<http://www.democracynow.org/2011/4/13/expert_despite_japanese_govt_claims_o
f>
http://www.democracynow.org/2011/4/13/expert_despite_japanese_govt_claims_of

Despite Japanese Gov't Claims of Decreasing Radiation, Fukushima a "Ticking
Time Bomb"

 

Guest: Dr. Michio Kaku
<http://www.democracynow.org/appearances/dr_michio_kaku> , a Japanese
American physicist and bestselling author. He is a professor of theoretical
physics at the City College of New York. His new book is Physics of the
Future: How Science Will Change Daily Life by 2100. 

AMY GOODMAN: Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan tried Tuesday to calm fears
about radiation levels and food safety in the region around the heavily
damaged Fukushima nuclear power plant. His comments came after Japan raised
the severity rating of its nuclear crisis to the highest possible level,
heightening concerns about the magnitude of the disaster.

Speaking at a news conference to mark one month since the massive earthquake
and tsunami devastated the northeastern coast of the country, Japanese Prime
Minister Kan said produce from the region around the Fukushima plant is safe
to eat despite radiation leaks.

PRIME MINISTER NAOTO KAN: [translated] From now on, people should not fall
into an extreme self-restraint mood, and they should live life as normal. To
consume products from the areas that have been affected is also a way in
which to support the area. We should enjoy the use of such products and
support the areas that have been affected. I ask you to do this.

AMY GOODMAN: A spokesperson for the International Atomic Energy Agency said
the latest food sample data indicates levels of contamination are below the
limits set by domestic authorities. Denis Flory, IAEA spokesperson, also
said yesterday Japan's nuclear crisis was not comparable to Chernobyl.

DENIS FLORY: The mechanics of the accidents are totally different. One
happened when a reactor was at power, and the reactor containment exploded.
In Fukushima, the reactor was stopped, and the containment, even if it may
be somehow leaking today-and we do not know-the containment is here. So this
is a totally different accident.

AMY GOODMAN: Japanese officials said they raised the severity level to 7
because of the total release of radiation at the Fukushima Daiichi power
plant, not because of a sudden deterioration in the situation. The 1986
Chernobyl disaster is the only other nuclear accident rated at the highest
level, 7, on a scale developed by the International Atomic Energy Agency to
assess nuclear accidents. But officials insist so far the power plant in
Japan has released one-tenth as much radioactive material as Chernobyl.

To discuss the situation in Japan, as well as his latest book, we're joined
by Dr. Michio Kaku, a Japanese American physicist, a bestselling author,
professor of theoretical physics at City University of New York and the City
College of New York. His brand new book is Physics of the Future: How
Science Will Change Daily Life by 2100.

Welcome to Democracy Now! It's great to see you again.

DR. MICHIO KAKU: Glad to be on the show, Amy.

AMY GOODMAN: So, talk about this raising of the category level to 7, on a
par with Chernobyl.

DR. MICHIO KAKU: Well, Tokyo Electric has been in denial, trying to downplay
the full impact of this nuclear accident. However, there's a formula, a
mathematical formula, by which you can determine what level this accident
is. This accident has already released something on the order of 50,000
trillion becquerels of radiation. You do the math. That puts it right smack
in the middle of a level 7 nuclear accident. Still, less than Chernobyl.
However, radiation is continuing to leak out of the reactors. The situation
is not stable at all. So, you're looking at basically a ticking time bomb.
It appears stable, but the slightest disturbance-a secondary earthquake, a
pipe break, evacuation of the crew at Fukushima-could set off a full-scale
meltdown at three nuclear power stations, far beyond what we saw at
Chernobyl.

AMY GOODMAN: Talk about exactly-I mean, as a physicist, to explain to
people-exactly what has taken place in Japan at these nuclear power plants.

DR. MICHIO KAKU: Think of driving a car, and the car all of a sudden lunges
out of control. You hit the brakes. The brakes don't work. That's because
the earthquake wiped out the safety systems in the first minute of the
earthquake and tsunami. Then your radiator starts to heat up and explodes.
That's the hydrogen gas explosion. And then, to make it worse, the gas tank
is heating up, and all of a sudden your whole car is going to be in flames.
That's the full-scale meltdown.

So what do you do? You drive the car into a river. That's what the utility
did by putting seawater, seawater from the Pacific Ocean, in a desperate
attempt to keep water on top of the core. But then, seawater has salt in it,
and that gums up your radiator. And so, what do you do? You call out the
local firemen. And so, now you have these Japanese samurai warriors. They
know that this is potentially a suicide mission. They're coming in with hose
water-hose water-trying to keep water over the melted nuclear reactor cores.
So that's the situation now. So, when the utility says that things are
stable, it's only stable in the sense that you're dangling from a cliff
hanging by your fingernails. And as the time goes by, each fingernail starts
to crack. That's the situation now.

AMY GOODMAN: What about the food, the level of contamination of the food?
They are increasingly banning food exports.

DR. MICHIO KAKU: The tragedy is, this accident has released enormous
quantities of iodine, radioactive iodine-131, into the atmosphere, like what
happened at Chernobyl, about 10 percent the level of Chernobyl. Iodine is
water soluble. When it rains, it gets into the soil. Cows then eat the
vegetation, create milk, and then it winds up in the milk. Farmers are now
dumping milk right on their farms, because it's too radioactive. Foods have
to be impounded in the area.

And let's be blunt about this: would you buy food that says "Made in
Chernobyl"? And the Japanese people are also saying, "Should I buy food that
says 'Made in Fukushima'?" We're talking about the collapse of the local
economy. Just because the government tries to lowball all the numbers,
downplay the severity of the accident, and that's making it much worse.

AMY GOODMAN: What do you think has to be done now? I mean, one of the
biggest problems is secrecy, both with the Tokyo company that runs the
plants and also the government, the constant downplaying from the beginning.
And yet, there are so many people who have been evacuated, who are demanding
compensation. There was just a major protest at TEPCO with the people in the
area who have been evaluated-no jobs, no money-saying, "We demand
compensation."

DR. MICHIO KAKU: Well, TEPCO is like the little Dutch boy. All of a sudden
we have cracks in the dike. You put a finger here, you put a finger there.
And all of a sudden, new leaks start to occur, and they're overwhelmed.

I suggest that they be removed from leadership entirely and be put as
consultants. An international team of top physicists and engineers should
take over, with the authority to use the Japanese military. I think the
Japanese military is the only organization capable of bringing this raging
accident under control. And that's what Gorbachev did in 1986. He saw this
flaming nuclear power station in Chernobyl. He called out the Red Air Force.
He called out helicopters, tanks, armored personnel carriers, and buried the
Chernobyl reactor in 5,000 tons of cement, sand and boric acid. That's, of
course, a last ditch effort. But I think the Japanese military should be
called out.

AMY GOODMAN: To do...?

DR. MICHIO KAKU: Because of the fact that the radiation levels are so great,
workers can only go in for perhaps 10 minutes, 15 minutes at a time, and
they get their year's dose of radiation. You're there for one hour, and you
have radiation sickness. You vomit. Your white corpuscle count goes down.
Your hair falls out. You're there for a day, and you get a lethal amount of
radiation. At Chernobyl, there were 600,000 people mobilized, each one going
in for just a few minutes, dumping sand, concrete, boric acid onto the
reactor site. Each one got a medal. That's what it took to bring one raging
nuclear accident under control. And I think the utility here is simply
outclassed and overwhelmed.

AMY GOODMAN: And yet, these workers are in for much longer periods of time.

DR. MICHIO KAKU: That's right. And we don't even know how much radiation
levels they're getting, because many areas around the site have no monitors.
So we don't even know how much radiation many of these workers are getting.
And that's why I'm saying, if you have access to the military, you can have
the option of sandbagging the reactor, encasing it in concrete, or at least
have a reserve of troops that can go in for brief periods of times and bring
this monster under control.

AMY GOODMAN: What about the evacuation zone? Is it big enough?

DR. MICHIO KAKU: It's pathetic. The United States government has already
stated 50 miles for evacuating U.S. personnel. The French government has
stated that all French people should consider leaving the entire islands.
And here we are with a government talking about six miles, 10 miles, 12
miles. And the people there are wondering, "What's going on with the
government? I mean, why aren't they telling us the truth?" Radiation levels
are now rising 25 miles from the site, far beyond the evacuation zone. And
remember that we could see an increase in leukemia. We could see an increase
in thyroid cancers. That's the inevitable consequence of releasing enormous
quantities of iodine into the environment.

AMY GOODMAN: What has to happen to the plant ultimately?

DR. MICHIO KAKU: Well, in the best-case scenario-this is the scenario
devised by the utility itself-they hope to bring it under control by the end
of this year. By the end of this year, they hope to have the pumps working,
and the reaction is finally stabilized by the end of this year.

AMY GOODMAN: Oddly, it's sounding a little bit like BP when they were trying
to plug up the hole.

DR. MICHIO KAKU: Right.

AMY GOODMAN: "It will happen. It will happen."

DR. MICHIO KAKU: They're literally making it up as they go along. We're in
totally uncharted territories. You get any nuclear engineering book, look at
the last chapter, and this scenario is not contained in the last chapter of
any nuclear engineering textbook on the planet earth. So they're making it
up as they go along. And we are the guinea pigs for this science experiment
that's taking place. Then it could take up to 10 years, up to 10 years to
finally dismantle the reactor. The last stage is entombment. This is now the
official recommendation of Toshiba, that they entomb the reactor over a
period of many years, similar to what happened in Chernobyl.

AMY GOODMAN: Entomb it in...?

DR. MICHIO KAKU: In a gigantic slab of concrete. You're going to have to
drill underneath to make sure that the core does not melt right into the
ground table. And you're going to put 5,000 tons of concrete and sand on top
of the flaming reactor.

AMY GOODMAN: Should people be concerned about any food that says "From
Japan"?

DR. MICHIO KAKU: Not from Japan. But remember, in the area, the sea, we're
talking about levels that are millions of times beyond legal levels found
right there. However, as you start to get out further, radiation levels drop
rather considerably.

AMY GOODMAN: I wanted to talk about policy in this country. I mean, we are
now seeing happening in Japan this horrific event. Japan was the target of
the dawn of the Nuclear Age, right?

DR. MICHIO KAKU: Mm-hmm.

AMY GOODMAN: The U.S. dropping of the atomic bombs on Hiroshima, Nagasaki.
Your own family mirrors the history of the Nuclear Age. Can you talk just
briefly about that, before we talk about current U.S. policy?

DR. MICHIO KAKU: Yeah, first of all, I have relatives in Tokyo, and they're
wondering about evacuation. In fact, some of my relatives have already
evacuated from Tokyo. They have little children. And radiation has already
appeared in the drinking water in Tokyo. And so, people are wondering, you
know, especially for young children, for pregnant women, should they leave.
People are voting with their feet now. A lot of people are voluntarily
evacuating from Tokyo, because they simply don't believe the statements of
the utility, which have consistently lowballed all the estimates of
radiation damage.

AMY GOODMAN: And, though, in the past, in terms of your own family's
history, your parents, being interned in the Japanese American internment
camps?

DR. MICHIO KAKU: That's right. In California, my parents were interned in
the relocation camps from 1942 to 1946, four years where they were put
essentially behind barbed wire and machine guns, under the supervision of
the United States military.

AMY GOODMAN: And yet, you became a nuclear physicist, interestingly enough,
and you worked with the people who made the atomic bombs that were dropped
on Japan.

DR. MICHIO KAKU: Yeah. In fact, my high school adviser was Edward Teller,
the father of the hydrogen bomb. And he arranged for me to get a scholarship
to Harvard, in fact, and that began my career as a nuclear scientist. And
Edward Teller, of course, wanted me to work on the Star Wars program. He put
a lot of pressure and said, "Look, we'll give you fellowships, scholarships.
Go to Los Alamos National Laboratory, Livermore National Laboratory. Design
hydrogen bombs." But I said no. I said, "I cannot see my expertise being
used to advance the cause of war."

AMY GOODMAN: And you've been very outspoken when it comes to nuclear power
in the United States. This, of course, has raised major issues about nuclear
power plants around the world, many countries saying they're not moving
forward. President Obama is taking the opposite position. He really is very
much the nuclear renaissance man. He is talking about a nuclear renaissance
and has not backed off, in fact reiterated, saying this will not stop us
from building the first nuclear power plants in, what, decades.

DR. MICHIO KAKU: Well, there's something called a Faustian bargain. Faust
was this mythical figure who sold his soul to the devil for unlimited power.
Now, the Japanese government has thrown the dice with a Faustian bargain.
Japan has very little fossil fuel reserves, no hydroelectric power to speak
of, and so they went nuclear. However, in the United States, we're now
poised, at this key juncture in history, where the government has to decide
whether to go to the next generation of reactors. These are the so-called
gas-cooled pebble bed reactors, which are safer than the current design, but
they still melt down. The proponents of this new renaissance say that you
can go out to dinner and basically have a leisurely conversation even as
your reactor melts down. But it still melts. That's the bottom line.

AMY GOODMAN: And so, what do you think should happen? Do you think nuclear
power plants should be built in this country?

DR. MICHIO KAKU: I think there should be a national debate, a national
debate about a potential moratorium. The American people have not been given
the full truth, because, for example, right north of New York City, roughly
30 miles north of where we are right now, we have the Indian Point nuclear
power plant, and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission has now admitted that of
all the reactors prone to earthquakes, the one right next to New York City
is number one on that list. And the government itself, back in 1980,
estimated that property damage would be on the order of about $200 billion
in case of an accident, in 1980 dollars, at the Indian Point nuclear power
station.

AMY GOODMAN: No private corporation could even build a nuclear power plant:
you have to have the taxpayers footing the bill.

DR. MICHIO KAKU: You have to have what is called the Price-Anderson Act,
having the United States government guarantee the insurance. Nobody will
guarantee-nobody will sell an insurance policy for a nuclear power plant,
because who can afford a $200 billion accident? That's why the United States
government has underwritten the insurance for every nuclear power plant. So
the Price-Anderson Act is an act of Congress that mandates the U.S.
government, the taxpayers, will underwrite the insurance, because nuclear
power stations are not insurable.

AMY GOODMAN: We're talking to Dr. Michio Kaku. We're going to go to break,
and when we come back, we want to ask him about, well, his new book, Physics
of the Future: How Science Will Change Daily Life by 2100. What would be a
day in the life of the future? Is it possible that, oh, the internet can be
in your contact lens, that cars will drive themselves? Just what we'll ask
Dr. Kaku when we come back. Stay with us.

 



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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