On Thursday, February 13, 2014 3:01:26 PM UTC, cdemorsella wrote:
>
> Ground water contamination levels at the sampled well site of 54,000Bq/ 
> liter
>
> NHK <http://www3.nhk.or.jp/nhkworld/english/news/20140213_22.html>, Feb. 
> 13, 2014: *Record cesium level in Fukushima plant groundwater* — [Tepco] 
> says water samples taken from a newly-dug well contained the highest levels 
> of radioactive cesium detected so far in groundwater at the site [...] the 
> record levels suggest that the leakage point could be near the well. [...] 
> 600 times the government standard for radioactive wastewater that can be 
> released into the sea. It is more than 30,000 times the level of cesium 137 
> found in water samples taken from another observation well to the north 
> last week. [...] [Tepco has] yet to determine where the leak originates.
>
In general the dangers arsing from nuclear fission power are grossly 
exaggerated. It's far and away the best answer to greenhouse emissions, 
that is also realistic. If we'd been building nuclear power stations the 
fracking locomotive wouldn't be the unstoppable force that it has become. 
on 
Many ways the dangers are blown out of proportion.. Even catastrophic 
meltdown that blow the roof off and spread the love like Chernobyl, do not 
result in a tiny fraction of the disasters that the standard models 
predict. Ten's of thousands were predicted to die. In the end, just 40 
deaths from Chernobyl, and most of those the people sent in to get control 
in the aftermath. 
 
There have been revolutions in station design since plants like fukishima 
were built, and that disaster isn't shaping up to the dire predictions 
either. 
 
What most of all this derives out of, are long standing questions about the 
level of risk associated with exposure to radiation at low doses up to 
somewhere below the 200 mark. There's no firm evidence of substantial risk. 
There's plenty of evidence for genetic protection. There's a whole plethora 
of statistics we could reasonably expect if low dose exposure was anything 
like the risk that still sits there in the model. Airline cabin crew should 
have higher frequency cancer for all that time so near space for one 
example. They don't. 
 
Conversely there are some major natural radiation hotspots in the world. 
You'd expect those areas to produce more cancer and radiation poisoning 
related disease. But the opposite is true. People exposed to dramatically 
higher doses of radiation (inside the low dosage spectrum), actually become 
lower risks. There seems to be a triggerable genetic response when levels 
increase. 
 
I'm over-compensating in the other direction a bit here. Not because I love 
the bomb, but if you only knew the power of the dark side. 
 
 
 

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