Wednesday, April 13, 2016

FUK-U-SHIMA: Japan Prepares For Release Of Tritium From Fukushima Plant Into The Pacific Ocean - The Radioactive Substance Could Pose SEVERE HEALTH RISKS, Prolonged Exposure Increases Occurrence Of CANCER; Release Could DEVASTATE Local Fisheries!

In this Feb 10 file photo, a worker, wearing protective suits and masks, takes notes in front of storage tanks for radioactive
water at the tsunami-crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant. Toru Hanai/Pool Photo via AP

April 13, 2016 - JAPAN - To dump or not to dump a little-discussed substance is the question brewing in Japan as it grapples with the aftermath of the nuclear catastrophe in Fukushima five years ago. The substance is tritium.

The radioactive material is nearly impossible to remove from the huge quantities of water used to cool melted-down reactors at the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant, which was wrecked by the massive tsunami in northeastern Japan in March 2011.

The water is still accumulating since 300 tons are needed every day to keep the reactors chilled. Some is leaking into the ocean.

Huge tanks lined up around the plant, at last count 1,000 of them, each hold hundreds of tons of water that have been cleansed of radioactive cesium and strontium but not of tritium.

Ridding water of tritium has been carried out in laboratories. But it’s an effort that would be extremely costly at the scale required for the Fukushima plant, which sits on the Pacific coast. Many scientists argue it isn’t worth it and say the risks of dumping the tritium-laced water into the sea are minimal.

Their calls to simply release the water into the Pacific Ocean are alarming many in Japan and elsewhere.

Rosa Yang, a nuclear expert at the Electric Power Research Institute, based in Palo Alto, California, who advises Japan on decommissioning reactors, believes the public angst is uncalled for. She says a Japanese government official should simply get up in public and drink water from one of the tanks to convince people it’s safe.

But the line between safe and unsafe radiation is murky, and children are more susceptible to radiation-linked illness. Tritium goes directly into soft tissues and organs of the human body, potentially increasing the risks of cancer and other sicknesses.

“Any exposure to tritium radiation could pose some health risk. This risk increases with prolonged exposure, and health risks include increased occurrence of cancer,” said Robert Daguillard, a spokesman for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

The agency is trying to minimize the tritium from U.S. nuclear facilities that escapes into drinking water.

Right after the March 2011 disaster, many in Japan panicked, some even moving overseas although they lived hundreds of miles (kilometers) away from the Fukushima no-go zone. By now, concern has settled to the extent that some worry the lessons from the disaster are being forgotten.

Tritium may be the least of Japan’s worries. Much hazardous work remains to keep the plant stabilized, and new technology is needed for decommissioning the plant’s reactors and containing massive radioactive contamination.

The ranks of Japan’s anti-nuclear activists have been growing since the March 2011 accident, and many oppose releasing water with tritium into the sea. They argue that even if tritium’s radiation is weaker than strontium or cesium, it should be removed, and that good methods should be devised to do that.

Japan’s fisheries organization has repeatedly expressed concerns over the issue. News of a release of the water could devastate local fisheries just as communities in northeastern Japan struggle to recover from the 2011 disasters.

An isotope of hydrogen, or radioactive hydrogen, tritium exists in water form, and so like water can evaporate, although it is not known how much tritium escaped into the atmosphere from Fukushima as gas from explosions.

The amount of tritium in the contaminated water stored at Fukushima Dai-ichi is estimated at 3.4 peta becquerels, or 34 with a mind-boggling 14 zeros after it.

But theoretically collected in one place, it would amount to just 57 milliliters, or about the amount of liquid in a couple of espresso cups - a minuscule quantity in the overall masses of water.

To illustrate that point, Shunichi Tanaka, chairman of the Nuclear Regulation Authority, showed reporters a small bottle half-filled with blue water that was the equivalent of 57 milliliters.

Public distrust is running so high after the Fukushima accident that Tokyo Electric Power Co, or TEPCO, the utility that operates the Fukushima plant and oversees its decommissioning, has mostly kept quiet about the tritium, pending a political decision on releasing the water.

Privately, they say it will have to be released, but they can’t say that outright.

What will be released from Fukushima will be well below the global standard allowed for tritium in the water, say Tanaka and others favoring its release, which is likely to come gradually later this year, not all at once.

Proponents of releasing the tritium water argue that tritium already is in the natural environment, coming from the sun and from water containing tritium that is routinely released at nuclear plants around the world.

“Tritium is so weak in its radioactivity it won’t penetrate plastic wrapping,” said Tanaka. - Japan Today.





DELUGE: Record Breaking Rainfall Causes Flash Floods In Las Vegas - Over A Hundred Road Crashes!

Flooding in Las Vegas.

April 13, 2016 - NEVADA, UNITED STATES - Record-breaking rain drenched Las Vegas throughout the weekend, causing flooding and more than a hundred crashes on the roads.

Flash flood warnings were issued Saturday, when 0.81 inch of rain was recorded at the National Weather Service's official measuring site at McCarran International Airport in Las Vegas. That handily beat Sin City's previous record for the day, which was set at 0.17 inch in 1943, said Andrew Gorelow, a meteorologist.

It now also ranks as the third-highest total amount of rain ever for a single day for the month of April.

"April is one of our driest months of the year," Gorelow said. "We only average 0.15 (inch) for the average month (total)."

Sunday also broke the day's record with 0.14 inch of rain, washing out the previous record of 0.13 inch set in 1943.

Gorelow said the rain was caused by a low pressure system that had picked up a lot of moisture on the way in from Southern California.


WATCH: Flooding in Las Vegas.




There's a 40 percent chance of more showers Monday after 11 a.m. before it clears out by Tuesday and temperatures return to the upper 70s.

That will be a welcome reprieve for emergency crews who slogged through the weekend.

The Las Vegas Sun reports that the Nevada Highway Patrol responded to 127 crashes, including seven hit-and-run incidents Saturday.

Most were caused by a single vehicle hydroplaning
.

A total of 43 injuries and 77 cases of property damage were noted.

The Clark County Fire Department also rescued seven people caught in the flooding Saturday.

Four adults believed to be homeless were rescued near the washes along Dean Martin Drive, including one man south of Tropicana Avenue and three others found north of Flamingo Road.

One was hospitalized for a minor leg injury.

Two adults and an infant child were also rescued from their vehicles stuck in standing water just east of the Strip.

The Vegas-based fire department also responded to flooding in Warm Springs, about 200 miles north, to assist a mobile home area.

People in four houses found themselves surrounded by flood water for about four hours Saturday evening until the water receded to safer levels around 8 p.m.

The homes were raised so no significant damage was reported.

"They had to sit and watch the water go by," said Larry Haydu, Clark County's assistant fire chief.

In northern Nevada, a recent bout of rainfall brought better news.

Lake Tahoe's water level hit its natural rim for the first time in 10 months, with National Weather Service reporting that the lake is now over its rim by half an inch.

The lake last reached its natural rim in June 2015. Tahoe hasn't spilled over into the Truckee River since before October 2014.

Lake Tahoe had hit a two-year low this past winter. - Las Vegas Now.






EXTREME WEATHER ANOMALIES: Unprecedented Heatwave Continues In India - Over 100 People Killed With Temperatures Over 115 Degrees Fahrenheit (46°C)!

A man drinks water to cool off during a hot day as temperatures soared above 110 degrees on April 10, 2016 in Allahabad, India. © Sipa via AP Images

April 13, 2016 - INDIA - Dozens of deaths have been reported in India as temperatures soared to 115 degrees (46°C) in recent days.

The intense heat has come earlier and is more widespread than normal, according to BBC.com. Triple-digit temperatures have been reported all over the country's southern states as west winds prevail in areas like Bhubaneswar and Kolkata, preventing sea breezes from relieving coastal cities from stifling heat along the Bay of Bengal, the report added.

The heat wave was responsible for at least 111 deaths through Saturday in the states of Telangana and Andhra Pradesh, Xinhua reported. A year ago, a heat wave killed some 2,300 people in those two states, Time.com said.

On Monday, the eastern Indian city of Bhubaneswar reported a high temperature of 114.5 degrees, clinching its hottest April day on record, BBC.com also reported. Many other cities in eastern India have been above 100 degrees for many consecutive days, the report added.

These temperatures are well above early-April averages for India, according to Xinhua, and local officials said they've made drinking water booths available in addition to other measures intended to keep residents safe from the heat.

The nation's monsoon season generally lasts from June through September, according to NOAA, and there's usually a period of dry, hot weather before it begins.

This year, the dry heat started earlier than expected, and when paired with parched ground dried out by a disappointing 2015 monsoon season, the warmth is even more intense, BBC.com added.

There's little relief coming in the next week. According to weather.com meteorologist Chris Dolce, much of India will continue to see high temperatures above 100 degrees in the coming days. - Weather Channel.






EXTREME WEATHER ANOMALIES: Unprecedented Heatwave Continues In India - Over 100 People Killed With Temperatures Over 115 Degrees Fahrenheit (46°C)!