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CREATED:20191211T054000Z
DESCRIPTION:12/11/19  SF Rally At Japan Consulate To Stop Restarting of Japanese NUKE 
 Plants\nSTOP OLYMPICS IN FUKUSHIMA &. JAPAN\nFor The Defense of Fukushima 
 Children and Families And Against Abe Gov Cover-up Of Olympics In Fukushima 
 and Japan\nStop PM Abe’s  Big LIE and Fraud On The People Of The World 
 That Fukushima is SAFE!\n\nWednesday December 11, 2019   3:00 PM \nSan 
 Francisco Japanese Consulate \n275 Battery St near California St. \nSan 
 Francisco \n\nThe Japanese Abe government continues to work to restart 
 nuclear plants including the Onagawa nuclear plant close to Fukushima. Also 
 the government is still saying that Fukushima has been\ndecontaminated 
 despite the fact that even government agencies like the METI say it will 
 take decades to clean up the radioactive plants.\nNow is the time to speak 
 out and mobilize against the Olympics in Japan and for a halt in the 
 restarting of the nuclear plants.\n\nDefend the people of Fukushima, Japan 
 and the world. \nStop The Restart of ALL Japan NUKE Plants\nDefend the 
 Children and People of Fukushima\nNo Olympic Baseball Games at Fukushima 
 and Olympics in Japan\nNo Militarization and War In Asia\n\nFor more event 
 information: \nhttp://nonukesaction.wordpress.com \n\nTokyo 2020 The 
 Radioactive Olympics With Dr. Alex Rosen Of 
 IPPNW\nhttps://youtu.be/t9rThrZWQ38\nThe Japanese government with the 
 support of the International Olympic Committee is organizing the Olympics 
 in Japan in 2020, Dr. Alex Rosen who is with the International Physicians 
 for the Prevention of Nuclear War (IPPNW) talks about the continuing health 
 dangers of the Fukushima nuclear meltdowns and why the Olympics should not 
 be held in Fukushima.\nThis interview was done on 11/241 in Berlin, 
 Germany. For more information go to:\nInternational Physicians for the 
 Prevention of Nuclear War (IPPNW)\nhttps://www.ippnw.de/startseite.html\n 
 www.radioactive-olympics.org\nhttp://www.openpetition.eu/petition/online/keep-the-olympic-games-out-of-radioactive-regions\nProduction 
 of Labor Video Project\nwww.laborvideo.org\n\nMETI eyes 2031 end to 
 Fukushima No. 1 cleanup-Experts say a 30- to 40-year completion 
 decommissioning target is too optimistic. \nThe Japan Times\n\nThe 
 Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power plant is seen in this photo taken on March 
 11. | KYODO\n\n\nMETI eyes 2031 end to Fukushima No. 1 cleanup-Experts say 
 a 30- to 40-year completion decommissioning target is too optimistic. 
 \nhttps://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2019/12/02/national/road-map-fukushima-nuclear-cleanup/#.XeVDCy2ZPxU\n\nBY 
 MARI YAMAGUCHI\nKYODO, AP\nDEC 2, 2019\n\nThe industry ministry on Monday 
 unveiled a revised plan to remove molten nuclear fuel debris from the 
 meltdown-hit Fukushima No. 1 power plant in 2021 — a process said to be 
 the biggest hurdle to decommissioning the six-reactor facility.\nWork to 
 remove the debris should start with the No. 2 reactor, according to the 
 mid- to long-term road map released by the government.\nDesignating a 
 specific time frame for the first time, the plan also calls for completing 
 the removal of 4,741 fuel rods left inside the cooling pools for reactor 
 Nos. 1 to 6 by 2031.\n“As more people return and rebuilding progresses in 
 the areas around the No. 1 plant, we will take measures based on the basic 
 principle of balancing rebuilding and decommissioning,” said Minister of 
 Economy, Trade and Industry Hiroshi Kajiyama, who heads the state team 
 tasked with decommissioning the heavily damaged plant.\nThe plan, revised 
 for the fifth time, maintains the general outlook for finishing the cleanup 
 within 30 to 40 years of the triple meltdown, which was triggered by the 
 mega-quake and tsunami on March 11, 2011.\nBut, given issues that have 
 halted work and caused delays so far, it remains uncertain whether the plan 
 will proceed as scheduled.\nHere is a look at some of the challenges facing 
 Fukushima No. 1:\nMelted fuel debris\n\nBy far the toughest challenge is 
 removing the 800 tons of nuclear fuel that melted in the three reactors 
 before dropping from their cores and hardening at the bottom of the primary 
 containment vessels.\nOver the past two years, Tepco has made progress 
 gathering details mainly from two of the reactors. In February, a small 
 telescopic robot sent inside the No. 2 reactor showed that small pieces of 
 debris can come off and be lifted out. Thus debris removal is scheduled to 
 begin there by the end of 2021.\nEarlier, assessments of the No. 3 reactor 
 were hampered by high radiation and water levels in the PCVs. A robot 
 survey at the No. 1 reactor also failed from extremely high 
 radiation.\nExperts say a 30- to 40-year completion decommissioning target 
 is too optimistic. Some doubt that removing all of the fuel is even doable 
 and suggest an approach like Chernobyl — contain the reactors and wait 
 until radioactivity naturally fades.\nFuel rods\n\nTogether, the three 
 reactors have more than 1,500 units of mostly spent nuclear fuel rods 
 inside that must be kept cool in pools of water. They’re among the 
 highest risks at the plant because the pools are uncovered, and loss of 
 water from structural damage or sloshing in the event of another major 
 quake could cause them to melt and release massive radiation.\nThe manager 
 of the plant, Tokyo Electric Power Company Holdings Inc., started removing 
 rods from the No. 3 reactor pool in April and aims to get all 566 out by 
 March 2021. Removal of rods from units 1 and 2 is to begin in 2023.\nBy 
 2031, Tepco plans to remove thousands of rods at the two units that 
 survived the tsunami and store them in dry casks on the compound. Over 
 6,300 fuel rods were in the six reactor cooling pools at the time, and only 
 the pool at No. 4 has been emptied.\nTainted water\n\nThe government and 
 Tepco have been unable to get rid of the more than 1 million tons of 
 radioactive water that has been treated and stored on site, fearing public 
 repercussions. The utility has managed to cut the volume by pumping up and 
 diverting groundwater upstream, as well as by installing a costly 
 underground “ice wall” around the reactor buildings to keep water from 
 entering.\nTepco says it only has space for up to 1.37 million tons until 
 summer 2022, raising speculation it might release the tainted water after 
 the 2020 Olympics. Tepco and experts say that the tanks are hampering 
 decommissioning work and that the space they occupy must be freed up to 
 build storage for the debris and other radioactive materials to be removed. 
 There is also the risk that the tanks might fail and release their contents 
 in the event of another quake, tsunami or flood.\nExperts say a controlled 
 release of the water into the ocean is the only realistic option, one that 
 will take decades. For years, a government panel has been discussing 
 methods amid opposition from fishermen and residents who fear it will 
 damage their products and their health.\nRadioactive waste\n\nJapan has yet 
 to develop a plan to dispose of the highly radioactive waste that will come 
 out of the reactors. Under the road map, the government and Tepco will 
 compile a plan sometime after the first decade of removal work ends in 
 2031.\nManaging the waste will require new technologies to compact it and 
 reduce its toxicity. Tepco and the government say they plan to build a 
 temporary storage site for the waste. But finding a site and getting public 
 consent to store it there will be nearly impossible, raising doubts the 
 cleanup can be finished within 40 years.\nManpower concerns\n\nSecuring a 
 workforce for the decades-long project is yet another challenge, especially 
 in a country with a rapidly aging and declining population. Tepco announced 
 plans to hire foreign workers for the decommissioning process under 
 Japan’s new visa program to attract unskilled foreign labor, but put it 
 on hold after receiving government instructions on careful planning to 
 address concerns about language problems and safety. Universities are also 
 struggling to attract students in nuclear science, a formerly elite major 
 that has become unpopular since the Fukushima crisis.\n\nJapan METI eyes 
 2031 end to Fukushima No. 1 cleanup\nThe Japan Times\n\nThe Fukushima No. 1 
 nuclear power plant is seen in this photo taken on March 11. | 
 KYODO\n\n\nNuclear watchdog approves restart of 3/11 tsunami-hit Onagawa 
 reactor in 
 Miyagi\nhttps://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2019/11/27/national/nuclear-watchdog-restart-reactor-march-2011-tsunami/#.Xd36qC-ZOu4\nKYODO\nNOV 
 27, 2019\n\nA nuclear power reactor in northeastern Japan that was damaged 
 by the 2011 earthquake-tsunami disaster and idled under stricter safety 
 standards following the Fukushima crisis got the nuclear watchdog’s 
 approval Wednesday to resume operations.\nThe No. 2 unit of Tohoku Electric 
 Power Co.’s Onagawa plant in Miyagi Prefecture received the green light 
 after the addition of anti-disaster measures including a towering seawall 
 that is nearing completion.\nIt is only the second nuclear reactor damaged 
 by the March 2011 calamity after the Tokai No. 2 power station in Ibaraki 
 Prefecture to clear the Nuclear Regulation Authority’s new safety 
 standards. The basement floors of the No. 2 unit at the Onagawa complex 
 were flooded.\nThe plant straddling the town of Onagawa and the city of 
 Ishinomaki still needs to complete the anti-disaster measures as well as 
 receive local consent to restart, meaning it will almost certainly remain 
 offline until after fiscal 2020.\nIts operator, Tohoku Electric, expects to 
 spend ¥340 billion ($3.1 billion) on the measures, primarily the 800-meter 
 long wall reaching 29 meters above sea level along the perimeter facing the 
 Pacific Ocean to guard from tsunami as high as 23.1 meters.\nCosts for 
 enhanced safety measures have ballooned and are expected to further swell 
 with the construction of facilities to be used in the event of a terrorist 
 attack, also required under the new safety standards.\nThe Onagawa plant is 
 the closest nuclear plant to the epicenter of the magnitude 9.0 quake that 
 struck northeastern Japan on March 11, 2011, and heavy shaking triggered an 
 automatic shutdown of its three reactors.\nWhile the No. 2 reactor building 
 suffered flooding from the subsequent 13-meter tsunami and lost up to 70 
 percent of its earthquake-resistance strength, the plant’s emergency 
 cooling system remained intact and it did not suffer a meltdown like the 
 Fukushima No. 1 plant run by Tokyo Electric Power Company Holdings 
 Inc.\nTohoku Electric applied for a safety screening for the No. 2 reactor 
 in December 2013, and its restart would save the utility ¥35 billion 
 annually in fuel costs. The No. 1 reactor is scheduled to be 
 decommissioned, while the utility is mulling whether to seek approval to 
 restart the No. 3 reactor.\nThe Onagawa No. 2 reactor may become the first 
 boiling water reactor — the same type used at the Fukushima No. 1 plant 
 — to resume operations after the disaster, which claimed nearly 16,000 
 lives and left more than 2,500 missing. In Onagawa, more than 800 were 
 killed or went missing.\nOther boiling water reactors at Tepco’s 
 Kashiwazaki-Kariwa plant in Niigata Prefecture and the Tokai No. 2 plant of 
 Japan Atomic Power Co. already have NRA approval to resume operations, but 
 are yet to obtain local consent.\n\n\n\nOLYMPICS/ Anti-heat costs for Tokyo 
 Games rise 2.5 times to 10 billion 
 yen\nhttp://www.asahi.com/ajw/articles/AJ201911150054.html\nTHE ASAHI 
 SHIMBUN\nNovember 15, 2019 at 18:00 JST\n\n\nMist showers are used at a 
 test event for beach volleyball in Tokyo in July. (Asahi Shimbun file 
 photo)\n\n\nSpending on anti-heat measures for the Tokyo Olympics and 
 Paralympics will more than double to about 10 billion yen ($92 million) to 
 protect athletes, spectators and staff from the expected sweltering weather 
 next summer, officials said.\n\nThe Japanese organizing committee and the 
 Tokyo metropolitan government were initially expected to each pay 2 billion 
 yen for conventional anti-heat measures, including tents and fans set up at 
 sites for security checks, according to an Olympic official.\n\nHowever, 
 safety concerns have risen about Tokyo’s hot and humid summers, prompting 
 Japanese organizers and the Tokyo metropolitan government to compile 
 additional precautions for the Games.\n\nBoth sides each agreed to spend an 
 additional 3 billion yen to provide protection against the heat.\n\nThe 
 ballooning expenses are expected to be included in the budget draft for the 
 Olympics, which is scheduled to be announced at the end of 
 December.\n\nInternational sports organizations called for greater 
 anti-heat measures after test events were held in Tokyo this summer to 
 gauge the conditions.\n\nFears for the athletes’ safety were so intense 
 that the Olympic marathon events were moved to Sapporo.\n\nEven with the 
 additional measures, some related officials remained doubtful on whether 
 anything would be effective in a metropolitan area that has baked under 
 record high temperatures in recent years.\n\n“Will they be enough?” one 
 official asked.\n\nThe organizers and the Tokyo government will spend 
 hundreds of millions of yen to prepare more than 1,300 tons of ice and set 
 up baths to cool off the athletes at more than 100 competition and training 
 venues.\n\nThey will also use additional freezers and refrigerator trucks 
 at the sites.\n\nOlympic staff members, including 80,000 volunteers, will 
 receive ice cream, tablets for salt supplementation, wet wipes and instant 
 coolants.\n\nEach staff member working outdoors will be given four plastic 
 beverage bottles, while indoor workers will receive two bottles 
 each.\n\nFor spectators, the total area of shade tents will increase by 
 about 2.5 times the initial estimate to about 20,000 square meters.\n\nThe 
 number of water fountains at outdoor venues will increase so that there 
 will be one faucet per 500 to 3,000 people based on congestion forecasts, 
 the officials said.\n\nIn past Olympics, plastic bottles have been banned 
 at venues because of anti-terrorism measures and complaints from beverage 
 companies that were official sponsors of the Games.\n\nHowever, organizers 
 said that one bottle will be permitted per person at the Tokyo Olympics. 
 They said they are in discussions with sponsors on whether the labels on 
 the bottles should be removed.\n\nFrozen plastic bottles are expected to be 
 prohibited at Tokyo Olympic venues for security reasons. But officials may 
 allow people to bring in pieces of ice in water bottles as well as frozen 
 but soft refrigerant packs.\n\nThe Tokyo government’s anti-heat measures 
 for the marathon races are not included in the extra precautions.\n\n\n(The 
 article was written by Daisuke Maeda and Yusuke Saito.)\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2019/12/10/18828790.php
SUMMARY:SF Rally At Japan Consulate To Stop Restarting of Japanese NUKE Plants
LOCATION:San Francisco Japanese Consulate \n275 Battery St near California St.
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2019/12/10/18828790.php
DTSTART:20191211T230000Z
DTEND:20191211T230000Z
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