasing US fears over the crisis.
The US has now chartered aircraft to help Americans leave Japan and authorised the voluntary departure of relatives of diplomatic staff.
The White House said Mr Obama conveyed "deep condolences" at the loss of life and said Washington was "determined to do everything possible to support Japan".
On Wednesday, Greg Jaczko, chairman of the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC), told a congressional energy and commerce subcommittee hearing in Washington that there appeared to be serious problems with attempts to cool the reactors.
"We believe that around the reactor site there are high levels of radiation."
He said it would be "very difficult for emergency workers to get near the reactors. The doses they could experience would potentially be lethal doses in a very short period of time".

Fukushima Daiichi: What went wrong

  • Reactor 1: Was first to be rocked an explosion on Saturday; fuel rods reportedly 70% damaged
  • Reactor 2: There are fears a blast on Tuesday breached a containment system; fuel rods reportedly 33% damaged
  • Reactor 3: Explosion on Monday; smoke or steam seen rising on Wednesday; damage to roof and possibly also to a containment system
  • Reactor 4: Hit by a major blaze (possible blast) on Tuesday and another fire on Wednesday
US Energy Secretary Steven Chu said the situation appeared to be more serious than the partial meltdown at the Three Mile Island nuclear plant in Pennsylvania in 1979.
The head of the UN's atomic energy agency, Yukio Amano, is travelling to Japan in person to gather more information.
The US state department has urged Americans living within 80km of Fukushima Daiichi to leave the area - a much wider exclusion zone than the 20km advised by the Japanese government.
Mr Edano described the US approach as "conservative".
Britain has advised its nationals currently in Tokyo and to the north of the capital to consider leaving the area.
France has urged its citizens in Tokyo to leave the country or move south. Two Air France planes are due to begin evacuating French nationals later on Thursday.
In areas of the north-east badly hit by the tsunami, bitter winter weather has added to the misery of survivors, though more supplies are now reported to be reaching them.
The governor of Fukushima prefecture, where the badly damaged nuclear plant is located, has complained that evacuation centres lack basic necessities, including sufficient hot food.
About 450,000 people have been staying in temporary shelters, many sleeping on the floor of school gymnasiums.
The crisis has also continued to affect the markets - the benchmark Nikkei index fell 3.6% in early Thursday trading in Tokyo, shortly after the yen briefly hit the highest level against the US dollar since World War II.
On Wednesday, in a rare public appearance, Japan's Emperor Akihito said he was "deeply worried" about the crisis his country was facing.
TV stations interrupted programming to show the emperor describing the crisis facing the nation as "unprecedented in scale".

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-pacific-12768645

Japan begins water drop on stricken reactor

Attempts to cool down a stricken reactor at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant suffered an early setback on Thursday after seawater dumped from the air failed to bring down radiation levels.
Radiation readings taken 20 minutes after self-defence force helicopters doused the plant's No 3 reactor remained unchanged, Tokyo Electric Power [Tepco] said, according to Kyodo news agcncy.
The use of Japanese military helicopters to drop seawater onto the plant's reactor marked the opening of a new front in the battle to avert nuclear meltdown.
TV footage showed the CH-47 Chinook helicopters dousing the No 3 reactor in an attempt to cool an overheating pool for spent fuel rods and prevent it from releasing dangerous radioactive steam.
Two helicopters, flying at less than 300 feet, dumped four loads of water on the reactor, although the footage suggested a significant quantity was missing the target.
The ministry said it planned to release at least 12 more loads in the 40 minutes that each crew can remain in the area before experiencing limited radiation exposure.
The aim of the operation is twofold: to cool the reactor and replenish a pool containing spent fuel rods. Although Tepco has been unable to take precise measurements, the pool is thought to be almost empty of water, raising the risk that the fuel rods will overheat and melt.
Earlier, Gregory Jackzo, chairman of the US nuclear regulatory commission told a congressional hearing in Washington that the storage pool at another reactor had lost all of its water and was in danger of spewing more radioactive material.
"We are afraid that the water level at [the No 4 reactor] is the lowest," said Hikaru Kuroda, a Tepco official. But he added, "Because we cannot get near it, the only way to monitor the situation is visually from far away."
At lunchtime on Thursday the police stood ready to spray the No 3 reactor from 11 water cannon trucks, as the focus of the crisis shifted from overheating reactors to the potentially more dangerous predicament of the storage pools.
The roofs of the No 3 and No 4 reactors were blown away by hydrogen explosions earlier this week, depriving them of a last line of defence against potentially dangerous radiation leaks.
In the worst-case scenario, overheating fuel rods could heat up to the point where they begin to melt and release high levels of radioactivity.
Tepco said it was attempting to open a temporary power line to the plant, 150 miles north of Tokyo, which would allow it to pump water directly into the storage pools and reactor cores.
Japan's nuclear safety agency said it hoped the power supply would be partially operational on Thursday afternoon.
"Once we establish the temporary power supply we will be able to pump seawater into the reactors," a Tepco spokesman said.
"We believe the operation will help cool down the fuel pools," the defence minister, Toshimi Kitazawa told reporters. "Ideally we want to repeat the exercise as many times as possible, but we also have to consider the health risks to our troops."
Each helicopter is capable of carrying 7.5 tonnes of water at a time, but the pools each hold 2,000 tonnes, an expert told public broadcaster NHK.
But he added: "It will be possible as long as the rods are fully submerged. That means the storage pool would need to be about a third full. But the dousing has to be done repeatedly."
About 70,000 people have been evacuated from a 20-kilomtre radius around Fukushima Daiichi, and another 140,000 living within a 20 to 30 kilometre radius ordered to stay indoors.
Japan's top spokesman, Yukio Edano, said there was no need to widen the exclusion zone, but signs are emerging that other countries are taking a more cautious approach.
The worsening situation prompted the US to ask citizens living within an 80-kilomtre radius to evacuate.
''We are recommending, as a precaution, that American citizens who live within 50 miles (80 kilometres) of the Fukushima nuclear power plant evacuate the area or to take shelter indoors if safe evacuation is not practical,'' the US embassy said in a statement.
The British embassy has since issued similar advice, and asked citizens living in Tokyo and northern Japan to consider leaving.
Elevated - though not hazardous - levels of radiation have been detected well outside the Fukushima evacuation zone. In Ibaraki prefecture to the south, officials said radiation levels were about 300 times normal levels by late Wednesday morning.
It would take three years of constant exposure to these higher levels to raise a person's risk of cancer.


http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/mar/17/japan-nuclear-crisis-fukushima-seawater-reactors

Rabu, 16 Maret 2011

CIA contractor leaves Pakistani prison after $2.3 million ‘blood money’ deal, officials say

LAHORE, Pakistan — A CIA contractor who shot and killed two Pakistani men was freed from prison on Wednesday after the United States paid $2.34 million in “blood money” to the victims’ families, Pakistani officials said, defusing a dispute that had strained ties between Washington and Islamabad.
In what appeared to be carefully choreographed end to the diplomatic crisis, the U.S. Embassy said the Justice Department had opened an investigation into the killings on Jan. 27 by Raymond Allen Davis. It thanked the families for “their generosity” in pardoning Davis, but did not mention any money changing hands.
Davis left the country immediately on a U.S. flight, Pakistani and American officials said.
The killings and detention of Davis triggered a fresh wave of anti-American sentiment in Pakistan and were testing an alliance seen as key to defeating al-Qaida and ending the war in Afghanistan.
Antagonism was especially sharp between the CIA and Pakistan’s powerful Inter Services Intelligence, which says it did not know Davis was operating in the country. One ISI official said the agency had backed the “blood money” deal as way of soothing tensions.
Small groups of protesters took to the street in major cities after nightfall, briefly clashing with police outside the U.S. consulate in Lahore, where officers fired tear gas at men burning tires and hurling rocks. Some called for larger protests Friday after noon prayers.
Davis, a 36-year-old Virginia native, claimed he acted in self-defense when he killed the two men on the street in the eastern city of Lahore. The United States initially described him as either a U.S. consular or embassy official, but officials later acknowledged he was working for the CIA, confirming suspicions that had aired in the Pakistani media.
The United States had insisted Davis was covered by diplomatic immunity, but the weak government here, facing intense pressure from Islamist parties, sections of the media and the general public, did not say whether this was the case.
The payment of “blood money,” sanctioned under Pakistani law, had been suggested as the best way to end the dispute.
Given the high stakes for both nations, few imagined either side would allow it to derail the relationship. The main question was how long it would take to reach a deal.
Punjab Law Minister Rana Sanaullah said Davis was charged with murder Wednesday in a court that was convened in a prison in Lahore, but was immediately pardoned by the families of the victims after the payment.
Reporters were not allowed to witness the proceedings.
“This all happened in court and everything was according to law,” he said. “The court has acquitted Raymond Davis. Now he can go anywhere.”
U.S. officials said Davis left the country soon after his release from jail.
Raja Muhammad Irshad, a laywer for the families, said 19 male and female relatives appeared in court to accept the $2.34 million. One Pakistani official said the sum was just under twice that, while other media outlets reported the amount was between $700,000 and $1.4 milion.
He said each told the court “they were ready to accept the blood money deal without pressure and would have no objection if the court acquitted Raymond Davis.”
Representatives of the families had previously said they would refuse any money.
Asad Mansoor Butt, who had earlier represented the families, accused Pakistan’s government of pressuring his former clients; he gave no details.
Some media reports said the some of the families had been given permission to live in the United States.
Irshad said that was not discussed in court.
The case dominated headlines and television shows in Pakistan, with pundits using it to whip up hatred against the already unpopular United States. While the case played out in court, many analysts said that the dispute was essentially one between the CIA and the ISA, and that they would need to resolve their differences before Davis could be freed.
One ISI official said CIA director Leon Panetta and ISI chief Gen. Shuja Pasha talked in mid-February to smooth out the friction between the two spy agencies. A U.S. official confirmed that the phone call took place.
Pasha demanded the U.S. identify “all the Ray Davises working in Pakistan, behind our backs,” the official said.
He said Panetta agreed “in principle” to declare such employees, the official said, but would not confirm if the agency had done so.
A second ISI official said as a result of that conversation the ISI — which along with the army is a major power center in the country — then backed an effort to help negotiate the “blood money.” The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they are not allowed to give their names to the media.
CIA Spokesman George Little said the two agencies had had “a strong relationship for years.”
“When issues arise, it is our standing practice to work through them. That<s the sign of a healthy partnership, one that is vital to both countries, especially as we face a common set of terrorist enemies,” he said.
Davis’ wife, Rebecca, outside her home in Highlands Ranch, Colorado, said she had heard of the release of her husband but did not have time to speak.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/jail-official-american-cia-contractor-freed-from-pakistani-prison-after-murder-case-dropped/2011/03/16/ABQN3Vd_story.html?wpisrc=nl_natlalert

Sarah Palin losing more ground among Republicans, Post-ABC poll finds

Sarah Palin’s ratings within the Republican Party are slumping, according to a new Washington Post-ABC News poll, a potentially troubling sign for the former Alaska governor as she weighs whether to enter the 2012 presidential race.
For the first time in Post-ABC News polling, fewer than six in 10 Republicans and GOP-leaning independents see Palin in a favorable light, down from a stratospheric 88 percent in the days after the 2008 Republican National Convention and 70 percent as recently as October.
In one sense, the poll still finds Palin near the top of a list of eight potential contenders for the GOP nomination. The former vice presidential candidate scores a 58 percent favorable rating, close to the 61 percent for former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee and 60 percent for former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney, and better than the 55 percent that onetime House speaker Newt Gingrich (Ga.) received.
But Palin’s unfavorable numbers are significantly higher than they are for any of these possible competitors. Fully 37 percent of all Republicans and GOP-leaning independents now hold a negative view of her, a new high.
In another first, fewer than 50 percent of Republican-leaning independents — 47 percent — hold favorable views of Palin.
She has given almost no indication of how seriously she is considering a 2012 bid.
Some have suggested that Palin and Huckabee, both of whom work for Fox News Channel, might need to decide before a May 5 presidential debate in South Carolina, which is being sponsored by the network.
It has long been clear that Palin is a polarizing figure amid the overall electorate — she typically receives negative reviews from Democrats — but this poll indicates that she may have a similar effect among some of the voters she would need to win the nomination.
Overall, 17 percent in this sample have “strongly unfavorable” opinions of her (among GOP-leaning independents, the number rises to 28 percent). At the same time, the percentage of Republicans and leaners with “strongly favorable” views is at a new low, 26 percent.
In contrast to Palin’s dip, Romney has solidified his standing in this group.
At the beginning of voting in the 2008 primaries, 36 percent of Republicans and GOP-leaning independents held unfavorable views of him; now that number has dipped to 21 percent. Three years ago, as many held strongly unfavorable as strongly favorable views of Romney. In the new poll, he has a 3-to-1 advantage on intensity.
Others frequently mentioned as possible candidates remain largely unknown to broad swaths of the Republican electorate.
Large numbers of those polled offered no opinion about Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour (57 percent no opinion), former Minnesota governor Tim Pawlenty (58 percent), Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels (66 percent) and former Utah governor Jon Huntsman Jr. (68 percent), who is wrapping up his service as the Obama administration’s ambassador to China.
This telephone poll was conducted March 10 to 13, and included interviews with 414 self-identified Republicans and GOP-leaners. The margin of sampling error is five percentage points.


http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/post-abc-poll-shows-sarah-palin-losing-more-ground-among-republicans/2011/03/15/ABRtiNb_story.html?wpisrc=nl_politics

Japan struggles to cool radioactive materials, after helicopter mission ruled unsafe

Japanese officials scrambled Wednesday for ways to cool overheated elements at a damaged nuclear plant that can emit potentially lethal radioactive steam, after aborting a risky mission to use a helicopter to douse part of the plant with water.
As radiation levels in the air above the Fukushima Daiichi plant spiked dangerously for the second consecutive day, a skeleton crew of workers charged with cooling efforts was temporarily relocated.
Within an hour, though, the radiation levels dropped again, and the small group was permitted to return.
In order for them to resume trying to cool the damaged sectors, Japan’s health and welfare minister had to waive the nation’s standard of radiation exposure, increasing the level of acceptable exposure from 100 millisieverts to 250 — five times the level allowed in the United States.
In Washington, the Pentagon announced Wednesday that U.S. forces participating in relief operations in Japan will not be allowed within 50 miles of the Fukushima Daiichi plant. Officials also said some flight crews are being issued potassium iodide tablets, which can reduce the risk of thyroid cancer from radiation exposure. The measure was described as precautionary. Several U.S. helicopter crews have been exposed to low levels of radiation, but no service members have shown signs of illness.
The head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, Yukiya Amano, said in Vienna he plans to leave for Japan as soon as Thursday to get “firsthand information” on the situation at the stricken nuclear power plant. Amano, a former Japanese diplomat, said he wants to improve the flow of information to the IAEA about the crisis.
At the Fukushima plant, workers were focusing on the unit 3 reactor building, where a white plume of smoke was spotted Wednesday morning, and on unit 4, where fires flared up Tuesday and again on Wednesday morning.
The blazes triggered fears that spent uranium fuel sitting in a pool above the reactor was burning. Such a conflagration would generate intense concentrations of cesium-137 and other dangerous radioactive isotopes. But a spokesperson for the Nuclear Energy Institute, an industry lobbying group, said Tokyo Electric Power Co. concluded that the first fire in unit 4 was not in the spent fuel pool, “but rather in a corner of the reactor building’s fourth floor.”
Initially, government spokesman Yukio Edano said the steam coming from the unit 3 reactor building could mean that its containment vessel had ruptured in an earlier explosion — a potentially dire development. A reactor containment vessel in the plant’s unit 2 is believed to have ruptured on Tuesday.
But Edano said Wednesday afternoon that the unit 3 containment vessel was unlikely to have suffered severe damage. The Japanese news agency Kyodo quoted the country’s nuclear disaster task force as saying: “The possibility of the No. 3 reactor having suffered severe damage to its containment vessel is low.”
Still, Edano said officials presumed that the steam coming from unit 3 was indeed radioactive. He said emergency crews were still trying to determine its source .
 The rising steam was just the latest problem for the embattled plant, which suffered heavy damage to its cooling systems after Friday’s devastating earthquake and tsunami. Since then, the Japanese government and Tokyo Electric, which owns the facility, have struggled mightily to keep the plant’s six reactors cool. Each day has brought new problems.
Tuesday’s blast at unit 2 was not outwardly visible, but was potentially more dangerous than some of the earlier explosions, because it may have created an escape route for radioactive material bottled up inside the thick steel-and-concrete reactor vessel.
Radiation-laced steam is probably building between the reactor vessel and the building that houses it, experts said, creating pressure that could blow apart the structure, emitting radiation from the core.
“They’re putting water into the core and generating steam, and that steam has to go somewhere. It has to be carrying radiation,” said nuclear engineer Arnie Gundersen, who has 40 years of experience overseeing the Vermont Yankee nuclear facility, whose re­actors are of the same vintage and design as those at the Fukushima Daiichi plant.
Such a breach would be the first at a nuclear power plant since the Chernobyl catastrophe 25 years ago in what was then the Soviet Union.
Nuclear experts have repeatedly stressed that radiation releases on the scale of Chernobyl are unlikely or even impossible, given the Japanese plant’s heavier engineering and additional layers of containment. Still, Tokyo Electric said radiation briefly rose to dangerous levels at the plant Tuesday morning and again on Wednesday.
Crews noted a drop in pressure after the blast inside the unit 2 reactor and within a doughnut-shaped structure below, called a suppression pool. The simultaneous loss of pressure in those two places indicates serious damage, nuclear experts said.
The explosion probably happened after the streams of seawater that crews have been pumping into the reactor faltered. The fuel rods were left completely exposed to the air for some time, Tokyo Electric said in a statement. Without water, the rods grew white-hot and possibly melted through the steel-and-concrete tube.
The power company said a skeleton crew of 50 to 70 employees — far fewer than the 1,400 or more at the plant during normal operations — had been working in shifts to keep seawater flowing to the three reactors now in trouble. Their withdrawal on Wednesday temporarily left the plant with nobody to continue cooling operations.

Sumber:http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/latest-nuclear-plant-explosion-in-japan-raises-radiation-fears/2011/03/15/ABwTmha_story.html?wpisrc=nl_natlalert

Selasa, 15 Maret 2011

Japan works to contain nuclear fires, radiation leaks

Japan worked desperately to contain explosions and fires at a damaged nuclear power facility on Tuesday, evacuating all but a few dozen workers, forbidding planes from flying overhead and searching for ways to keep spent fuel rods submerged in water so they would not emit potentially dangerous radiation.
Radiation levels shot up early Tuesday after the third explosion in four days rocked the seaside Fukushima Daiichi complex and fire briefly raged in a storage facility.
Three hours after the explosion, the radiation level at the plant measured 11,930 micro sieverts per hour — several times the amount a person can safely be exposed to in one year.
Radiation levels shrank dramatically within the next six hours, to 496 micro sieverts per hour, which government spokesman Yukio Edano called “much higher than the normal level . . . but one that causes no harm to human health.”
The levels detected earlier, however, “would certainly have negative effects on the human body,” Edano told the Japanese news service Kyodo.
Toyko Electric Power Co., which owns the facility, said it was considering using a helicopter to douse a storage pond with cold water, an effort to bring down the temperature of the pool, which reportedly has been heated to the boiling point by the spent, radioactive rods.
Hundreds of workers were sent away from the power facility, though about 50 stayed on to fight fires and try to stabilize the plant. Prime Minister Naoto Kan hailed those workers who remained at the plant, who, he said, “are putting themselves in a very dangerous situation.”
Officials from Tokyo Electric said radioactive substances were emitted after an explosion in the unit 2 reactor at 6:14 a.m. (5:14 p.m. Monday in Washington). The blast took place near or in the suppression pool, which traps and cools radioactive elements from the containment vessel, officials said. The explosion appeared to have damaged valves and pipes, possibly creating a path for radioactive materials to escape.
While the fire at the fourth reactor had been extinguished, Japanese officials told the International Atomic Energy Agency that because of the blaze “radioactivity is being released directly into the atmosphere,” the agency said.
Kan, looking grave, told the nation that radiation already had spread from the reactors and there was “still a very high risk of further radioactive material escaping.” He urged people within 12.5 miles to evacuate the area, and said those within 19 miles of the plant should remain indoors.
Higher-than-normal radiation levels were detected in Tokyo, roughly 150 miles from Fukushima. Kanagawa, a prefecture south of Tokyo, recorded radiation at nine times the usual level. In Ibaraki, roughly 70 miles from Tokyo, levels were briefly 100 times the normal measure, according to the Kyodo news agency.
In each case, officials said that exposure to those levels of radiation would not pose an immediate danger to human health.
But many residents said they were deeply worried, and scores of foreign residents of Japan made plans to leave the country as soon as possible.
A no-fly zone was declared covering a 19-mile radius around the Fukushima Daiichi facility. For most of the day, winds blew in a southeasterly direction, pushing the plume of radioactivity toward the Pacific Ocean.
Late Tuesday afternoon, Japanese authorities said the situation at Fukushima Daiichi had marginally improved — though it remains dangerous. In addition to putting out the fire at unit 4, workers were closer to stabilizing units 1 and 3, keeping the fuel rods under the necessary cooling water. Edano said that it was too early to tell if workers’ emergency cooling efforts are working for unit 2.
“There is no manual to this kind of incident. I believe on the ground things are chaotic,” Takayuki Terai, professor of nuclear engineering at the University of Tokyo. “But in essence, they just have to put water into the reactors continuously and cool them down and contain them.”
Amid the four-day-long emergency at the Fukushima Daiichi plant, Japan’s public has grown skeptical about the reliability of official information, criticizing Tokyo Electric officials in particular for their vague answers during news conferences.
Kan himself was not briefed on the Tuesday morning explosion until after it had been reported on television. According to a Kyodo reporter who overheard the conversation, Kan later grilled the company representatives, asking, “What the hell is going on?”
During a midmorning news conference, four Tokyo Electric officials revealed almost no information about the blast.
Japan’s usually deferential news media turned vicious, asking, “What does this mean?”
“We want answers, not apologies,” one reporter said.
Tuesday began with the fire that broke out in a pool storing spent fuel rods at the base of unit 4, which had been shut down for inspection before last Friday’s earthquake. Experts said the fire most likely broke out because the pool water had run low or dry, allowing the rods to overheat. Radioactive substances spewed outside from the fire, officials said, because the structure housing the pool was damaged by Monday’s explosion at unit 3.
Half an hour later, the explosion at unit 2 took place. Experts said that, unlike the two previous explosions that destroyed outer buildings, this explosion might have damaged portions of the containment vessel designed to bottle up radioactive materials in the event of an emergency.
The explosion was followed by a brief drop in pressure in the vessel and a spike in radioactivity outside the reactor to levels more than eight times the recommended limit for what people should receive in a year, the company said. Japanese government officials later said it was unclear whether the spent fuel fire or the explosion had caused the spike in radiation.
The new setbacks came on the heels of a difficult Monday at Fukushima Daiichi unit 2, one of six reactors at the site. Utility officials there reported that four out of five water pumps being used to flood the reactor had failed and that the other pump had briefly stopped working. As a result, the company said, the fuel rods, normally covered by water, were completely exposed for 140 minutes.
That could have grave consequences, worsening the partial meltdown that most experts think is underway. By comparison, in the 1979 Three Mile Island nuclear plant accident in Pennsylvania, it took two hours for half the plant’s nuclear fuel to melt.
According to a report by the Kyodo news agency, the fifth pump was later restarted, and seawater mixed with boron was again injected in a desperate bid to cool the reactor, but the fuel rods remained partially exposed and ultra-hot. On Tuesday morning, Tokyo Electric said that 2.7 meters (3 yards), or less than half, of the rods were still exposed.
The other four pumps were thought to have been damaged by a blast Monday that destroyed a building at the nearby unit 3 reactor, Kyodo reported. That blast, like one on Saturday at unit 1, was caused by a buildup in hydrogen generated by a reaction that took place when the zirconium alloy wrapped around the fuel rods was exposed to steam at 2,200 degrees Fahrenheit.
The International Atomic Energy Agency reported that injections of seawater into units 1 and 3 had been interrupted because of a low level in a seawater supply reservoir, but the seawater injections were later restored.
A commercial satellite photo of the complex showed piles of debris on top of units 1 and 3, which raised new fears about the condition of the pools where spent fuel is stored, especially at unit 1, where a design by General Electric placed the pool on top of the reactor but below the outer structure that was destroyed. In the satellite photo, there was no sign of a large crane that had been sitting on the roof before the blast. The ability of workers to assess the damage was hindered by fears that another explosion might occur.
In March 2010, 1,760 tons of spent fuel was stored in the six pools — 84 percent of capacity, according to Tokyo Electric.
After Monday’s explosion at unit 3, Japanese government officials were quick to assert that it did not damage the core containment structure, and they said there would be little increase in radiation levels around the plant. But the explosion prompted Japan’s nuclear agency to warn those within 12 miles to stay indoors. The blast also injured 11 people, one seriously.
The string of earthquake- and tsunami-triggered troubles at the Fukushima Daiichi plant began Friday, when a loss of grid power (caused by the earthquake) followed by a loss of backup diesel generators (caused by the tsunami) led to the failure of cooling systems needed to keep reactor cores from overheating.
The IAEA reported that Japan has evacuated 185,000 people from towns near the nuclear complex. The agency said Japan has distributed 230,000 units of stable iodine to evacuation centers from the area around the Fukushima Daiichi and Fukushima Daini nuclear power plants. The iodine has not been administered to residents; the distribution is a precautionary measure. The ingestion of stable iodine can help to prevent the accumulation of radioactive iodine in the thyroid.
The U.S. 7th Fleet said Monday that some of its personnel, who are stationed 100 miles offshore from the Fukushima Daiichi plant, had come into contact with radioactive contamination. The airborne radioactivity prompted the fleet to reposition its ships and aircraft.
Using sensitive instruments, precautionary measurements were conducted on three helicopter aircrews returning to the USS Ronald Reagan after conducting disaster relief missions near Sendai. Those measurements identified low levels of radioactivity on 17 crew members.
The low-level radioactivity was easily removed from affected personnel by washing with soap and water, and later tests detected no further contamination.
The political fallout spread all the way to the United States and Europe. German Chancellor Angel Merkel said Monday that she was suspending a deal that would have extended permits for 17 aging nuclear plants.
Many nuclear experts also called for a tougher scrutiny of U.S. plants, noting that the Japanese nuclear crisis exposed the limits of human ingenuity and imagination and pointed to the possible failure of the best-laid backup plans.
David Lochbaum, a nuclear engineer and director of the Nuclear Safety Program of the Union of Concerned Scientists, said in a conference call that in certain respects, the U.S. nuclear plants are not as prepared as the Japanese ones for a catastrophic power outage. After the earthquake and tsunami knocked out the electrical grid and backup generators, the Japanese engineers switched to batteries that could last for eight hours, he said.
“In this country, most of our reactors are only designed with battery capacity for four hours,” Lochbaum said. “Many of our reactors are in situation where earthquakes, or hurricanes in the gulf, or ice storms in the northeast, or a tree in Cleveland, can cause an extensive blackout,” he said.
The August 2003 blackout in North America that affected 52 million people across the upper Midwest, New York and parts of Canada was triggered when overheated wires sagged into trees in northeastern Ohio. Nine nuclear units switched to diesel backup generators, which are the size of locomotives without wheels.
Despite the cascade of equipment failures at the Fukushima Daiichi complex, some nuclear experts noted on Monday that the fuel rods there, whose temperature could have risen to as high as 4,000 degrees Fahrenheit, would lose some of their heat over the next few days and would probably remain encased, even in the worst-case scenario, in a secondary containment structure with several feet of steel and concrete walls.
But the new explosion raises new questions. With it impossible to see into the reactor vessels, officials were in large part speculating about what is happening inside by using a variety of gauges and indicators.
“Let’s hope they can get these reactors under control,” said Richard Lester, head of the department of nuclear science and engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. “They’re not there yet.”

Death toll rises, stocks plunge, foreigners flee as nuclear crisis escalates

TOKYO — Torn up and terrified by a disaster that keeps on getting worse, Japan has transformed in just four days from one of the world’s most comfortable countries into one of its most distressed.
Thousands of people along the northeastern coast of Asia’s richest country are dead, and tens of thousands have gone days with little food, little water and almost no heat. Their towns have been demolished into soggy fields.
And Tuesday, amid an escalating nuclear emergency, a dangerous plume of radioactive material leaked from a coastal power plant, causing panic among stock traders, triggering evacuation orders from foreign companies and generating a deep sense of unease among millions of residents concerned about radiation exposure.
One catastrophe alone would have been overwhelming. But Japan, since Friday, has been hit by a 9.0-magnitude earthquake and countless aftershocks, a shoreline-crushing tsunami and an evolving crisis at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant.
Tuesday, the related disasters caused even more complications. Radiation leakage prompted mass evacuations and a no-fly zone covering a 19-mile radius around the facility. Malfunctioning nuclear plants have left the country with an energy shortage, leading to power cuts even at some refugee shelters even as the weather turned colder. The stock market plunged more than 10 percent.
Along the coast, 6,000 are officially confirmed as either dead or missing, according to the police tally. Many more are unaccounted for. Officials in one prefecture estimate that at least 10,000 of its 2.3 million citizens were killed by the tsunami and quake.
Hospitals, short of medicine and supplies, are struggling to treat seriously injured or ill patients, news agencies said, and overwhelmed local officials have not been able to secure enough space for morgues and coffins. The continuing blackout has made it impossible to create dry ice to pack the bodies.
More than 500,000 people have been evacuated from the hardest-hit areas and 15,000 have been rescued, including a 70-year-old woman pulled from her toppled home by rescuers on Tuesday. But time is running out for rescuers to help those still stranded by flooding or trapped in debris.
In the north, a cold front was moving in, leading to a drop in temperatures and snow in some areas. In Tokyo, yet another strong aftershock hit late Tuesday night. No significant damage was reported.
Officials said about 2,000 bodies were found Monday along the coast of battered Miyagi Prefecture, and a survey of local governments conducted by the Kyodo News agency found that about 30,000 people in the devastated areas remain unaccounted for.
Those who survived now spend much of their time watching public broadcaster NHK, following frightening news about the explosions and fires at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant.
After a 6:14 a.m. explosion at the Unit 2 reactor Tuesday (5:14 p.m. Monday in Washington), Prime Minister Naoto Kan — wearing a durable blue work jacket — addressed the nation.
“Please listen to my message calmly,” he said, before explaining that that radiation had spread from malfunctioning reactors at Fukushima Daiichi into the environment.
Readings in the nearby area suggested very high risk, he said, although within nine hours of the blast they had dropped to lower — but still elevated — levels.
“The radiation level has risen substantially,” Kan said. “The risk that radiation will leak from now on has risen.”
The government told those within 12.5 miles of the plant to evacuate. It asked those within 19 miles to stay indoors. Those outside of that radius — including the 13 million in Tokyo, 150 miles to the south — wondered whether to trust what little information they received from the government, whose top spokesman said those in the capital would be safe.
Snaking lines formed at Tokyo’s Narita and Haneda international airports as foreigners packed the ticket counters, hoping to catch a flight far away from Japan and the lingering threat of radiation poisoning.
Many came to the airport hours or days before their scheduled flights were to leave, hoping for an earlier departure, even though they had already been told several times no earlier flights were available.
“Anywhere but here,” said Maria Sumner, a 23-year-old from Washington, Mo., who was headed to San Francisco on Tuesday after a deluge of worried e-mails from family and friends. “It just got to be a little too much,” she said.
Meanwhile, the Nikkei 225 recorded one of its largest-ever drops, closing at 8605.15 — down 10.55 percent. Coupled with Monday’s 6.2 percent drop, the index has plummeted nearly 17 points in the first two business days since the catastrophe.
Many of the losses were due to a rapid sell-off that occurred right as Kan warned about the radiation risks.
At an earlier news conference Tuesday, four officials from Tokyo Electric Power Co., which operates the nuclear plant, offered almost no information about the damage that occurred during the explosion or the implications.
“What has happened in the stock market reflects the amount of uncertainty — the different rumors that are floating around,” said Edwin Merner, a 30-year resident of Tokyo and president of the Atlantic Investment Research Corp. “A certain panic thinking that is going on. I think the main thing is, people just don’t know. And they don’t necessarily trust the information they have been hearing.”[http://www.washingtonpost.com]

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