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UID:Indybay-18846190
SEQUENCE:19006272
CREATED:20211109T035800Z
DESCRIPTION:SF Rally At SF Japanese Consulate: No Dumping Of Radioactive Water In The 
 Pacific Ocean From The Fukushima Meltdowns!\n\nThursday November  11, 2021 
 3:00 PM \nSan Francisco Japanese Consulate \n275 Battery St/California St. 
 \nSan Francisco \nSponsored by No Nukes Action \n\nJoin No Nukes Action to 
 demand a halt to any dumping of over a million tons of radioactive tritium 
 water from tanks around the broken Fukushima nuclear plants into the 
 Pacifica ocean.\nThe government still has not been able to remove all the 
 melted rods from the meltdown because of their heat and radiation and this 
 is causing more danger of contamination.\nDespite the fact that the former 
 Prime Minister Abe has said that the plant had been decontiminated this is 
 absolutely not the case.\nTEPCO, the operator  which is controlled by the 
 Japanese government  is also liable for some 16 trillion yen (about $140.83 
 billion) to decommission the stricken \nFukushima Daiichi plant and pay 
 compensation to nuclear disaster victims but is fightng them in court. It 
 will take another 30 years for this plan to safeguard the plant.\nThe 
 government also continues to push nuclear power and the restarting of other 
 plants in the highly dangerous ring of fire which Japan is part 
 of.\nMassive earthquakes will continue to happen making another disaster 
 and meltdown likely again. A 7.0 or even 8.0 earthquake could cause many 
 plants to meltdown threatening the people of Japan and the world.\nAt the 
 same time the new Prime Minister Fumio Kishida is carrying on the political 
 agenda of the LDP of nuclear power and  more militarization of 
 Japanincluding allowing the construction of US bases in Okinawa desspite 
 the fact that the mass of people are against these bases.\nIt is time to 
 speak out against the nuclear threat of Fukushima that 
 continues.\n\nPhysical distancing and masks for all participants at action 
 \nSpeak-out In Stop The Restarting Of The Nuke Plants \n\nDefense of the 
 Residents of Fukushima \n\nDon’t Dump The Radioactive Water In The 
 Pacific Ocean \n\nThursday November 11, 2021 3PM \nSan Francisco Japanese 
 Consulate \n275 Battery St/California St. \nSan Francisco \nNo Nukes Action 
 \nhttp://nonukesaction.wordpress.com/ \n\n\nNew evacuation ‘border’ 
 baffles, splits community in Fukushima 
 \nhttps://www.asahi.com/ajw/articles/14464648\nTHE ASAHI SHIMBUN\nNovember 
 5, 2021 at 07:10 JST\n\n \nShoichi Sasaki’s house on the right, shown 
 here on July 30 in Okuma, Fukushima Prefecture, will remain 
 “off-limits” even after an evacuation order is lifted next spring for 
 two houses on the other side of a road. (Shinichi Sekine)\n\n\nOKUMA, 
 Fukushima Prefecture—Evacuees eager to finally return to their homes near 
 the hobbled Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant have been thrown into confusion 
 over the way evacuation orders will be lifted.\nThe orders will end in 
 parts of the “difficult-to-return zones” in less than six months but 
 not all of them as the town of Okuma had hoped.\nIn a compromise with the 
 central government, the town accepted a boundary that cuts across the Machi 
 neighborhood of Okuma, creating a livable “enclave” surrounded on all 
 sides by “no-entry” areas.\nResidents from the enclave will be able to 
 return to their homes, but their neighbors, even on the other side of a 
 street, could be prohibited from returning until the end of the 
 decade.\n‘RECONSTRUCTION BASE’ DESIGNATION\nOkuma co-hosts the nuclear 
 plant, which suffered a triple meltdown after being hammered by the tsunami 
 triggered by the Great East Japan Earthquake in 2011.\nMachi is located 
 along National Route 6 around 3 kilometers southeast of JR Ono Station, 
 which stands in what used to be Okuma’s downtown.\nThe road is busy with 
 trucks for post-disaster rebuilding work and passenger cars. But streets 
 behind the barricades along the road are still lined with empty 
 houses.\nThe around 90 households in the community were all forced to flee 
 after the disaster. Machi was later designated a difficult-to-return zone, 
 the most severe level for evacuation orders.\nIn 2017, about 20 of the 140 
 or so hectares of the community’s landmass were collectively designated 
 by the central government as a “specified reconstruction and 
 revitalization base,” entitling the area to preferential decontamination 
 work.\nThe evacuation order covering those 20 hectares is expected to be 
 lifted next spring.\nHowever, Shoichi Sasaki, head of the Machi community, 
 is not excited by the prospect.\n“Our community has been divided, 
 although radiation levels are more or less the same on the inside and 
 outside of the ‘reconstruction base’ area,” Sasaki, 72, said.\nMost 
 of the 860 or so hectares in Okuma that have been designated as 
 reconstruction bases are concentrated around Ono Station. The Machi 
 community is detached from those areas.\nThe reconstruction base in Machi 
 includes only about half of all households in the community. Returning 
 residents may be denied free access to areas outside the reconstruction 
 base that will remain as difficult-to-return zones.\n‘PRODUCT OF 
 COMPROMISE’\nA behind-the-scenes struggle between Okuma and the central 
 government led to the curious demarcation, according to former senior town 
 officials and assembly members.\nOkuma town representatives called for a 
 lifting of all difficult-to-return zone designations, but the central 
 government did not like the idea, which would have required huge cleanup 
 costs.\nThe “specified reconstruction and revitalization base” zoning 
 system was a “product of compromise” to promote decontamination work 
 for the lifting of evacuation orders only in limited parts of the 
 difficult-to-return zones.\nSources said the central government made the 
 proposal to designate part of the Machi community as a reconstruction base 
 even though it was isolated from other bases around Ono Station.\nCentral 
 government officials said the proposal took account of the fact that Machi 
 was the seat of the Kumamachi village office before the village merged into 
 Okuma during the Showa Era (1926-1989). Machi was home to a certain 
 concentration of residences.\nOkuma town representatives, concerned about a 
 division of the Machi community, called on Tokyo to clean up and lift 
 evacuation orders across all areas of the town, a former senior town 
 official said.\nThe pleas were in vain.\nOkuma ended up accepting Tokyo’s 
 proposal, hoping it would “at least broaden areas where evacuation orders 
 have been lifted,” the former senior town official said.\nIn Sasaki’s 
 survey in May of all households from the Machi community, 11 said they 
 wanted to return to their homes.\nOne of those who want to go home is 
 Sasaki. However, his house lies just outside of the reconstruction base 
 zone across a road.\n“I have no idea when I will be allowed to go back 
 home,” Sasaki said. “I hope as many residents as possible will be able 
 to return and help each other to rebuild their lives there.”\nLATER THIS 
 DECADE\nThe central government in August released a plan for cleaning up 
 and lifting evacuation orders in areas outside the reconstruction bases, 
 including those in Machi. Residents who had to evacuate from those areas 
 may be allowed to return home by the end of the 2020s.\nThe specific dates 
 and areas will be determined after talks with local communities, officials 
 said.\nAround 33,700 hectares of difficult-to-return zones exist in seven 
 municipalities in Fukushima Prefecture.\nTokyo plans to lift evacuation 
 orders for 1,510 hectares in Okuma, Futaba and Katsurao from next spring, 
 followed by 1,237 hectares in three surrounding municipalities in spring 
 2023.\nCleanup of radioactive contaminants and development of 
 infrastructure, including water supply and sewerage, are under way in those 
 areas.\nHowever, high residual radiation levels following the cleanup and 
 delays in the restoration work have emerged.\nRadiation levels failed to 
 dip below 3.8 microsieverts per hour, the safety standard for lifting 
 evacuation orders, at 1,269, or 2.7 percent, of measurement sites in areas 
 of Okuma where the Environment Ministry conducted cleanup work between June 
 2013 and May this year.\nThe Okuma town government initially planned to 
 start “preparatory overnight stays,” or temporary home returns for 
 evacuees, in October.\nThe starting date has been put off to “by the end 
 of this year.”\nRadiation levels also failed to fall below the safety 
 standard at 563, or 1.0 percent, of the measurement sites in the 
 neighboring town of Futaba, the other co-host of the nuclear 
 plant.\nEvacuation orders in Futaba were initially scheduled to be lifted 
 next spring. But delays in the infrastructure development will likely push 
 back that schedule to around June at the earliest.\n“It is essential to 
 prepare an environment that allows residents to live without anxiety,” 
 said Kencho Kawatsu, a guest professor of environmental policy and 
 radiation science with Fukushima University.\nKawatsu heads an Okuma town 
 committee reviewing the effects of cleanup work and other matters.\nThe 
 Environment Ministry is conducting supplementary decontamination work in 
 Okuma and Futaba. Kawatsu said the effects of those efforts should be 
 reviewed carefully.\n(This article was written by Shinichi Sekine, Toru 
 Furusho and Nobuyuki Takiguchi.)\n\nTEPCO must stop atomic power dependence 
 to fulfill duty to Fukushima 
 recovery\n\nhttps://mainichi.jp/english/articles/20211108/p2a/00m/0op/008000c\n\nNovember 
 8, 2021 (Mainichi Japan)\nJapanese version\n\n\nTokyo Electric Power 
 Company Holdings Inc. (TEPCO), the utility responsible for the meltdowns at 
 the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station, has hit a business dead end. 
 Not only is it hemorrhaging customers after the liberalization of Japan's 
 retail electricity market, but its main hope of growing profits, the 
 Kashiwazaki-Kariwa nuclear plant in Niigata Prefecture, has no perceptible 
 chance of being restarted.\n\nTEPCO is also liable for some 16 trillion yen 
 (about $140.83 billion) to decommission the stricken Fukushima Daiichi 
 plant and pay compensation to nuclear disaster victims. Meanwhile, fuel 
 prices have soared. All this has added up to a projected loss for the 
 current fiscal year ending in March 2022 -- the company's first in nine 
 years.\n\nThe greatest risk stemming from TEPCO's troubles is that the 
 utility may become unable to fulfill its heaviest responsibility: aiding 
 the recovery of Fukushima Prefecture. Thus, the business's restructuring 
 needs to be drastically rethought.\n\nThe biggest problem with how the 
 company is reviving its business is how much it is leaning on the chances 
 of restarting the Kashiwazaki-Kariwa plant. Distrust of the firm is strong, 
 considering it is responsible for one of the worst nuclear disasters in 
 history.\n\nThe plant has already suffered a series of embarrassing 
 revelations this year, including someone gaining illicit entry using a 
 different person's ID card, and malfunctions in intruder detection systems 
 -- both major failures in the station's anti-terror measures. After it 
 completed its inspections of the Kashiwazaki-Kariwa plant, the Nuclear 
 Regulation Authority (NRA) -- which must approve any reactor restarts -- 
 effectively forbade TEPCO from restarting the station's No. 7 
 reactor.\n\nIn September, TEPCO released a report on the causes of these 
 problems and policies to prevent a recurrence. The document revealed that 
 the intruder alert system had been left broken for a long time due to an 
 overemphasis on cost-saving. And this and other issues revealed a corporate 
 culture with a disdainful attitude to safety. The pleas of those on-site 
 trying to sound the alarm about the problems apparently never reached 
 TEPCO's executive suite.\n\n"Putting safety first and gaining the trust and 
 understanding of locals are prerequisites for the plant restart we are 
 aiming for," TEPCO President Tomoaki Kobayakawa told a press conference. 
 And he is so determined because getting just one of the Kashiwazaki-Kariwa 
 power station's reactors back on-line is projected to add 50 billion yen 
 (about $440 million) to the utility's bottom line.\n\nBut locals' distrust 
 of TEPCO is at a fever pitch, and getting the host municipalities' approval 
 for reactor restarts will be very difficult. Meanwhile, pie-in-the-sky 
 plans to get the utility back on track are only making the situation worse 
 and grinding employee morale into the dust.\n\nOn the other hand, the 
 company also has many hydro power stations -- the most stable of renewable 
 energy sources -- and is building large wind farms. TEPCO also has a joint 
 venture with fellow regional utility Chubu Electric Power Co. to develop 
 carbon-free thermal power plants burning ammonia.\n\nIf TEPCO takes full 
 advantage of these strengths, then it should be able to restructure itself 
 without relying on atomic energy.\n\nIt has been a decade since the 
 Fukushima Daiichi catastrophe. TEPCO must wake up to the fact that, if it 
 does not remake itself as a leader of the carbon-free energy era, it will 
 fail in its duty to Fukushima Prefecture's recovery.\n\n\nEx-TEPCO 
 executives again plead not guilty to nuke accident 
 \nhttps://www.asahi.com/ajw/articles/14474341\n\nTHE ASAHI 
 SHIMBUN\nNovember 3, 2021 at 16:47 JST\n\n Ichiro Takekuro, a former vice 
 president of Tokyo Electric Power Co., enters the Tokyo High Court on Nov. 
 2 for the start of the appeal of his not guilty district court ruling. 
 (Pool)\n\n\nThree former Tokyo Electric Power Co. executives again 
 maintained their innocence as proceedings began Nov. 2 at the Tokyo High 
 Court on an appeal of a lower court ruling that absolved the three of 
 negligence in the 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster. \nTsunehisa Katsumata, 
 81, a former TEPCO chairman, Ichiro Takekuro, 75, a former vice president, 
 and Sakae Muto, 71, also a former vice president, were indicted by a 
 prosecution inquest panel in 2016.\nThey were charged with professional 
 negligence resulting in the deaths of 44 people who were forced to evacuate 
 and the injuries of others after the triple meltdown at the Fukushima No. 1 
 nuclear power plant in 2011.\nHowever, the Tokyo District Court in 2019 
 found the three not guilty on grounds they could not have predicted that a 
 gigantic tsunami would inundate the plant and cut off all electricity to 
 cool the reactors.\nIn their opening statement on Nov. 2 at the Tokyo High 
 Court, the lawyers designated as the prosecutors in the appeals case argued 
 that the district court ruling should be overturned because the executives 
 could have foreseen a tsunami could swamp the plant based on the long-term 
 earthquake forecast made by a government panel.\nThe two main issues in 
 question in the case are whether the executives could have foreseen the 
 tsunami and whether they took the necessary steps to prevent damage to the 
 nuclear plant from a tsunami.\nThe Tokyo District Court cast doubt on the 
 reliability of the long-term earthquake forecast and said the executives 
 could not have foreseen that a situation would arise calling for the 
 immediate stoppage of operations at the Fukushima plant.\nThe prosecutors 
 at the high court said the district court made a major error by denying the 
 forecast, which was the only official view of the central government, and 
 based on scientific rationale.\nThey also said the district court should 
 have considered if other measures, such as the building of a tide 
 embankment, could have prevented damage to the plant.\nMeanwhile, bereaved 
 family members of the 44 who perished during the evacuation process said 
 they only wanted justice.\nMitsuko Honobe, 90, not only lost her husband, 
 Kinji, but also their home in Namie, Fukushima Prefecture, because it was 
 located in the no-entry zone and later destroyed. She now lives alone in an 
 evacuation center in Iwaki, Fukushima Prefecture.\n“I don’t know how 
 much longer I can go on living,” Mitsuko said. “I want to hear a 
 verdict as soon as possible and see the former executives atone for their 
 crimes.”\nKinji was an inpatient at Futaba Hospital when the triple 
 meltdown occurred. The hospital was located about 4.5 kilometers from the 
 Fukushima plant.\nMitsuko and a grandchild visited Kinji at the hospital on 
 the morning of March 11, 2011. When she said she would come again, he 
 nodded.\nThat was the last time she would see her husband alive.\nKinji was 
 transported by a Self-Defense Forces bus on March 14, 2011, from Futaba 
 Hospital, but the high radiation levels around the Fukushima plant meant a 
 roundabout route had to be taken to evacuate. That meant it took more than 
 10 hours to reach Iwaki, Fukushima Prefecture.\nKinji also could not 
 receive treatment, such as an IV drip, during the transport. He died at an 
 Iwaki senior high school gymnasium on March 15, 2011.\n“If measures 
 against tsunami had been taken, my husband would still be alive today,” 
 Mitsuko said. “Since a number of lives were taken, I was not convinced by 
 (the district court) not guilty verdict. I want the court to recognize the 
 responsibility of the former executives.”\n(This article was written by 
 Eri Niiya and Keiji Iijima.)\n\nJapan PM says Fukushima wastewater release 
 can't be delayed 
 https://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/world/2021/10/683_317177.htmlPosted : 
 2021-10-18 10:38Updated : 2021-10-18 10:38\n\nJapanese Prime Minister Fumio 
 Kishida speaks during a news conference at the prime minister's official 
 residence, Tokyo, Oct. 14. AP-Yonhap\n\nJapan's new prime minister on 
 Sunday said the planned mass disposal of wastewater stored at the 
 tsunami-wrecked Fukushima nuclear plant cannot be delayed, despite concerns 
 from local residents.\n\nSpeaking at his first visit to the facility since 
 taking office, Fumio Kishida said his government would work to reassure 
 residents nearby the plant about the technical safety of the wastewater 
 disposal project.\n\nThe Fukushima Daiichi plant suffered a triple meltdown 
 in 2011 following a massive earthquake and tsunami.\n\nKishida's brief tour 
 of the facility by its operator, Tokyo Electric Power Company Holdings, 
 focused on the ongoing decommissioning of the plant, and the massive amount 
 of treated but still radioactive water stored there.\n\n''I felt strongly 
 that the water issue is a crucial one that should not be pushed back,'' 
 Kishida told reporters after the tour.\n\nThe government and TEPCO 
 announced plans in April to start releasing the water into the Pacific 
 Ocean in the spring of 2023 over the span of decades. \n\nThe plan has been 
 fiercely opposed by fishermen, residents and Japan's neighbors, including 
 China and South Korea.\n\n\nIn this Feb. 27 file photo, nuclear reactors of 
 No. 5, center left, and 6 are seen with tanks storing water, which was 
 treated but still radioactive, at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant 
 in Okuma town, Fukushima prefecture, Japan. AP-Yonhap\n\nContaminated 
 cooling water has continued to leak from the damaged reactors since the 
 disaster. The water has been pumped up from basements and stored in about 
 1,000 tanks which the operator says will reach their capacity late next 
 year.\n\n-- \n https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2021/11/08/18846190.php
SUMMARY:Rally At SF Japanese Consulate: No Dumping Of Radioactive Water In Pacific From Fukushima!
LOCATION:San Francisco Japanese Consulate\n275 Battery St/California\nSan Francisco
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2021/11/08/18846190.php
DTSTART:20211111T230000Z
DTEND:20211112T000000Z
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