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30 tons of water was injected into the reactor No.3

March 17, 2011

Sent:   Thu 3/17/2011 10:27 AM EDT

Subject:   [IPPNWFORUM] 30 tons of water was injected into the reactor No.3

#In addition to dropping water from the helicopters this morning, the defense force has injected 30 tons of water in total to the No.3 reactor.

Five special cars were involved in the operation today. They spend around five min for each (7:35, 7:45, 7:53, 8:00, 8:07 p.m.). A pair of personnel worked staying in a car.

We hope the operation was successfully……we do not know whether or not radiation level has decreased after the operation.

#Prior to the operation by the defense force, the riot police tried to inject water into the No. 3 reactor, but they failed to reach the target.

#It was reported the radiation dose of personnel involved in the operation by helicopter this morning was within the emergency dose limit 100 mSv (max data was 60mSv).

— Katsumi Furitsu

 

Today’s Fukushima updates from Dr. Furitsu (March 17)

March 17, 2011

The following updates from Dr. Katsumi Furitsu have arrived since yesterday, when we posted an initial collection of her reports [A first-hand account of Japan’s nuclear crisis]. They are in chronological order as we received them.

Sent:   Wed 3/16/2011 8:56 PM EDT

Subject:   [IPPNWFORUM] They start dropping water…..

We are now watching on TV a helicopter which is measuring the radiation level over the plants.

The helicopter has just dropped water over the No. 3 reactor……..

The reporter saids: The CH 47 helicopter can carry 7.5 ton of water. Another helicopter is now heading to the site. (9:48 am)

The second one (or the same one? again) has just drop water….9:52 am

The third drop is over No. 4.

I will write further later…..

Katsumi

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Sent:   Wed 3/16/2011 10:19 PM EDT

Subject:   [IPPNWFORUM] more information

Just before starting to drop water from the helicopter the government had a press conference.

The following is the information from the conference and the TV media (NHK) report showing the actual operation.

We saw white steam coming out after dropping water. You may see the video later or already seen? Not all the water could drop in pin-pont over the pond unfortunately.

# Reactor No. 3:

They will pour the spent fuel pool with water both by helicopters of the defense force and special cars with high pressure injection system of the riot police.

The helicopter, CH 47, can carry 7.5 ton of water. It dips up sea water nearby, flies to the reactor and drop the water over the pond of reactors. Before the operation, they measure radiation level and wind over a reactor and see the feasibility to work.
The defense force (DF) estimated that they have to repeat this procedure more than 100 times to fill a pond.

The reporter said that the maximum radiation limit for DF staff is set up 50 mSv with exception of life saving situation:100 mSV. (So, they seem to keep the present limit anyway….)

On the other hand, they are collecting 11 cars with special injector from all over Japan. All or some of them are now ready to go….they have already headed to the site from 20km zone. They will start to work after the operation of dropping water from helicopters so that (hopefully) the radiation level at the site would reduce to some extent. A car can carry 4 ton of water for each. They will stay about 50 m from the building (as the maximum injection length is 50m), but they estimated only one min. would be allowed for a staff before reaching the maximum exposure level.

They decided to start from the reactor No. 3 as it is more dangerous compared to No. 4. (You may remember that No.3 has the not spent fuel complex in the pool.) It is easier to drop water in the case of No. 3, as it has no ceiling anymore.

They have dropped water four times this morning from 9:48 to around 10:00 am. (So, the exposure dose might become up to 50 mSv for around 15 min inside the helicopter. This is only my guess.) They said that they put a lead plate on the floor of the helicopter and a staff on board is measuring radiation level during the operation. They put on protecting clothes.

#As for No. 4, they will not use helicopters, but only use the cars of the riot police, as a hole on the ceiling is far from the pool.  Fortunately (?) it already has a large hole (or holes?) (seeing from the picture, it is not a hole, almost whole side wall facing to the sea has completely fallen down) on the wall. So, they think that they can inject water from the side.

#The reactor No. 5 and 6:

The temperature of the water of spent fuel pons is increasing:

No. 5: 63 degree centigrade (5 degree increased compared to yesterday)

No. 6: 60 degree centigrade (4 degree increased compared to yesterday)

They are preparing to introduce electricity from outside of the plant site and try to recover the cooling system.

The facilities of pumping were destroyed by tsunami.

#The reactor No. 1 and 2 are stable anyway. They continue pouring sea water into the containments and core vessels.

Katsumi

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Sent:   Wed 3/16/2011 10:46 PM EDT

Subject:   [IPPNWFORUM] some additional information

#The minister of defense ministry is now at the press conference:

some additional information:

The radiation level measured before the operation:

4.13 mSv/h at 1000 feet

87.7 mSv/h at 300 feet

They did not start the operation, but they decided to do this morning as the situation too critical to wait anymore.

The minister does not yet have the data after the droppings.

The US force will also join the operation later.

Katsumi

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A first-hand account of Japan’s nuclear crisis

March 16, 2011

On March 12, 2011, the day after northeastern Japan was struck by an 8.9 Richter-scale earthquake and tsunami, IPPNW began to receive first-person, detailed updates about the crisis at the Fukushima Nuclear Power Plant from Dr. Katsumi Furitsu, a specialist in radiation biology and medical genetics based in Osaka, and a member of the board of the International Campaign to Ban Uranium Weapons. Katsumi’s reports, arriving several times a day, have provided information and insights into the worsening situation on the ground — information sometimes in stark contrast with what has been reported in the Japanese and global media. In this posting we are sharing all of Katsumi’s messages to date, arranged in reverse chronological order, with her most recent at the top. We will post new messages on the blog as they arrive. A text document containing all the messages will be updated each day and made available for download on the Disaster in Japan section of this blog.

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From: Katsumi Furitsu
Date: March 16, 2011 8:24:38 AM EDT
To: IPPNWFORUM <ippnwforum@googlegroups.com>

The following are some updates:

#The smoke/seam from reactor No. 3:

The company said that the smoke/steam from the reactor No. 3 came from the spent fuel pond (not from a possible leak from the containment).

The cooling system of the pond is out of order and the temperature of the water is getting higher to make steam. As you know, the building of this reactor already is broken down and there is no cover/ceiling over the spent fuel pond. It is open to the air now.

Then, they are planning to drop sea water from helicopters and fill the pond with water to stop the damage of spent-fuel rods.

A team of “Defense Force” started the training to do the task. They are ready to start now.

However, the radiation level over the pond is still high. It was measured “far more than 50 mSv/h”. (They actually measured it by a helicopter.) So, they decided not to pursue this operation today. There is no guarantee that the radiation level would become lower tomorrow, though. (The government has decided yesterday to set up the maximum exposure level at an emergency situation from 100 to 250 mSv, as I wrote you yesterday.)

#The reactor No. 4:

The government has just ordered the “riot police” to go to the site as they have a special car which has a “high pressure injection system”. (I do not know the proper words for such a car in English. I suppose a car which might be usually used against “riot”….or sometimes against a demonstration, as some of you might know?) They will try to fill the spent fuel with water using the special car. The defense force will lend protective suits to the “riot police”. They will start to work tomorrow morning.

#The result of the radiation level measurement today:

Today, a team from the Ministry of Education and Science, measured around the 20-60 km zone:

about 20km: 0.33 mSv/h

30-60 km: 0.0253 – 0.0125 mSv/h

The government and media emphasized, “the level is not a immediate danger for the people’s health, though it might be problem to live in such area continuously for a year.”

(I agree that it is not an “immediate danger” but it could contribute to cause “late affect” as cancer, leukemia or other disease. It depends on the duration of exposure.)

They do not provide us, people, any information about the concentration of radioactive noble gas, iodine, cesium and so on.

Peace,
Katsumi

_____ Read more…

Nuclear power – “basta”!

March 13, 2011
Abandon nuclear energy now!

"Abandon nuclear energy now!" IPPNW Germany demonstrates in Frankfurt

It really is enough now. Hiroshima, Nagasaki, Windscale, Harrisburg, Chernobyl and now Fukushima. When will it be enough for governments around the world to understand that there is no playing with nuclear fire? The moment that Oppenheimer saw the first nuclear explosion he understood the magnitude of this new and awful kind of energy. Now the raw power of nature meets our technical arrogance and is destroying Japan in the form of earthquakes, tsunami and the unleashing of terrifying quantities of radiation. It hardly bears thinking about. But we must think about it and act upon it.

As I boarded the train this morning in Frankfurt heading back to Berlin, an exhausting day behind me, the news was still totally unclear. Had there already been a meltdown or was it yet to come? Would there be more than one meltdown? How much radiation had already leaked out of the reactor that had exploded and how much had they deliberately released to reduce pressure in the core? Read more…

Breaking free from the hoax of nuclear deterrence

March 12, 2011

Commander Robert Green, Royal Navy (Retired)

[Former British nuclear weapons officer Rob Green is the author of Security Without Nuclear Deterrence. He made the following presentation at Tufts University on February 27, as a panelist at the symposium “Our Nuclear Age: Peril and Promise,” sponsored by the university’s Institute for Global Leadership.]

Commander Robert Green (ret)

"Nuclear deterrence is irrational and unacceptable." Rob Green addresses the 2010 NPT Review Conference during a special plenary session devoted to NGO perspectives.

People often ask why I am the only former British Navy Commander with experience of nuclear weapons to have come out against them. Others in the peace movement ask why it took me so long. My short answer is that I now realize my lack of military pedigree meant I had a truly open mind; but military indoctrination, peer pressure and top security clearances overrode this, especially when combined with reminders not to damage my career prospects.

I was five days past my first birthday when 24-year-old Theodore Van Kirk, navigator of the Enola Gay, flew on the first tactical nuclear strike, against Hiroshima. In 1968, I too was a 24-year-old bombardier-navigator when told that my Buccaneer strike jet pilot and I had been chosen as a nuclear crew in our squadron aboard the aircraft-carrier HMS Eagle, and we were given a target near Leningrad. Read more…

The Horsemen ride again; but toward the finish line or in circles?

March 10, 2011

On March 7, George Shultz, Henry Kissinger, William Perry, and Sam Nunn penned a new installment in a series of Wall Street Journal articles they launched in January 2007. The first was called “A world free of nuclear weapons,” and signaled a conversion experience that had transformed these old cold warriors into abolitionists. Subsequent articles — at the rate of about one a year — relegated the achievement of a nuclear-weapons-free world to some indeterminate future, while focusing on short term steps and what some have called “creating the conditions” for nuclear disarmament.

Last year, the US Gang of Four thought out loud about “how to protect our nuclear deterrent,” and now they have returned to the subject of deterrence and the need to reconceptualize “a safer and more comprehensive form of deterrence and prevention in a world where the roles and risks of nuclear weapons are reduced and ultimately eliminated” (“Deterrence in the Age of Nuclear Proliferation”).

Are the Four Horsemen visionaries or are they stuck in old ways of thinking? If, as they say, they are truly committed to eliminating nuclear weapons, are they offering a clear path to that goal, or just throwing up frustrating roadblocks?

Former IPPNW co-president Gunnar Westberg of IPPNW’s Swedish affiliate, SLMK, and Ira Helfand, North American regional vice president and a member of the board of Physicians for Social Responsibility (IPPNW-USA), had different perspectives on this latest editorial, which we share with you here.

Readers of the Peace and Health blog are welcomed and encouraged to add their own comments. What will it take to rid the world of nuclear weapons? How fast can that be accomplished? Are the Horsemen helping or hindering the effort?

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Ira HelfandIra Helfand: I think this piece is fairly important.  While written, predictably, from a US security point of view, it seems the beginning of a real effort on the part of these guys to undermine “deterrence” as a rationale for holding on to nuclear weapons.

While the rhetoric is not very inspiring, it seems a very serious, and potentially game changing effort to destroy the arguments of [US Senator John] Kyl and his allies in the nuclear weapons camp who say that nuclear weapons play a positive role in maintaining US security.

We would prefer a clearer rejection of nuclear weapons altogether, and, of course, that should be our message,  but we are not the intended audience for this piece, and I think this piece advances the argument that we need to make.

Any time Kissinger says we should further reduce nuclear arsenals it is positive….

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Gunnar WestbergGunnar Westberg: My impression is that this latest paper, compared to the three previous, represents a persisting, maybe increasing, understanding that nuclear proliferation cannot be stopped if the nuclear weapon states do not clearly dedicate themselves to nuclear disarmament. At the same time they have become even more timid about Going for Zero. Through this indecisiveness (and opportunism?) they risk losing their objective. How can the goal of nuclear abolition be seen as credible when they claim:

“Fourth, as long as nuclear weapons exist, America must retain a safe, secure and reliable nuclear stockpile primarily to deter a nuclear attack and to reassure our allies through extended deterrence. There is an inherent limit to U.S. and Russian nuclear reductions if other nuclear weapon states build up their inventories or if new nuclear powers emerge.”

The first sentence says that US will be the last to abolish nukes. But the second sentence says that the problem is a build up in other nuclear weapon states. The authors seem not to dare to discuss the road to Zero which they understand is necessary. In their first paper they said that without a clear dedication to abolition by the nuclear weapon states  they will not be credible.

I do not understand their vacillation.

In the first paper they also stressed the importance of decreasing the readiness for firing of strategic nuclear arms. That, so very important step, is not mentioned now.

But I remember an interview with Kissinger in the French Le Figaro half a year after the first WSJ paper, where he says that “of course nuclear abolition will take several generations.”

Does anyone in the general media criticize or at least critically analyze their papers from this viewpoint? It is amazing to see that four statesmen of this stature are almost neglected by the media.

But we shall celebrate that these elder statesmen understand that the time of deterrence is gone, and the time for nuclear weapons will soon be over. The problem is that these men seem to believe that there is no urgency, that we must finish the nuclear era before the nukes finish the human era.

Old men are often in a hurry. I wish these were.

Nuclear weapons cause war

March 10, 2011

Colonel Muammar Gaddafi tried for many years to obtain nuclear weapons. The reason was, he said, that Israel had nukes. The desire for nuclear weapons is contagious. In the 1980s a rumor circulated that Gaddafi had made an offer on the international nuclear bazaar of one billion US dollars for a nuclear bomb. No bomb was available, it seems, but Gaddafi persevered.  From Pakistan and Abdul Khadeer Khan, the star salesman for nuclear weapons technology, he bought equipment and competence, blueprints and scientists.

Early after the year 2000, the Libyan dictator wanted to change his image, to become an internationally respected, or at least accepted, leader. Maybe he cared primarily for his son Saif al-Islam, the intended successor. Saif is reported to have participated in the negotiations with Great Britain. He is educated at the London School of Economics.

In 2003 an agreement on the nuclear program was reached. The equipment was transferred to Tennessee and was inspected by President Bush. Four thousand centrifuges, assembled or in parts, blueprints from China for a bomb and many other useful tools were found.  As late as 2009 the last shipment of uranium took place. There is nothing left in Libya of the nuclear program. We are grateful.

The Colonel  achieved his own goal, to a considerable degree.  He was received, embraced and kissed on the cheeks by Western leaders.

If Gaddafi had not converted but instead, with resolve and with petro-dollars, continued the nuclear program, he could very well have had some useable nuclear weapons today. In that case we would now worry that Gaddafi, who by some is seen as a madman, could use or threaten to use nuclear weapons against his own people. The likely consequence of that would have been attacks or threats on the nuclear facilities by NATO and the USA.  Gaddafi could have escalated by threatening to bomb cities around the Mediterranean. The government of Israel would have demanded a military invasion to stop the lunatic in Tripoli.

Had Gaddafi obtained nuclear weapons, an attack by NATO on Libya would have been likely. The situation could be compared with that in 2002 when the US government said there were nukes in Iraq. If the Bush administration had not managed to make the US population believe this, the American public would probably not have accepted an attack on Iraq. “We don’t want the smoking gun to be a mushroom cloud” said Condoleezza Rice on American TV.

A land that acquires nuclear weapons, or make others believe they plan to acquire them, risks a “preventive attack.” This applies today to Iran and North Korea. Many leaders and citizens in these countries believe that nuclear weapons deter an attacker. It is the other way around:

Nuclear weapons cause war.

A young physician’s perspective at the United Nations Arms Trade Treaty

March 4, 2011

by Ogebe Onazi, Nigeria

It is an honor to speak on behalf of IPPNW and the IANSA network today at the United Nations Arms Trade Treaty second Preparatory Committee Meeting.

Ogebe Onazi

Dr. Ogebe Onazi of Nigeria addresses the Arms Trade Treaty PrepCom at the UN

I am convinced that if an ATT is to make a meaningful impact on the ground it has to address the health and humanitarian impact of illicit and irresponsible arms transfers. I am one of the people who have to treat victims of gun violence, and heal the physical and mental wounds left by these weapons. When someone arrives in my emergency room, I don’t know if the gun or bullet is legal or illegal; all I know is that the person is bleeding and I try to save a life.

I am a Physician from Nigeria, a country situated in the global South. According to the World Health organization there is 1 doctor for every 2500 people in Nigeria and this compares to one doctor for every 370 people in the United States. This disparity demonstrates the severe lack of human resources to meet the health demands of the people in my country. Despite the heavy burden of disease including malaria, HIV and tuberculosis, resources for health care are chronically scarce; and every time resources are used to treat gun injuries, they are diverted from preventing communicable disease and malnutrition, maternal & child health care, and other critical public health services. Read more…

Observations by a Stranger in a Strange Land (With apologies to Robert A. Heinlein)

March 3, 2011

by Donald L. Mellman, MD

As a recent IPPNW member, I have had the honor to join the mission to the Arms Trade Treaty meeting at the UN.

IPPNW is the only physician-driven NGO at this UN Arms Trade Treaty meeting. Therefore, its representatives bring into perspective the unstated goal of the treaty: to improve the lives and health of all peoples of the world. Certainly there is the need for the presence and passion of the other representatives of the many other NGOs who meet in a variety of ways to bring some sanity to the insane situation of armed violence and its millions of victims. Yes, IPPNW is caught up in the politics among the NGOs, the politics between the NGOs and the many state delegates, and is an observer of the (often acrimonious) politics among the state delegates. But, it is the only NGO that, by definition, speaks the language of patient care and the publics’ health.

Our co-president, Bob Mtonga, alluded to the famous Virchow quote, “Medicine is a social science, and politics is nothing but medicine on a large scale,” when he prepared remarks for the general NGO session. Interestingly, Bob is both a Zambian delegate to these proceedings and an IPPNW representative, the only NGO person so placed. He has the respect of all (> 50) the NGO members in attendance. Read more…

ATT chair’s draft foreshadows treaty elements

March 3, 2011

by Michael Schober, IPPNW-Austria

Thursday morning at the ATT PrepCom: The plenary, with delegates of all UN member states, is now discussing the newest version of the PrepCom chairman’s paper which was discussed for the past three days and which we hope will lead to an arms trade treaty in the future.

Just prior to the release of the paper, there was much anticipation. Would the statement and needs of their own country have been taken into consideration? What would be the further direction be in the negotiations? Would the ATT be strong and really contribute to more security, development and therefore health? In addition, the NGOs were anticipating the result of the efforts they made and lobbying they did in the last days.

After a short time studying the revised paper finally released, we could find the following:

The controversial issue of ammunition in the treaty was maintained;
The immediate statement of the US delegation ( which is against including ammunition due to difficulties in implementing it) was, that an ATT should regulate international arm transfers and can not and should not legislate on death and murder.
For us, a strong ATT would mean exactly this: Reducing death and murder!;
Further, the responsibility to execute the treaty was made stronger: “Should take into account” was replaced by “shall.” A success for IPPNW, which pushed with other NGOs for that language as well as such considerations as victim assistance.

The challenge in the further discussion will be how the positions of the states, which are aiming for a less universal and strong ATT — referring to the right of self defense and difficulties of implementation — will be taken into account.
Further plenaries will cast more light on this.