http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2011/06/07-1

Published on Tuesday, June 7, 2011 by The Guardian/UK

Japan Doubles Fukushima Radiation Leak Estimate

Inquiry launched into nuclear disaster as studies reveal 
contamination more widely spread than first thought

by Justin McCurry

TOKYO - The amount of radiation released by the Fukushima Daiichi 
nuclear power plant in the days after the 11 March tsunami could have 
been more than double that originally estimated by its operator, 
Japan's nuclear safety agency has said.

The revelation has raised fears that the situation at the plant, 
where fuel in three reactors suffered meltdown, was more serious than 
government officials have acknowledged.

In another development that is expected to add to criticism of 
Japan's handling of the crisis, the agency said molten nuclear fuel 
dropped to the bottom of the pressure vessel in the No 1 reactor 
within five hours of the accident, 10 hours earlier than previously 
thought.

By the end of last week, radiation levels inside the reactor had 
risen to 4,000 millisieverts per hour, the highest atmospheric 
reading inside the plant since the disaster.

The agency also speculated that the meltdown in another reactor had 
been faster than initially estimated by the plant's operator, Tokyo 
Electric Power (Tepco).

It is not clear whether the revised account of the accident, the 
world's worst since Chernobyl in 1986, would have prompted Tepco to 
respond differently at the time.

But it is expected to raise questions about the ability of Japan's 
nuclear authorities to provide accurate information to the public.

According to the latest estimates, 770,000 terabequerels - about 20% 
as much as the official estimate for Chernobyl - of radiation seeped 
from the plant in the week after the tsunami, more than double the 
initial estimate of 370,000.

In a possible sign that the contamination is more widespread than 
previously thought, a university researcher said at the weekend a 
small amount of plutonium had been identified a mile from the front 
gate of the Fukushima plant.

It is the first time plutonium thought to have originated from the 
complex has been detected in soil outside its grounds.

However, Masayoshi Yamamoto, a professor at Kanazawa University, said 
the level of plutonium in the sample was lower than average levels 
observed in Japan after nuclear weapons tests conducted overseas.

The release of findings coincided with the start of an investigation 
on Tuesday into the accident by a 10-member panel.

Last week, a fact-finding team from the International Atomic Energy 
Agency criticised Tepco for failing to acknowledge the risk to the 
plant from a tsunami, despite warnings from government experts and 
its own scientists.

The panel, led by Yotaro Hatamura, a human error expert from Tokyo 
University, will issue an interim report by the end of the year. "I 
think it is a mistake to consider [the plant] safe," he said.

The prime minister, Naoto Kan, said he would be willing to undergo 
questioning in the hope that the report "stands up to scrutiny from 
around the world".

© 2011 Guardian News and Media Limited

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