http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/publications/id.9060/pub_detail.asp

 

March 24, 2011


The Japanese Reactor Leaks - Without the Hype


 <http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/authors/id.204/author_detail.asp> Don
Petersen, PhD,
<http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/authors/id.205/author_detail.asp> Bill
Stratton, PhD

http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/imgLib/20110314_Fukushima2.jpg

 

Loss of coolant events at several of Japan's nuclear reactors are eerily
similar to the Three Mile Island incident of 1979, except that four reactors
and spent fuel pools are involved, and tens of thousands perished in a
massive earthquake, and devastating tsunami.  With all the monumental loss
of life and and the unbelievable destruction, the US media still takes most
of its time to report hysterically on a "Meltdown" and "Radiation"!  The
panic reporting is exactly the same as Three Mile Island--inflated and
misinformed.  It is hard to separate the facts from the assertions and the
media are not helping, but with each passing day more information relevant
to the outcome emerges and the hand wringing of previous days lessens.  The
level of severity at Fukushima Dai-Ichi has been increased to equal Three
Mile Island, a desirable condition that appears to be developing--no major
radiation release, no one killed, and no serious long term hazard.  Even the
aftermath of Chernobyl--the worst accident ever--does not reflect the
exaggerated initial casualty predictions.  Similar exaggerated cancer death
predictions undoubtedly will be made for this accident.

The Japanese reactors, forty-year-old GE BWR Mark-1s, were shut down
automatically when the earthquake,  5 times greater than the building
design, struck.  All containment  remarkably survived the 9.0 quake intact .
Loss of core cooling resulted from the tsunami interrupting offsite
electrical transmission and inundating the emergency diesel generators that
powered the cooling systems.  Fresh water supply also was destroyed by the
tsunami, leading to the use of sea water and boron in attempts to cool down
the reactor cores and the spent fuel storage pools close to the reactors.
The reactor cores cannot be saved but the catastrophe predicted by the
frantic reporting will not happen.  The spent fuel has been in the pools for
a year, about half the time required  for fuel to cool enough for dry cask
storage.  It will heat,  but It is more accessible for cooling, and there
will be no massive Chernobyl-style releases.

Hydrogen explosions have occurred, 137-cesium and,131-iodine have been
detected around Fukushima  Dai-Ichi units one through four, resulting from
intentional venting to relieve strain on containment, but no major radiation
releases have occurred, and the containment appears to remain intact.  If
cooling conditions can be maintained, most of the spent fuel melting will
have been averted and the final outcome will be a huge economic  loss for
the power company, an engineering nightmare to decommission all four units
and associated pools, but with no serious injuries, nobody killed, and
little or no long term radiation-related consequences.

Recall that the reactors were shut down and that the core heat comes from
the decay of fission products. The residual heat is a small fraction of what
would have been present from fission.  If core geometry can be  cooled and
preserved, the cores will not become critical (new nuclear reactions) again.
It is important to distinguish between decay heat  and criticality which
would introduce a new temperature excursion.  So far, the Japanese are
dealing only with decay heat.  A new and serious feature of the Japanese
reactor reports is the suggestion that containment has been breached but
falling radiation levels indicate that containment is intact.

Finally, in the worst case, the reactor cores will melt but remain contained
without massive release of a radioactive plume.  Residual heat in an
uncooled but shut down reactor is enough to melt the core. The Three  Mile
Island  core melted, the containment held, no significant radiation was
released, and no one was injured or killed--not even a grasshopper.  The
search for cesium at Three Mile Island was intense.  Finally, a pike from
the Susquehanna River gave evidence of 134-, and 137-cesium but it turned
out to be from a nine-month-old Chinese atmospheric weapons test, not from
Three Mile Island. The story illustrates the incredible sensitivity of
detection instruments.  The information that "radiation" has been detected
on returning commercial aircraft, dutifully reported by the distracted
press, also illustrates the remarkable sensitivity of detection devices, as
does reporting of 131-Iodine in local milk, and activity in leafy
vegetables.  Little information on amounts or identity of contributing
nuclides escaping from the reactor complex is available except that measured
spikes of radioactivity exceed accepted emergency annual worker exposure
limits fivefold (500 millisieverts).  That value suggests that relatively
small amounts have been released consistent with the notion that it comes
from intentional venting and not a breach.

To put the event in perspective, the four reactor cores and associated spent
fuel in pools are being stabilized, iodine and cesium releases are
relatively small but indicate damage to the reactor cores, exposures of
recovery personnel are low, and there have been no fatalities. Thus,
Fukushima Dai-Ichi is worse than Three Mile Island, but far, far less
serious than Chernobyl. The event is inconsequential by comparison with the
awful tragedy that has befallen the Japanese people, and eventually someone
should take the melodramatic  media to task for misplaced priorities that
virtually ignore the genuine tragedy.

The authors are retired from LANL, write for the Los Alamos Education Group,
and have credentials to comment on the nuclear situation. One (DFP) has
published on human radiation injuries, biological neutron dosimetry, and has
experienced working in intense radiation fields during a reactor accident
recovery operation. The other (WRS) served nine years on the AEC Advisory
Committee on Reactor Safeguards, was on the scientific  support staff of the
Kemeny Commission investigating the Three Mile Island accident, where he was
instrumental in explaining the small radiation (131-iodine) release.

 

 <http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/> FamilySecurityMatters.org
Contributing Editor
<http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/authors/id.204/author_detail.asp> Don
Petersen, Ph.D., writes for the Los Alamos Education Group and is a retired
former Leader of the Los Alamos National Laboratory's Life Sciences
Division. Since Operation Desert Shield, he has served on the Deputy
Undersecretary of the Army for Operational Research advisory panel for
development of chemical and biological weapons detection and protection
equipment. 

 

 <http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/authors/id.205/author_detail.asp>
Bill Stratton, Ph.D., writes for the Los Alamos Education Group. Now
retired, he spent his career at the Los Alamos National Laboratory working
on reactor safety. While a member of the working staff of the President's
Commission on the Accident at Three Mile Island, was instrumental in
explaining why almost no Iodine-131 escaped from the reactor core. He has
consulted for nuclear utilities, reactor vendors, the Department of Energy,
the Nuclear Regulatory Commission and was a member of the Atomic Energy
Commission's Advisory Committee on Reactor Safeguards.

 



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