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Dołączył: 29 Lis 2010
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Wysłany: Śro 17:22, 06 Kwi 2011 |
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Health Ministry spokesman Taku Ohara said the cesium was found in a cow massacred March 15 more than 40 miles (70 kilometers) from the plant. It had a total cesium class of 510 becquerels per kilogram. The limit is 500.
Some frustrated evacuees closer to the plant had begun trickling back to collect belongings and check on their homes, but officials in Fukushima prefecture posted omens at evacuation centers telling them not to go back for any cause.
French, American and international experts even a robot are either in Japan or on their direction, and French President Nicholas Sarkozy visited Tokyo on Thursday to meet with the prime minister and show solidarity.
A TEPCO spokesman said Thursday that radioactive contamination in groundwater almost 50 feet (15 meters) under one of 6 reactors had been amounted at 10,000 times the government standard for water by the plant. It was the premier time the utility has loosened statistics for groundwater approach the plant.
Workers are racing to find the source of contaminated water that has been pooling in the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant since the March 11 earthquake and tsunami. The leaks have often forced workers to flee the plant, preventing them from restarting essential cooling systems.
TEPCO officials too said they expect to use a remote-controlled automaton sent by the U.S. among a few days to evaluate areIt’s about time high radiation. They are too setting up a panel of Japanese and American nuclear specialists and U.S. naval personnel to residence the emergency.
Officials from Tokyo Electric Power Co., the worker of the plant, said they greet the help.
"There is not only a risk that you may be contaminated, but also that you could contaminate others in the evacuation centers when you return," the warnings said. "The citizen government is immediately considering if to allow terse return visits, so amuse bear with us."
"The value of water is enormous, and we need anyone knowledge obtainable," said nuclear safety agent lecturer Hidehiko Nishiyama.
Tens of thousands of people have been superseded by the tsunami and magnitude-9.0 earthquake. Some saw their homes devastated by the wall of water, while others have been arrayed to depart if they live 12 miles (20 meters) from the plant. Authorities have recommended that human who live 20 miles (30 kilometers) from the plant might absence to evacuate too because of the lack of services in that place.
On Friday, the government said it planned more tests on a cow slaughtered for meat that had quite slightly elevated levels of cesium, another radioactive particle. Officials tensioned that the pork was never put on the mall. Contamination has yet been found in vegetables and raw breast near the plant.
Radioactive cesium tin create up in the body and high levels are thought to be a risk for assorted cancers. Still, researchers who studied Chernobyl could not find one addition in cancers that might be correlated to cesium.
"U.S. nuclear plants aren't by the ocean, diverse Japanese ones, so we calculate the French may be proficient to help us more than the Americans," said TEPCO manager Teruaki Kobayashi.
Experts from French nuclear gigantic Areva, which supplied fuel to the plant, are helping diagram out how to dispose of the polluted water that has begun leaking into the ground and the sea.
TOKYO, Japan Japan is increasingly turning to other countries for help for it skirmishes to stabilize its tsunami-stricken nuclear plant and stop radiation drips that are complicating exertions to retrieve the bodies of some of the thousands swept away at the towering wave.
TEPCO did not instantly unravel the health hazards if that water were to obtain into the surroundings or say if that was a potentiality, though spokesman Naoyuki Matsumo said the drinking water supply has no been affected. Still, hoisted levels of iodine-131,[link widoczny dla zalogowanych], a radioactive material that decays quickly, were dissimilar sign that radiation continues to leak at the plant.
"We are not a supplier only for merry days," CEO Anne Lauvergeon told reporters in Tokyo on Thursday. "We are mainly also there when things transform complicated."
It is still found in the taint of Germany, Austria and France 25 years later Chernobyl and is found in wild boar in Germany, making the pigs off-limits for dining in numerous cases. The limit Germany has set for cesium in wild boars is 600 becquerels per kilogram.
In Japan, the radiation has forced police officers trying to recover the die from the evacuation district to don white hazmat suits and radiation monitors. Officials trust more than 19,000 people died, but at present only almost 11,000 bodies have been found. Local media estimate that hundreds of corpses remain.
"We detect bodies everywhere in cars, in rivers, under [link widoczny dla zalogowanych]ris and in streets," a police lawful from the hard-hit Fukushima prefecture said Thursday. He spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to reporters.
In the small coastal city of Miyako, many people still have no motif what occurred to their relatives. Residents watched intently Thursday as a firefighter in a boat and two tractors cleared the bay of rubble, portion of cleanup efforts under way by hundreds of miles (kilometers) of Japan's northeastern seaside.
Giant tractors and dump trucks removed roads and arranged [link widoczny dla zalogowanych]ris into giant piles. Huge barges with onboard cranes docked offshore and scooped up wreckage in the shallow bays.
"I lost 3 grandchildren," says Isamu Aneishi,[link widoczny dla zalogowanych], 69, who sat on a record for hours and watched the men search the gulf.
A vacant lot outdoor Miyako has been turned into a car graveyard, with hundreds of wrecked conveyances from along the zone deposited in neat rows. Some looked ready to be driven away, while others were tiny more than mangled heaps of metal. Many were apparent with red spray paint, indicating bodies had been found inside, and some still had keys in the ignition. Residents hiked up and down the rows looking for their cars.
"This is my third time coming here," said Yasuhiro Ichihashi, 42, who watched his car get swept out of the parking lot at his factory from high ground. "They keep joining more cars every day, so I come back to check."
Meanwhile, at the nuclear plant 140 miles (220 kilometers) northeast of Tokyo, workmen work inside in shifts and are often forced to turn back because radiation levels are too lofty.
They have been lauded as heroes, but Kazuma Yokota, head of the Fukushima local bureau Japan's Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency, said he saw them alive under coarse conditions during a recent inspection visit. They got only two meals a day and equitable one blanket each while it was time to sleep.
"They slumber above the ground, inside a session room, alternatively even in the hallway alternatively in front of a lavatory. That's where they sleep, with merely 1 carpet each to wrap themselves approximately," he told a te[link widoczny dla zalogowanych]ed news conference. Nishiyama said TEPCO namely going to cultivate the conditions.
Sarkozy, the first major international governor to visit since the catastrophe, complimented the work creature done at the plant.
"Every picture I have looked is truly, actually agitating, and I am actually impressed by the workers in Fukushima who work at the nuclear plant with bravery," he said before meeting with Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan.
After the appointment, he urged the globe to learn from Japan's crisis and suggested that the Group of 20 countries set worldwide nuclear safety standards.
"It's entirely eccentric that these international safety norms don't exist," Sarkozy said. The International Atomic Energy Agency does have standards, but nations are not bound by them.
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Associated Press writers Eric Talmadge in Fukushima, Jay Alabaster in Miyako and Shino Yuasa in Tokyo endowed to this report.
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