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DESCRIPTION:2/13/24 Fukushima Action In SF 13 Years After The Meltdowns-Stop Dumping 
 Tritium Into The Pacific Ocean\n\n\nOn The 13th Anniversary Of The 
 Fukushima NUKE Disaster\n\nDon’t Nuke the Pacific Ocean! Protect Our 
 Oceans & Stop The Nukes\n\nOn the 13th anniversary of the man made disaster 
 in Fukushima and the catastrophe continues. Over 800 pounds of radioactive 
 waste continues to reside in the broken nuclear plants and it may be 30 
 years before they are removed and the site is “decontaminated”. The 
 previous Prime Minister Abe lied to the International Olympics Committee 
 that it had already been “decontaminated” but this obviously not the 
 case.\n\nThe Japanese government and TEPCO  despite opposition of people in 
 Japan, Asia and around the world is also releasing millions of tons of 
 tritium into the Pacific Ocean. This is contaminating our oceans and the 
 government is not only going forward but is opening more NUKE Plants but is 
 remilitarizing Japan and is sending armaments around the world.\n\nThe 
 Japanese Kashida government is working with the US and Korea to militarize 
 Asia and surround China to prepare for war. They are continuing to build 
 and expand US military bases in Okinawa and threatening the people of Japan 
 with the dangerous Osprey helicopters that fly in the middle of major 
 cities and in Okinawa ignoring the dangers to the people of Japan and 
 Okinawa.\n\nLet us join together to demand the halt to release of tritium 
 water from Fukushima, No restarting NUKE plants and opposing  US Korea war 
 militarization in Asia.\n\nDate and Time : Monday March 11, 2024  12:00 pm 
 Noon \nSF Japanese Consulate, 275 Battery St, SF (a few blocks from BART 
 Embacadero station)\nPlease Bring Signs, Banners and Instruments\n\n　No 
 Nukes Action,　Jun 11th Global Day of 
 Action\n\nhttp://nonukesaction.wordpress.com/\n\n1st drone probe of melted 
 fuel inside Fukushima reactor halted-About 880 tons of highly radioactive 
 melted nuclear fuel remain inside the three damaged 
 reactors.\n\nhttps://www.asahi.com/ajw/articles/15183719\nREUTERS\nMarch 1, 
 2024 at 07:50 JST\n\nPhoto_Illutration.jpeg\n\nJapanese authorities said 
 they were forced to abandon plans Thursday to send in drones for a second 
 day to probe one of the damaged reactors at the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear 
 power plant because of equipment failure.\n\nTwo drones successfully flew 
 inside the reactor for the first time on Wednesday, to examine some of the 
 molten fuel debris and other damages in areas where earlier robots failed 
 to reach. Thursday's development delayed the probe further and underscored 
 the difficulty of the task.\n\nThe government and TEPCO plan to remove the 
 massive amount of fatally radioactive melted nuclear fuel that remains 
 inside each reactor since a magnitude 9.0 quake and tsunami in March 2011 
 destroyed the plant’s power supply and cooling systems, causing a triple 
 meltdown.\n\nThe daunting decommissioning process has already been delayed 
 for years and mired by technical hurdles and a lack of data.\n\nTEPCO had 
 prepared since July to fly a fleet of four drones, one at a time, inside 
 the hardest-hit No. 1 reactor's primary containment vessel, in which most 
 of the fuel in the core melted and fell to the concrete bottom, experts 
 say.\n\nThe first two drones Wednesday captured images showing enough space 
 for the other two to reach the particular area that TEPCO's experts wanted 
 to examine.\n\nThursday's flights were canceled after a snake-shaped 
 crawling robot, designed to transmit data from a drone's high-definition 
 camera to the control room, stalled before reaching a targeted position, 
 said TEPCO spokesperson Kenichi Takahara.\n\nThe cause of its failure is 
 under investigation, Takahara said without elaborating or saying when the 
 next drone flight might take place.\n\nFukushima No. 1 plant 
 decommissioning chief Akira Ono was cautiously optimistic.\n\n“We should 
 not force it because it could cause bigger trouble for our future work," he 
 said "We just want to be careful."\n\nOn Wednesday, the first of what was 
 supposed to be a two-day project, the two drones inspected the area around 
 the exterior of the main structural support in the vessel, called the 
 pedestal. It is located directly under the reactor’s core. Officials 
 hoped to film the core’s bottom to find out how overheated fuel dripped 
 there in 2011.\n\nTEPCO officials said they plan to use the new data to 
 develop technology for future probes as well as a process to remove the 
 melted fuel from the reactor.\n\nAbout 880 tons of highly radioactive 
 melted nuclear fuel remain inside the three damaged reactors. Critics say 
 the 30- to 40-year cleanup target set by the government and TEPCO is overly 
 optimistic. The damage in each reactor is different, and plans need to 
 accommodate their conditions.\n\nTEPCO has sent a number of probes — 
 including a crawling robot and an underwater vehicle — inside each 
 reactor but was hindered by debris, high radiation and the inability to 
 navigate through the rubble, though they were able to gather some data. In 
 2015, the first robot to go inside got stuck on a grate.\nU.S. Seeks to 
 Boost Nuclear Power After Decades of Inertia\nMeasures moving through 
 Congress to encourage new reactors are receiving broad bipartisan support, 
 as lawmakers embrace a once-contentious 
 technology.\n\n\nhttps://www.nytimes.com/2024/03/01/climate/nuclear-power-legislation-congress.html\n\nU.S. 
 Seeks to Boost Nuclear Power After Decades of Inertia\nMeasures moving 
 through Congress to encourage new reactors are receiving broad bipartisan 
 support, as lawmakers embrace a once-contentious technology.\n\n\nClouds of 
 white smoke billow from one of two large structures inside the fenced-off 
 campus of smaller concrete buildings.\nThe Vogtle nuclear power plant in 
 Georgia, whose two new reactors cost $35 billion, nearly double the initial 
 estimates.Credit...Kendrick Brinson for The New York Times\n\nBy Brad 
 Plumer\nReporting from Washington\n\nMarch 1, 2024\nUpdated 6:11 p.m. 
 ET\nThe House this week overwhelmingly passed legislation meant to speed up 
 the development of a new generation of nuclear power plants, the latest 
 sign that a once-contentious source of energy is now attracting broad 
 political support in Washington.\n\nThe 365-to-36 vote on Wednesday 
 reflected the bipartisan nature of the bill, known as the Atomic Energy 
 Advancement Act. It received backing from Democrats who support nuclear 
 power because it does not emit greenhouse gases and can generate 
 electricity 24 hours a day to supplement solar and wind power. It also 
 received support from Republicans who have downplayed the risks of climate 
 change but who say that nuclear power could bolster the nation’s economy 
 and energy security.\n\n“It’s been fascinating to see how bipartisan 
 advanced nuclear power has become,” said Joshua Freed, who leads the 
 climate and energy program at Third Way, a center-left think tank. “This 
 is not an issue where there’s some big partisan or ideological 
 divide.”\n\nThe bill would direct the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, 
 which oversees the nation’s nuclear power plants, to streamline its 
 processes for approving new reactor designs. The legislation, which is 
 backed by the nuclear industry, would also increase hiring at the 
 commission, reduce fees for applicants, establish financial prizes for 
 novel types of reactors and encourage the development of nuclear power at 
 the sites of retiring coal plants.\n\nTogether, the changes would amount to 
 “the most significant update to nuclear energy policy in the United 
 States in over a generation,” said Representative Jeff Duncan, Republican 
 of South Carolina, a lead sponsor of the bill.\n\nThe Biden 
 Administration’s Environmental Agenda\nFuel Ban: The Biden administration 
 will permanently lift a ban on summertime sales of higher-ethanol gasoline 
 blends in eight states starting in 2025, in response to a request from 
 Midwestern governors.\nBiden’s Climate Law: A year and a half after 
 President Biden signed into law a sweeping bill to tackle climate change, 
 an analysis of the legislation’s effects has found that electric vehicles 
 are booming as expected but renewable power isn’t growing as quickly as 
 hoped.\nTailpipe Emissions: In an election-year concession to automakers 
 and labor unions, the Biden administration intends to relax limits on 
 tailpipe emissions that are designed to get Americans to switch from 
 gas-powered cars to electric vehicles.\nSteel Merger: President Biden is 
 facing new pressure to block Nippon Steel’s acquisition of the iconic 
 manufacturer U.S. Steel, from environmental groups that say the tie-up 
 would set back America’s efforts to curb climate change.\nIn the Senate, 
 Republicans and Democrats have written their own legislation to promote 
 nuclear power. The two chambers are expected to discuss how to reconcile 
 their differences in the coming months, but final passage is not assured, 
 particularly with so many other spending bills still in limbo.\n\n“If 
 Congress was functioning well, this is one of those bills you’d expect to 
 sail through,” said Mr. Freed.\n\nNuclear power currently generates 18 
 percent of the nation’s electricity, but only three reactors have been 
 completed in the United States since 1996. Although some environmentalists 
 remain concerned about radioactive waste and reactor safety, the biggest 
 obstacle facing nuclear power today is cost.\n\nU.S. Bets on Small Nuclear 
 Reactors to Help Fix a Huge Climate Problem\nConventional nuclear plants 
 have become extremely expensive to build, and some electric utilities have 
 gone bankrupt trying. Two recent reactors built at the Vogtle nuclear power 
 plant in Georgia cost $35 billion, double the initial estimates.\n\n\nIn 
 response, nearly a dozen companies are developing a new generation of 
 smaller reactors a fraction of the size of those at Vogtle. The hope is 
 that these reactors would have a smaller upfront price tag, making it less 
 risky for utilities to invest in them. That, in turn, could help the 
 industry start driving down costs by building the same type of reactor 
 again and again.\n\nThe Biden administration has voiced strong support for 
 nuclear power as it seeks to transition the country away from fossil fuels; 
 the Department of Energy has offered billions of dollars to help build 
 advanced reactor demonstration projects in Wyoming and Texas.\n\nBut before 
 a new reactor can be built, its design must be reviewed by the Nuclear 
 Regulatory Commission. Some Democrats and Republicans in Congress have 
 criticized the N.R.C. for being too slow in approving new designs. Many of 
 the regulations that the commission uses, they say, were designed for an 
 older era of reactors and are no longer appropriate for advanced reactors 
 that may be inherently safer.\n\n“Tackling the climate crisis means we 
 must modernize our approach to all clean energy sources, including 
 nuclear,” said Representative Diana DeGette, Democrat of Colorado. 
 “Nuclear energy is not a silver bullet, but if we’re going to get to 
 net zero carbon emissions by 2050, it must be part of the 
 mix.”\n\n\nAmong other changes, the House bill would require the N.R.C. 
 to consider not just reactor safety but also “the potential of nuclear 
 energy to improve the general welfare” and “the benefits of nuclear 
 energy technology to society.”\n\nProponents of this change say it would 
 make the N.R.C. more closely resemble other federal safety agencies like 
 the Food and Drug Administration, which weighs both the risks and benefits 
 of new drugs. In the past, critics say, the N.R.C. has focused too heavily 
 on the risks.\n\nBut that provision updating the N.R.C.’s mission was 
 opposed by three dozen progressive Democrats who voted against the bill and 
 said it could undermine reactor safety. The specific language is not in the 
 Senate’s nuclear bill.\n\nEven if Congress approves new legislation, the 
 nuclear industry faces other challenges. Many utilities remain averse to 
 investing in novel technologies, and reactor developers have a long history 
 of failing to build projects on time and under budget.\n\nLast year, 
 NuScale Power, a nuclear startup, announced it was canceling plans to build 
 six smaller reactors in Idaho. The project, which had received significant 
 federal support and was meant to demonstrate the technology, had already 
 advanced far through the N.R.C. process. But NuScale struggled with rising 
 costs and was ultimately unable to sign up enough customers to buy its 
 power.\n\nBrad Plumer is a Times reporter who covers technology and policy 
 efforts to address global warming. More about Brad Plumer\n\nWhy Japan 
 should stop its Fukushima nuclear wastewater ocean release\n\n\nBy 
 Tatsujiro Suzuki | September 22, 2023\nWater tanks holding contaminated 
 water at Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in Japan. (Credit: 
 IAEA)\n\n\nOn August 24, 2023, Japanese electric utility holding company 
 Tokyo Electric Power Co. (TEPCO) announced that it has started discharging 
 so-called “treated” and “diluted” water from the damaged Fukushima 
 Daiichi nuclear power plant into the Pacific Ocean. This is not the end of 
 controversy over the release of “treated water.” Rather, it may be the 
 beginning of what might be a long-lasting struggle where science meets 
 politics and lack of public trust, both inside and outside of Japan.\n\nTo 
 understand TEPCO’s decision and why this operation caused such a big 
 controversy, one must explain what this “treated water” being released 
 is, the scientific debates over this operation, and the underlying social 
 and political issues.\n\n“Treated” or “contaminated” water? When 
 underground water, including rainfall, passes through the damaged Fukushima 
 Daiichi reactor site and is used to cool the melted fuel debris inside the 
 reactors, it becomes contaminated with oil as well as many harmful 
 radioactive nuclides, including cesium and strontium. Generation of 
 “contaminated water” has been gradually declining due to various 
 measures, such as pumping up water by sub-drains and the construction of 
 impermeable, land-side frozen walls (see Figure 1). According to TEPCO, 
 contaminated water generation declined from 540 cubic meters (m3) per day 
 in 2014 to 90 m3 per day in 2022.\n\ntive substances that contaminate the 
 water is now being removed by multi-nuclide removal equipment called 
 “advanced liquid processing systems” (ALPS)—an unfortunate name given 
 that the Alps mountain range in Europe is home to some of the cleanest 
 freshwater in the world. After the removal of most radioactive 
 substances—except for tritium, which cannot be removed by the ALPS 
 system—treated water is then stored in tanks (see Figure 2). The ALPS 
 process is supposed to reduce the concentration of radionuclides, except 
 tritium, to levels below regulatory standards. However, according to 
 TEPCO’s data, as of March 31, 2023, of the total of about 1.3 million m3 
 of treated water, only about a third satisfied regulatory standards and the 
 other two-thirds needed to be re-purified.\n\nFigure 2. Depiction of the 
 so-called Alps process treating contaminated water at the Fukushima Daichi 
 nuclear power plant. (Credit: IAEA)\nFigure 2. Depiction of the so-called 
 Alps process treating contaminated water at the Fukushima Daichi nuclear 
 power plant. (Credit: IAEA)\nIt can’t be denied that “treated water” 
 is not as pure as “tritiated water” because treated water may still 
 contain other radioactive nuclides, albeit in small proportions. But the 
 comparison of Fukushima’s “treated water” with other “tritiated 
 water” released during the normal operation of other nuclear power plants 
 can be misleading because the latter is not contaminated with other 
 radioactive nuclides.\n\nTEPCO says it re-purifies the “treated water” 
 to make sure the water satisfies regulatory standards before it is released 
 to the sea. To do that, the company’s plan is to dilute “treated 
 water” with large amounts of sea water to reach a concentration of 
 tritium of 190 Becquerel (Bq) per liter, which is much lower than the 
 allowed concentration of 1,500 Bq per liter.\n\nThe first discharge 
 happened over a period of 17 days and involved a total of 7,800 tons of 
 treated water being released to the sea. TEPCO plans to discharge treated 
 water three more times in 2023, and the total tritium discharge by the end 
 of March 2024 is expected to reach about 5 trillion Bq. This is much lower 
 than the annual discharge target of 22 trillion Bq set before the Fukushima 
 accident.\n\nIn addition to tritium, TEPCO must report that the 
 concentration of all other radionuclides is below regulatory standards. To 
 do this, TEPCO uses a simplified index, which corresponds to the sum of 
 ratios of the concentration of each radioactive nuclides (excluding 
 tritium) compared to regulatory standards. If this ratio is below one, it 
 means the concentration of other radionuclides is below regulatory 
 standards. TEPCO reported that the water being discharged during the first 
 period was measured to have an index of 0.28, therefore satisfying 
 regulatory standards. TEPCO said the operation may last at least 30 years 
 to discharge all “treated water.”\n\nScientific debate. The Japanese 
 government and TEPCO argue that the whole operation satisfies both Japanese 
 regulatory standards and international safety standards. Besides, the 
 Japanese government officially asked the International Atomic Energy Agency 
 (IAEA) to conduct an independent review of the safety of the ALPS treated 
 water release. On July 4, 2023, the IAEA published its “comprehensive 
 report,” which concluded that the ALPS process is “consistent with 
 relevant international safety standards” and that “the discharge of the 
 treated water [into the sea], as currently planned by Tepco, will have a 
 negligible radiological impact on people and the 
 environment.”\n\n\nCongress torpedoes a Biden nominee and casts doubt on 
 nuclear safety\nBut there are scientific arguments against TEPCO’s 
 release plan.\n\nThe Pacific Island Forum expressed its concern in a 
 statement in January 2023 about whether current international standards are 
 adequate to handle the unprecedented case of the Fukushima Daiichi 
 tritiated water release. Based on a report from an independent expert panel 
 established by the forum, TEPCO’s guideline compliance plan does not 
 appear to include the transboundary implications of IAEA’s guidance in 
 its General Safety Guide No. 8 (GSG-8), which requires that the benefits of 
 a given process outweigh the harms for individuals and societies.\n\nThe 
 experts also recommended the alternative method of using the treated water 
 to manufacture concrete for the construction industry instead of releasing 
 it to the sea. By immobilizing the radionuclides in a material, this 
 alternative would imply a lower potential for human contact and would avoid 
 transboundary impacts. Quoted in a National Geographic article, one of the 
 panel members, Robert Richmond, director of the Kewalo Marine Laboratory of 
 the University of Hawaii, summarizes well the uncertainty surrounding the 
 impacts of TEPCO’s water release plan on the ocean environment: “It is 
 a trans-boundary and trans-generational event” and that he does not 
 believe “the release would irreparably destroy the Pacific Ocean but it 
 does not mean we should not be concerned.”\n\nLack of public trust. In 
 addition to scientific debate, TEPCO’s ALPS treated water issue has 
 become more of a social and political controversy. The origin of this 
 debate was the speech given by then-Prime Minister Shinzo Abe before the 
 International Olympic Committee on September 7, 2013, in which he referred 
 to the city where the 2020 Summer Olympics were to be held by saying: 
 “Some may have concerns about Fukushima. Let me assure you, the situation 
 is under control. It has never done and will never do any damage to 
 Tokyo.” After Abe’s speech, the government took over the responsibility 
 for the management of the contaminated water, while TEPCO is still 
 responsible for all decommissioning operations at the Fukushima Daiichi 
 nuclear power plant. Since then, all policy decisions about the treated 
 water have been made by the Japanese government, with TEPCO simply 
 following the government, which has complicated the decision-making 
 process.\n\nIn August 2015, the Japanese government and TEPCO promised to 
 the local fishermen that they “will not implement any disposal without 
 understanding of interested parties.” The government even established a 
 committee consisting of experts from a local university to discuss 
 technical options and held meetings with local citizens for several years 
 to build trust with the local communities. So, when the decision was made 
 by former Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga in August 2021 to release the 
 “treated water” to the sea, this felt like a treachery for the local 
 fishermen and many other interested parties. In a June 2023 statement 
 opposing the planned discharge of treated water, the head of Japan’s 
 national fisheries cooperatives Masanobu Sakamoto said: “We cannot 
 support the government’s stance that an ocean release is the only 
 solution. … Whether to release the water into the sea or not is a 
 government decision, and in that case we want the government to fully take 
 responsibility.”\n\nThe subsequent lack of public trust in TEPCO and 
 Japan’s Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry has been one of the major 
 reasons for this continued controversy. In August 2018, a news 
 investigation revealed that the “tritiated water” still contained other 
 radioactive nuclides after treatment, which were above regulatory 
 standards—a result that was not consistent with the explanation given by 
 TEPCO. The justification then advanced by the ministry and TEPCO on the 
 need and timing for the water discharge was no more convincing: They 
 claimed that there would be a need for storage space once the melted fuel 
 debris would be taken out of the reactors and that, without discharge now, 
 the plant’s storage area would be filled soon. But, the timing—and even 
 the feasibility—of removing the fuel debris is not known at all. Besides, 
 there are potential storage space available at the nearby Fukushima Daini 
 nuclear power plant.\n\nRELATED:\nLessons from Zaporizhzhia: How to protect 
 reactors against 'nuclear piracy'\nConcerns have also spread to neighboring 
 countries despite the Japanese government’s efforts to explain its plan. 
 For instance, the South Korean government even sent some of its experts, 
 including senior officials of the South Korean Nuclear Safety and Security 
 Commission. Seemingly reassured after the visit, Yoo Guk-hee, the 
 chairperson of South Korean commission, declared: “[I]f the water release 
 is carried out as planned, the discharge standard and target level (of 
 radiation) would be consistent with international standards”. Still, both 
 fishermen and consumers in South Korea are worried about the impacts of 
 water release from the Fukushima nuclear plant, which led the largest 
 fisheries market to start monitoring the fish’s radioactivity to allay 
 those concerns.\n\nBuilding upon the South Korean experts’ visit, the 
 Japanese government called for a science-based dialogue with the Chinese 
 government, complaining that it continued to describe the Fukushima treated 
 water as “contaminated” water. But the Japanese government’s effort 
 seems not to have been successful, with a spokesperson of the Chinese 
 Foreign Ministry saying that Japan has yet to prove that its planned water 
 discharge is safe and harmless. In August, China decided to ban imports of 
 all seafood products from Japan shortly after Japan started discharging 
 treated water from Fukushima that month. And there seems to be no prospect 
 of reducing tensions between the two countries over this issue.\n\nHow to 
 improve the situation? Several options exist that could help restore public 
 trust in TEPCO’s and the Japanese government’s treated water plan at 
 Fukushima.\n\nFirst, the Japanese government and TEPCO should realize that 
 the management of radioactive wastewater is not a purely scientific and 
 technical issue. Public controversies of this sort cannot be resolved by 
 “science-based” dialogues only. Yes, a scientific dialogue is 
 essential, but it’s not enough. Rather, Fukushima’s treated water is a 
 typical case of “trans-science” using Alvin Weinberg’s term, meaning 
 an issue where “questions which can be asked of science and yet which 
 cannot be answered by science” (Weinberg’s emphasis). TEPCO’s and the 
 Japanese government’s plan also needs a non-scientific approach to the 
 issue and provide additional measures, including an improved 
 decision-making process and a sincere dialogue (not persuasion) with 
 stakeholders.\n\nSecond, to restore public trust and confidence, the 
 government should first stop the water release and task an independent 
 oversight organization which can be trusted by stakeholders. The IAEA 
 review of TEPCO’s plan was helpful at best, but it was not enough, as it 
 only verifies the samples provided by TEPCO for the first discharge but 
 does not review the entire plan which could continue for the next 30 years. 
 In fact, IAEA Director General Rafael Mariano Grossi clarified in the 
 foreword of the agency’s “comprehensive report” that the review was 
 “neither a recommendation nor an endorsement of that (government) 
 policy.” Complete transparency over the entire decision-making process 
 and disclosure of supporting data and information are essential conditions 
 to improve public trust.\n\nThird, TEPCO and the Japanese government should 
 designate the current release operations as part of a “demonstration” 
 program and declare that they will make a final decision about the plan 
 after studies confirm that the release has had no significant impacts on 
 the ocean environment and fish. This would imply that the government stops 
 the release of the treated water, and asks the scientific community to 
 conduct such studies. At the same time, the government could also continue 
 to explore technical alternatives to its plan that may be more attractive 
 to both domestic and international stakeholders. In addition to provide a 
 face-saving opportunity to the Japanese government and TEPCO to justify 
 that they “temporarily” halt the release, it would show that they have 
 sincerely listened to the concerns expressed by the stakeholders.\n\nThe 
 Japanese government and TEPCO clearly have the ability to improve public 
 trust in their handling of the treated water at Fukushima, but this 
 requires them to go beyond their “scientific logic” only.\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2024/03/01/18863721.php
SUMMARY:Fukushima Action in SF 13 Years After the Meltdowns-Stop Dumping Tritium into the Pacific
LOCATION:SF Japanese Consulate, 275 Battery St, SF (a few blocks from BART 
 Embarcadero station)
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2024/03/01/18863721.php
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DTEND:20240311T200000Z
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