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Japan Power

Fukushima's Radiation Is Contained By a Mile-Long Wall of Ice (cnet.com) 121

CNET reports on the massive ice wall created by an "intricate network of small metal pipes, capped off by six-foot-high metal scaffolding." It turns out, coolant is running through the pipes, freezing the soil below and creating an impermeable ice wall that's nearly 100 feet deep and a mile long, encircling the reactors. It's like a smaller-scale subterranean version of the Wall in Game of Thrones, but instead of keeping out White Walkers and wights, this line of defense keeps in a far more realistic danger: radioactive contaminants from melted-down reactors that threaten to spill into the water by Fukushima Daiichi....

The structure, which cost roughly $300 million, paid for by public funds, serves as critical protection, defending the Fukushima area from one of the most radioactive hotspots in the world. While Tokyo Electric Power Co., also known as Tepco, struggles to find a way to remove radioactive material from the facility -- a process the government estimates could take more than four decades -- the more immediate concern is what to do with the contaminated water leaking out from the facility. One of the solutions has been to put up (down?) this underground ice wall, which prevents much of the surrounding groundwater from getting in.

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Fukushima's Radiation Is Contained By a Mile-Long Wall of Ice

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  • by Cyberax ( 705495 ) on Monday March 11, 2019 @04:30AM (#58251128)
    Nope. The wall does exactly nothing. It's basically a part of Kabuki theater that is the whole Fukushima cleanup operation. The reactor is still leaking, but the amount of released radiation is now below the dangerous levels - the hottest isotopes have decayed by now.
    • by mysidia ( 191772 ) on Monday March 11, 2019 @06:08AM (#58251314)

      The "hottest" isotopes are of the LEAST concern at this point -- the ones that remain are still dangerous. The Ice wall is Not even perfectly watertight. The corium will have radioactivity hazardous to humans and the environment for hundreds of years... the water will contact it and become contaminated, and that contamination will spread into the soil and into the oceans and cause massive long-term damage.

      • by sjames ( 1099 )

        The U.S. and Soviet testing of nuclear weapons have released far more radioactive material into the environment. On purpose.

        I'm not claiming it's harmless, but let's keep things in perspective.

        • As you say, the US and Soviet tests were controlled and purposeful.

          The Fukushima event appears to be uncontrolled, at least so far. It's an ongoing, active disaster, much like the Centralia Coal Fire.

          We could have stopped the Centralia fire at any time by diverting the Susquehanna, but every year we've waited has made that a more economically and environmentally destructive option.

          • by sjames ( 1099 )

            Actually, those tests weren't all that controlled. More than one ended in fallout landing on civilians. They had no plan at all to contain or clean up after the blasts. In fact, very little cleanup was done. You can still distinguish wine produced before and after the tests based on analysis of isotopes.

            • A fair point. I meant they were controlled in the sense that they did what they were designed and intended to do; you're certainly right that there was little containment.

              But unless the Fukushima reactors were designed consume more treasure than they ever generated, they are not doing what they were designed to do. They haven't been contained or controlled since the tsunami, and aren't going to be any time soon. They are an ongoing burden on the people who they were supposed to support.

              • by sjames ( 1099 )

                Other than corruption, there's no reason the Japanese government shouldn't bill TEPCO for the lot of it.

      • The "hottest" isotopes are of the LEAST concern at this point -- the ones that remain are still dangerous.

        Not terribly dangerous, really. Frankly, if you released a similar amount of mercury into the area, you'd find MUCH greater health issues...and mercury isn't radioactive at all....

  • The Night King will break free some day, and then we'll see spiders big as hounds!

  • Someone tell the flat earthers.
  • interesting (Score:3, Informative)

    by Tom ( 822 ) on Monday March 11, 2019 @06:19AM (#58251346) Homepage Journal

    so much of the info about Fukushima is clearly tainted by the preferences of those writing.

    I've now read, within 2 days, articles about the current cleanup efforts that

    a) claim they mostly don't work, the area is still dangerous and it will take decades to complete everything.
    b) claim they are a demonstration of 1st world technology keeping things under control, people returning to the area, much of the radiation being cleaned up and the Japanese making impressive progress with robots in the reactor cores as well as completing a total overhaul of all their nuclear reactors to incorporate the lessons learnt from Fukushima.

    So what is true? Probably some of both. But which?

    • by MrKaos ( 858439 )

      So what is true? Probably some of both. But which?

      I think part of the answer to it is in who controls the mineral rights of the two competing energy industries of the world today. Oil and Coal are essentially the Rockefeller's considered to be the wealthiest Americans of all time. Uranium mineral rights are largely held by the English Royal Family and amount to some 35 Trillion dollars.

      That kind of influence must compete to manifest its version of reality amongst the populace through media organizations they both control.

      • Uranium mineral rights are largely held by the English Royal Family and amount to some 35 Trillion dollars.

        Can I get a smoke on that - it must be some strong shit.

        If you'd claimed that the Crown Estate - a very different thing to the Royal Family (hawk, spit) held a lot of U mineral rights, then you could make an argument involving Canadian and Australian deposits. But I think you'd struggle to get that argument by a mineral lawyer from either sovreign government, and the UK certainly doesn't have the ar

        • by MrKaos ( 858439 )

          Uranium mineral rights are largely held by the English Royal Family and amount to some 35 Trillion dollars.

          Can I get a smoke on that - it must be some strong shit.

          If you'd claimed that the Crown Estate - a very different thing to the Royal Family (hawk, spit) held a lot of U mineral rights

          Please forgive my error, but how far down the rabbit hole should I dig? I held the information with as much disbelief until I considered it from the perspective Would those families deceive us as to their true wealth? I came to the conclusion that they would.

          If I can dig out the documentary that this assertion came from I will however what I was doing was offering some conjecture as to how the true situation is distorted by the financial interests that rule the world.

    • There are interesting movies by "Deutsche Welle" done by Heidi Grott.
      The clean up is a complete disaster/fake. They remove the top 10cm - 20cm of soil around every house in a +10m radius (+10m to the size of the property), pack it in sacks and put it around the area into depressions. Land where no house is, is not cleaned. Basically 10m beyond your property it is still contaminated.
      At the moment all the "valleys" around Fukushima are full with plastic sacks. The plan is to cover them with "earth".

      You can fi

    • Both are true, and both are false depending on who is asking for money.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      The official report is true: https://www.nirs.org/wp-conten... [nirs.org]

      The claims that it is going well are just nuclear industry shilling. For example the "impressive" progress with robots amounts to managing to get one close enough to poke at one of the melted down reactors after 8 years.

      The clean up has been failing quite badly. The government screwed up by starting before they had anywhere to put the contaminated material, and by not asking people what they actually wanted from the process. The actual cleaning i

      • by doom ( 14564 )

        The official report is true: https://www.nirs.org/wp-conten... [nirs.org]

        That's the official report from 2012. It's well worth reading, but will not tell you anything about the construction of the "Land-side Impermeable Wall" which was started in 2016.

    • Fukushima status (Score:4, Interesting)

      by doom ( 14564 ) <doom@kzsu.stanford.edu> on Monday March 11, 2019 @01:23PM (#58254298) Homepage Journal

      The short answer: the "ice wall" is helping to reduce water flow, but isn't perfect, and if you want to spin that in a positive way, you can say "look, it's working!", and if you want to go the other way you can say "it's not working!"-- because anything short of perfection is obviously useless.

      A better question would be "how well is it working?" but even better would be "how well does it need to work?".

      I'm inclined to agree with our anti-nuclear friends that this is all a bunch of theater to reassure people (much like that that other "wall" we've been hearing so much about). It would be nice if they were just reassured by declining levels of leakage, and little evidence of health impacts, but that kind of message gets lost in the weeds of statistical chatter and "activist" shouting.

      Fukushimas Ice Wall Not Working [ien.com]:

      A government-commissioned group of experts concluded Wednesday that a costly underground ice wall is only partially effective in reducing the ever-growing amount of contaminated water at Japan's destroyed Fukushima nuclear plant, and said other measures are needed as well.

      The panel agreed that the ice wall helps, but said it doesn't completely solve the problem. Panel members suggested that additional measures be taken to minimize the inflow of rainwater and groundwater, such as repairing roofs and other damaged parts of buildings.

      Martin Fackler at the NYT commented:

      Since the start, the project has attracted its share of skeptics. Some say buried obstacles at the plant, including tunnels that linked the reactor buildings to other structures, will leave holes in the ice wall, making it more like a sieve. Others question why such an exotic solution is necessary when a traditional steel or concrete wall might perform better.

      From the World Health Organization faq [who.int]:

      What are the health implications of the Fukushima Daiichi NPS (FDNPS) nuclear accident?

      [...] UNSCEAR published a report on the levels and effects of radiation exposure due to the accident. In 2015, UNSCEAR released a white paper that evaluates new information in the peer-reviewed literature.

      There were no acute radiation injuries or deaths among the workers or the public due to exposure to radiation resulting from the FDNPS accident.

      Considering the level of estimated doses, the lifetime radiation-induced cancer risks other than thyroid are small and much smaller than the lifetime baseline cancer risks. [...] There have been recent reports about thyroid cancer cases being diagnosed among children exposed to low doses of radioactive iodine as a result of the Fukushima accident. These reports should be interpreted with caution. [...] The substantial number of cases that have already been observed in the Fukushima Health Management Survey have been considered likely due to the sensitivity of the screening rather than to radiation exposure.

      From a global health perspective, the health risks directly related to radiation exposure are low in Japan and extremely low in neighbouring countries and the rest of the world.

      "Bio-concentration" is essentially not happening: Insignificant Environmental and Public Health Risk from Fukushima in North America 8 Years On [fukushimainform.ca]

  • by MrKaos ( 858439 ) on Monday March 11, 2019 @06:38AM (#58251426) Journal

    It's been eight years since this disaster occurred.

    The official report of The Fukushima Nuclear Accident Independent Investigation Commission [nirs.org] contains a wealth of information for anyone interested in the facts regarding this disaster.

    The report is scathing and contains lines such as a multitude of errors and willful negligence that left the Fukushima plant unprepared for the events of March 11 and describes the mindset that supported the negligence behind this disaster.

    It is very difficult to believe that the company that got the world into this situation is the one that will get us out of it. Chernobyl's New Safe Confinement [wikipedia.org] took the combined resources of the European Union to fund and was designed by the British.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Monday March 11, 2019 @08:53AM (#58252092) Homepage Journal

      One of the most damning lines is this:

      "It is thought that the ground motion from the earthquake was strong enough to cause damage to some key safety features"

      Also there is evidence that some of the power loss that was a critical factor in the disaster was not due to the tsunami either:

      "This suggests that at least the loss of emergency power supply A at Unit 1 might not have been caused by flooding."

      In other words there are serious questions about all the other nuclear plants in Japan and anywhere else that might experience seismic shocks. In fact we have to also question terrorism-proofing measures to defend against things like aircraft hitting the reactors, which cause shocks too.

      The report also laments the poor response and clean-up by the government, and how the former residents have been treated.

    • It is very difficult to believe that the company that got the world into this situation is the one that will get us out of it.

      No it's not. The situation was created through errors and negligence that were supported by a closed and punishment free working environment. The company none the less is full of intelligent experts within their field.

      With the eyes of the world looking over them and their local regulators bearing down on them it is perfectly believable that they are among the best placed to get us out of a bad situation, they have more to lose than ever.

      Comparing this to Chernobyl is silly. They are very different accidents

      • by MrKaos ( 858439 )

        It is very difficult to believe that the company that got the world into this situation is the one that will get us out of it.

        No it's not. The situation was created through errors and negligence that were supported by a closed and punishment free working environment. The company none the less is full of intelligent experts within their field.

        Yet here we are with four smouldering reactors. It's stupid and naive to trust them to fix this issue.

        With the eyes of the world looking over them and their local regulators bearing down on them it is perfectly believable that they are among the best placed to get us out of a bad situation, they have more to lose than ever.

        There is one born every minute.

        Comparing this to Chernobyl is silly. They are very different accidents, with very different scenarios, with very different systemic causes, overseen by a very different political environment, in a very different time in history.

        Fukushima proves that the Nuclear industry learned nothing from the Chernobyl disaster.

  • “It's like a smaller-scale subterranean version of the Wall in Game of Thrones”

    It's for razor-sharp technical analysis such as the above that keeps me coming back to slashdot. What's the half-life of the radioactive material until it's rendered safe and will the coolant system last that long?
    • will the coolant system last that long?

      It will last for as long as it's properly maintained.

    • It's not meant to contain radioactive material, it's meant to keep groundwater out while they clean up to lessen the amount of contaminated water they have to deal with. When the cleanup is mostly finished they will turn it off.
      • It is also meant to keep groundwater in. By putting a low permeability seal around the site, they're insuring themselves against future accidents in the clean-up (e.g., a storage/ treatment tank leaking, again). It's a standard technique - relatively expensive but well established. When I was doing my degree in the 1980s, the local sewage processing plant was being re-built which included a similar "ice wall" to prevent previously spilled shit from being flushed into the adjacent sea. Beach sands are not th

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