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DESCRIPTION:6/11 Rally-Speak Out At SF Japan Consulate To Oppose Nuclear Plant  
 Start-ups & Defend The Fukushima Children and Families\nMonday June 11, 
 2018 3:00 PM\nJapanese Consulate\n275 Battery St near California St.\nSan 
 Francisco\n\nDespite the continuing failure to remove the melted rods at 
 the Fukushima nuclear plants and the expanding amount of radioactive water 
 to cool the plant the Japanese Abe government continues to restart nuclear 
 plants throughout Japan. The Japanese government also seeks to force 
 families and children to Fukushima by threatening to shut off their 
 subsidies.The plants which have been reopened are decades old and have 
 serious safety problems. The government is also preparing for another major 
 earthquake that could kill according to the government 230,000 people yet 
 it continues to re-open nuclear plants.\n\nThe Abe government which also 
 runs TEPCO is continuing to allow contract labor to be brought in for the 
 clean-up without proper training and is even using so called “trainees” 
 from Vietnam and other countries.\n\nThe government also is pushing for 
 militarization of the country removing Article 9 which prohibits offensive 
 war and the development of nuclear weapons by Japan.\n\nJoin us in calling 
 for justice for the people of Fukushima and against more nuke plant 
 start-ups that threaten Japan and the world\n\n\nDate: Monday June 11, 2018 
 3:00 PM\nPlace: The front of SF Japanese Consulate\n275 Battery Street, SF  
  3-4 blocks from the BART Embarcadero station\nInitiated by No Nukes Action 
 nonukesaction.wordpress.com\n\nAir duct corrosion and holes found at seven 
 Japanese nuclear 
 plants\nhttps://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2018/05/23/national/air-duct-corrosion-holes-found-seven-nuclear-plants/KYODO\n\nMAY 
 23, 2018\n\nCorrosion and holes have been found in ventilation ducts at 12 
 reactors at seven nuclear plants across the country, the Nuclear Regulation 
 Authority said Wednesday, raising concerns that workers could be exposed to 
 radiation in the event of an accident.\n\nThe governmental nuclear watchdog 
 released the results of a nationwide survey it had ordered following a 
 revelation in December 2016 that corrosion had left multiple holes in the 
 air ducts of the No. 2 reactor at Chugoku Electric Power Co.’s Shimane 
 plant in western Japan. That reactor was not included in the 
 survey.\n\nSerious corrosion was found at the No. 3 unit of the 
 Kashiwazaki-Kariwa plant in Niigata Prefecture operated by Tokyo Electric 
 Power Company Holdings Inc. and may have abnormally affected ventilation of 
 the central control room, the watchdog said.\n\nAlthough the No. 7 unit at 
 the same plant has passed a test to resume operation, the NRA said it will 
 inspect the impact of any corrosion found at the reactor. No abnormality 
 associated with corrosion has been found at the remaining 10 units, it 
 said.\n\nCorrosion or holes were found in steel or galvanized steel ducts 
 at Tohoku Electric Power Co.’s Onagawa nuclear plant, Japan Atomic Power 
 Co.’s Tokai No. 2 nuclear plant, Tepco’s Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant 
 and Kashiwazaki-Kariwa nuclear plant, Chubu Electric Power Co.’s Hamaoka 
 plant, Hokuriku Electric Power Co.’s Shiga nuclear plant and Chugoku 
 Electric’s Shimane plant.\n\nIf an accident occurs, radioactive materials 
 could flow into a plant’s central control room through such holes, 
 putting workers in danger of radiation exposure.\n\nAt the No. 3 reactor at 
 the Kashiwazaki-Kariwa plant, a crack as large as 13 centimeters in length 
 and 5 cm in width was found. A total of nine holes and cracks have been 
 discovered at the Nos. 3 and 7 units at the plant.\n\nAll the reactors with 
 corrosion were boiling-water reactors, the same type used at the Fukushima 
 No. 1 plant, which spewed a massive amount of radioactive material into the 
 atmosphere following the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami.\n\nNo problems 
 have been detected at pressurized-water nuclear reactors, as filtering and 
 other measures take place near air inlets.\n\nThe holes at the No. 2 unit 
 at the Shimane plant were discovered when insulation materials covering the 
 ducts were removed for inspection.\n\nThe holes, the largest of which 
 measured about 100 centimeters wide and about 30 centimeters long, are 
 believed to have been caused by dew condensation and rainwater that seeped 
 inside the building, as well as salt deposits on the ducts, given that the 
 corrosion extended about 50 meters from the air inlet and spread from the 
 inner surface of the ducts.\n\nChugoku Electric has decided to increase the 
 number of inspection points at sections near fresh-air inlets and bolster 
 anti-corrosion measures, including the installation of a 
 dehumidifier.\n\nNo. 4 reactor at Oi nuclear plant restarted after nearly 
 five years 
 offline\n\nhttps://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2018/05/10/national/no-4-reactor-oi-nuclear-plant-restarted-nearly-five-years-offline/\n\nOi 
 nuclear power plant's No. 4 reactor (far left) in Fukui Prefecture is seen 
 on Wednesday before being restarted by Kansai Electric Power Co. | 
 KYODO\n\nNo. 4 reactor at Oi nuclear plant restarted after nearly five 
 years 
 offline\nhttps://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2018/05/10/national/no-4-reactor-oi-nuclear-plant-restarted-nearly-five-years-offline/\n\nMAY 
 10, 2018\n\nOI, FUKUI PREF. – Kansai Electric Power Co.’s No. 4 reactor 
 at its Oi nuclear plant in Fukui Prefecture inched closer toward running at 
 full capacity Thursday, four years and eight months after operations were 
 suspended.\n\nThe reactor has reached criticality, its nuclear fission 
 chain reaction having reached a self-sustaining state, and is set to begin 
 power generation and transmission Friday. It is projected to reach full 
 capacity early next week.\n\nThe reactor, which was halted in September 
 2013 for regular checkups, is the eighth to have been reactivated under the 
 country’s new safety standards for nuclear plants. The new standards were 
 introduced in the wake of the March 2011 triple meltdown at Tokyo Electric 
 Power Company Holdings Inc.’s tsunami-stricken Fukushima No. 1 nuclear 
 plant.\n\nKansai Electric plans to put the No. 4 reactor into commercial 
 mode in early June and cut its electricity prices this 
 summer.\n\nCommercial operations of the No. 3 and No. 4 reactors at the Oi 
 plant are projected to help reduce the firm’s fuel costs by about ¥120 
 billion a year. The No. 3 unit was brought back online in March this year 
 and entered commercial mode in April.\n\nThe utility lowered its 
 electricity rates for households by 3.15 percent on average in August 2017, 
 after it resumed commercial operations of the No. 3 and No. 4 reactors at 
 its Takahama plant in Fukui Prefecture.\n\nAs each of the two Oi reactors 
 has a capacity of 1.18 million kilowatts — larger than the 870,000 
 kilowatt capacity of each of the Takahama reactors — the forthcoming rate 
 cut may be more significant than the previous one and could bring the 
 company’s electricity prices down to levels from before the Fukushima 
 nuclear accident, industry observers said.\n\nKansai Electric owns 11 
 reactors — four each at the Oi and Takahama plants, and three at the 
 Mihama plant, also in Fukui Prefecture.\nBesides the four currently in 
 operation, the Mihama No. 1 and No. 2 units and the Oi No. 1 and No. 2 
 units are set to be decommissioned. The Mihama No. 3 unit and the Takahama 
 No. 1 and No. 2 units are undergoing work to allow them to continue to 
 operate after reaching 40 years of service.\n\nWith the Oi and Takahama 
 plants located as little as 13.5 kilometers from each other, the plant 
 operator has been urged to draw up measures that should be taken in case 
 accidents occur at the same time at the two facilities.\n\nThis summer the 
 government plans to carry out a comprehensive anti-disaster drill assuming 
 simultaneous accidents.\n\nContaminated water leak found at Ehime Pref. 
 nuke 
 plant\n\nhttp://mainichi.jp/english/articles/20180509/p2a/00m/0na/022000c\n\nMay 
 9, 2018 (Mainichi Japan)\n\nIKATA, Ehime -- Water containing radioactive 
 materials has leaked from a purification system inside of a stalled nuclear 
 reactor here, Shikoku Electric Power Co. and the Ehime Prefectural 
 Government announced on May 9.\n\nThe leak occurred in the auxiliary 
 building of the No. 3 reactor at the Ikata Nuclear Power Station in the 
 town of Ikata, Ehime Prefecture. According to the prefectural government 
 and Shikoku Electric, the coolant water was found to be leaking from the 
 pressure gauge stop valve for the purification system at around 2:10 a.m. 
 on May 9.\n\nThe radiation level of the materials in the roughly 130 
 milliliters of escaped water measured 20 becquerels, far below the standard 
 for filing a report to the central government. The utility and Ehime 
 Prefecture said there is no reported leakage outside of the facility, nor 
 was there any danger posed to employees or the surrounding environment. 
 Regardless, the reason for the leak will be investigated thoroughly.\n\nThe 
 No. 3 Reactor at the facility was restarted in August 2016. However, while 
 the rector was undergoing a scheduled inspection in December 2017, a 
 temporary injunction was handed down by the Hiroshima High Court that 
 halted operation at the site.\n\n(Japanese original by Aoi Hanazawa, 
 Matsuyama Bureau)\n\nMore Vietnamese trainees made to conduct Fukushima 
 decontamination work, union 
 says\nhttps://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2018/04/18/national/vietnamese-trainees-made-conduct-fukushima-decontamination-work-union-says/\n\nAPR 
 18, 2018\n\nThree more Vietnamese men in a foreign trainee program in Japan 
 were made to take part in radioactive decontamination work in Fukushima 
 Prefecture, which was devastated by the March 2011 nuclear crisis, their 
 supporters said Wednesday.\n\nThe Justice Ministry’s Immigration Bureau 
 is conducting a probe, believing more foreigners may have been made to 
 engage in inappropriate work under the Technical Intern Training 
 Program.\n\nJapan introduced the program in 1993 with the aim of 
 transferring skills to developing countries. But the scheme, applicable to 
 agriculture and manufacturing among other sectors, has drawn criticism at 
 home and abroad for giving Japanese companies a cover to importing cheap 
 labor.\n\nAccording to the Zentouitsu Workers Union, which supports foreign 
 trainees, the three Vietnamese men came to Japan in July 2015 and conducted 
 radiation cleanup work in Fukushima Prefecture between 2016 and 2018 as 
 trainees of a construction company in the city of Koriyama in the 
 prefecture.\n\nTheir contracts only stated that they would be engaging in 
 form-work installation and reinforcing steel placements, and the company 
 did not give them a detailed explanation of the decontamination work 
 beforehand.\n\nIn March, a Vietnamese trainee hired by a construction firm 
 in Morioka, Iwate Prefecture, said at a news conference in Tokyo that he 
 had been misled into conducting decontamination work in Fukushima 
 Prefecture.\n\nThe Justice Ministry and the Ministry of Health, Labor and 
 Welfare have released statements saying that decontamination work does not 
 fit the purpose of the trainee program.\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2018/06/05/18815502.php
SUMMARY:Speak Out At SF Japan Consulate To Oppose Nuke Plant Start-ups & Defend The Families
LOCATION:Japanese Consulate\n275 Battery St./California\nSan Francisco
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2018/06/05/18815502.php
DTSTART:20180611T220000Z
DTEND:20180611T230000Z
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