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DESCRIPTION:8/11 SF Rally-Speak Out Defend The Children and  People Of Fukushima and 
 Stop the Start-up of More Nuclear Plants in Japan\nThursday August  11, 
 2016  3:00 PM\nSan Francisco Japan Consulate\n275 Battery St./California 
 St.\nSan Francisco\n\nOn Thursday August 11  at 3:00 PM , community members 
 and defenders of the people of Fukushima  will speak out at the San 
 Francisco Japanese consulate to demand the evacuation of all children and 
 families from Fukushima, full compensation and the closure of all nuclear 
 plants in Japan/  The Abe government is seeking to reopen the remaining 
 more than 35  nuclear plants despite the great dangers of another Fukushima 
 disaster. Japan is located on the ring of fire and the danger of another 
 major earthquake that could cause a similar disaster is very real.\nThe Abe 
 government also is continuing to cover-up the growing dangers of thyroid 
 cancers. Using the secrecy law the government refuses to release the 
 information in the spike of thyroid cancer surgeries in the country.\nAlso 
 the Abe government which now controls Tokyo Electric Power Company TEPCO 
 continues to all subcontractors to hire day laborers and other immigrant 
 workers and put them to work without proper training a protection at 
 Fukushima. These workers are then dumped and face a potential lifetime of 
 dealing with radioactive poisoning.\nAccording to a report of Greenpeace 
 Japan the radioactive material continues.\n"Radioactive contamination in 
 the seabed off the Fukushima coast is hundreds of times above pre-2011 
 levels, while contamination in local rivers is up to 200 times higher than 
 ocean sediment, according to results from Greenpeace Japan survey work 
 released Thursday."\nIt is time for all people in the United States to 
 defend the people of Fukushima and demand that the Japanese government stop 
 the restarting of all nuclear plants in Japan.\nJoin Us On August 11, 2016 
 at 3:00 PM\n\nSpeak Out and Rally initiated by\nNo Nukes Action 
 Committee\nhttp://nonukesaction.wordpress.com/\nFor more information\n(510) 
 495-5952\n\n\nRadiation Along Fukushima Rivers Up to 200 Times Higher Than 
 Pacific Ocean 
 Seabed\nhttp://www.ecowatch.com/radiation-fukushima-rivers-200-times-higher-than-pacific-ocean-seabed-1937971722.html\nJul 
 22, 2016\nRadiation Along Fukushima Rivers Up to 200 Times Higher Than 
 Pacific Ocean Seabed\n\n     \nRadioactive contamination in the seabed off 
 the Fukushima coast is hundreds of times above pre-2011 levels, while 
 contamination in local rivers is up to 200 times higher than ocean 
 sediment, according to results from Greenpeace Japan survey work released 
 Thursday.\n\n"The extremely high levels of radioactivity we found along the 
 river systems highlights the enormity and longevity of both the 
 environmental contamination and the public health risks resulting from the 
 Fukushima disaster," Ai Kashiwagi, energy campaigner at Greenpeace Japan, 
 said.\n\n\n\nGreenpeace sediment sampling in Abukuma river, Miyagi 
 prefecture, February 2016. The Abukuma has a 5,172km2 catchment15 which is 
 largely in Fukushima prefecture, before entering the Pacific ocean in 
 Miyagi prefecture. \nGreenpeace / Raquel Monton\n"These river samples were 
 taken in areas where the Abe government is stating it is safe for people to 
 live. But the results show there is no return to normal after this nuclear 
 catastrophe," said Kashiwagi.\n\nRiverbank sediment samples taken along the 
 Niida River in Minami Soma, measured as high as 29,800 Bq/kg for 
 radiocaesium (Cs-134 and 137). The Niida samples were taken where there are 
 no restrictions on people living, as were other river samples. At the 
 estuary of the Abukuma River in Miyagi prefecture, which lies more than 
 90km north of the Fukushima Daiichi plant, levels measured in sediment 
 samples were as high as 6,500 Bq/kg.\n\n\n\nGreenpeace radiation specialist 
 Jacob Namminga on board research vessel off the coast of Fukushima Daiichi, 
 removing marine sediment sample collected by Remotely Operated Vehicle, 
 March 2016. \nGreenpeace / Christian Aslund\nThe lifting of evacuation 
 orders in March 2017 for areas that remain highly contaminated is a looming 
 human rights crisis and cannot be permitted to stand. The vast expanses of 
 contaminated forests and freshwater systems will remain a perennial source 
 of radioactivity for the foreseeable future, as these ecosystems cannot 
 simply be decontaminated.\n\nCaesium-137 has a half life of 30 years and 
 will continue to pose a risks to the the environment and human health for 
 hundreds of years. Cs-137 contamination in seabed samples near the 
 Fukushima plant was measured at up to 120 Bq/kg – compared to levels 
 pre-2011 of 0.3 Bq/kg. Further, the levels of contamination found 60km 
 south of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant were comparable with those 
 found within 4km of the plant. Numerous marine science investigations, have 
 concluded that these higher levels are one explanation for some marine 
 species still showing higher cesium levels than the background levels in 
 seawater.\n\n\nRiver systems along Fukushima and neighboring prefecture 
 coastline discharging radioactivity into Pacific Ocean.\n"The radiation 
 levels in the sediment off the coast of Fukushima are low compared to land 
 contamination, which is what we expected and consistent with other 
 research," Kendra Ulrich, senior global energy campaigner at Greenpeace 
 Japan, said. "The sheer size of the Pacific Ocean combined with powerful 
 complex currents means the largest single release of radioactivity into the 
 marine environment has led to the widespread dispersal of 
 contamination."\n\nMost of the radioactivity in Fukushima Daiichi reactor 
 units 1-3 core fuel in March 2011 remains at the site.\n\n"The scientific 
 community must receive all necessary support to continue their research 
 into the impacts of this disaster," Ulrich said.\n\n"In addition to the 
 ongoing contamination from forests and rivers, the vast amount of 
 radioactivity onsite at the destroyed nuclear plant remains one of the 
 greatest nuclear threats to Fukushima coastal communities and the Pacific 
 Ocean. The hundreds of thousands of tonnes of highly contaminated water, 
 the apparent failure of the ice wall to reduce groundwater contamination 
 and the unprecedented challenge of three molten reactor cores all add up to 
 a nuclear crisis that is far from over."\n\nA radiation survey team onboard 
 the research vessel Asakaze, supported by the Greenpeace flagship Rainbow 
 Warrior, conducted underwater survey work along the Fukushima coastline 
 from Feb. 21 to March 11 this year, as well collecting samples in river 
 systems. The samples were measured at an independent laboratory in 
 Tokyo.\n\nThere’s no end to Fukushima crisis while melted fuel 
 remains\nhttp://www.asahi.com/ajw/articles/AJ201607230013.html\nVox Populi, 
 Vox Dei is a daily column that runs on Page 1 of The Asahi Shimbun.\nJuly 
 23, 2016 at 12:20 JST\n\nA massive concrete structure encases the wrecked 
 No. 4 reactor at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant, site of the 
 catastrophic 1986 accident.\n\nDubbed the "sarcophagus," it was erected to 
 contain the fuel that could not be extracted from the crippled 
 reactor.\n\nI never expected this word ("sekkan" in Japanese) to crop up in 
 connection with the 2011 Fukushima nuclear crisis.\n\nLocal governments 
 raised objections to the use of this word in a report compiled by a 
 government organ that supports the decommissioning of the Fukushima No. 1 
 nuclear power plant.\n\nWhile the report discusses the extraction of melted 
 fuel as a requirement, it is written in such a way as to suggest that the 
 construction of a sarcophagus is an option that should not be dismissed out 
 of hand.\n\nThis outraged the governor of Fukushima, Masao Uchibori, who 
 lashed out, "Containing (the melted fuel) in a sarcophagus spells giving up 
 hope for post-disaster reconstruction and for returning home."\n\nThe 
 government organ has since deleted the word from the report, admitting that 
 it was misleading and that constructing a sarcophagus is not under 
 consideration.\n\nThe report lacked any consideration for the feelings of 
 local citizens. But more to the point, just deleting the word does not 
 settle this case.\n\nEven though five years have passed since the disaster, 
 nothing has been decided yet on how to extract the melted fuel. How, then, 
 can anyone guarantee that the fuel will never be "entombed"?\n\nI am 
 reminded anew of the sheer difficulty of decommissioning nuclear reactors. 
 The Fukushima edition of The Asahi Shimbun runs a weekly report on the work 
 being done at the Fukushima No. 1 plant.\n\nThe report portrays the harsh 
 realities at the site, such as leaks of contaminated water and accidents 
 involving workers. Efforts to decommission the crippled reactors continue 
 day after day, but the task is expected to take several 
 decades.\n\nElsewhere in Japan, the rule that requires nuclear reactors to 
 be decommissioned after 40 years is becoming toothless, and preparations 
 are proceeding steadily for restarting reactors that have remained 
 offline.\n\n"Normalcy" appears to be returning, but there is a huge gap 
 between that and the unending hardships in the disaster-affected 
 areas.\n\n--The Asahi Shimbun, July 23\n\nBulk of melted fuel at bottom of 
 Fukushima No. 2 reactor 
 vessel\nhttp://mainichi.jp/english/articles/20160729/p2g/00m/0dm/022000c\nJuly 
 29, 2016 (Mainichi Japan)\n\nTOKYO (Kyodo) -- Most of the melted nuclear 
 fuel inside the No. 2 reactor at the disaster-hit Fukushima Daiichi power 
 plant is likely located at the bottom of its pressure vessel, Tokyo 
 Electric Power Company Holdings Inc. said Thursday.\n\nAccording to a study 
 that used a cosmic ray imaging system, an estimated 130 tons of the 
 so-called fuel debris remains at the bottom of the vessel, the first time 
 the location and amount of the melted fuel have been estimated.\n\nThe 
 finding is important as the data could help the operator to narrow down 
 methods to remove the fuel debris, the most challenging task in 
 decommissioning the plant's Nos. 1 to 3 reactors that experienced meltdowns 
 in the nuclear crisis that began in March 2011.\n\nThe study was carried 
 out by a team involving Tokyo Electric and the High Energy Accelerator 
 Research Organization in Ibaraki Prefecture.\n\nAs high radiation levels 
 are continuing to hamper direct access to the reactors, researchers have 
 tracked muon elementary particles, which are produced as cosmic rays 
 collide with atmospheric particles and change course when coming into 
 contact with nuclear fuel.\n\nThe No. 2 reactor was in operation when the 
 nuclear crisis was triggered by a powerful earthquake and subsequent 
 tsunami that devastated Japan's northeast.\n\nAbout 160 tons of fuel 
 assemblies are estimated to have been present inside the reactor vessel 
 prior to the crisis. Most of the fuel is believed to have fallen to the 
 bottom of the pressure vessel and mixed with nearby structures to form 
 debris.\n\nIn the nuclear crisis, massive amounts of radioactive substances 
 were released into the environment, with the Nos. 1, 3 and 4 reactor 
 buildings damaged by hydrogen explosions.\n\nThe No. 4 reactor was offline 
 for periodic maintenance work and all of its fuel was stored in the spent 
 fuel pool, avoiding a meltdown.\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2016/08/09/18789955.php
SUMMARY:SF Rally-Speak Out Defend The Children and People Of Fukushima and Stop the Start-up
LOCATION:San Francisco Japan Consulate\n275 Battery St./California St.\nSan 
 Francisco
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2016/08/09/18789955.php
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DTEND:20160811T230000Z
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