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Waste Drums Tipped at Nuke Plant after Deadly Japan Quake; Thousands Evacuate

Quake Zone

 

 

 

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Waste Drums Tipped at Nuke Plant after Deadly Japan Quake; Thousands Evacuate

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July 17, 2007 — By Eric Talmadge, Associated Press

 

KASHIWAZAKI, Japan -- A powerful earthquake tipped over barrels of nuclear waste

at a power plant and officials on Tuesday were investigating whether there were

any radioactive leaks, a day after they said the quake had caused the reactor to

spill radioactive water into the sea.

 

The death toll stood at nine a day after the 6.6-magnitude quake. One person was

missing and another 13,000 were homeless, as rescue workers rushed to locate any

survivors in the rubble amid fears of landslides.

 

The quake had caused a leak of water with radioactive material Monday at the

Kashiwazaki Kariwa nuclear power plant, the world's largest in terms of

electricity output, although officials said that leak caused no harm to the

environment.

 

On Tuesday, officials said about 100 drums containing low-level nuclear waste

fell over at the plant during the quake. They were found a day later, some with

their lids open, said Masahide Ichikawa, an official with the local government

in Niigata prefecture.

 

A spokesman at Tokyo Electric Power Co., which runs the plant, said the company

was still trying to determine whether any hazardous material had spilled but

said there was no effect outside the plant.

 

" We have no information at this time that there is any effect on the outside

environment, " TEPCO spokesman Manabu Takeyama said.

 

Another leak at the Kashiwazaki power plant would feed fresh concerns about the

safety of Japan's 55 nuclear reactors, which supply 30 percent of the

quake-prone country's electricity and have suffered a long string of accidents

and cover-ups.

 

Monday's quake initially triggered a small fire at an electrical transformer in

the sprawling plant. But it was announced 12 hours later that the temblor also

caused a leak of water containing radioactive material.

 

Officials said the water leak was harmless and well below safety standards, but

the delay in notifying the public spurred concern among anti-nuclear activists

and triggered criticism from Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.

 

" They raised the alert too late. I have sent stern instructions that such alerts

must be raised seriously and swiftly, " Abe told reporters in Tokyo. " Those

involved should repent their actions. "

 

Meanwhile, nearly 13,000 people packed into evacuation centers such as schools

and other secure buildings in the quake zone 160 miles northwest of Tokyo, the

Fire and Disaster Management Agency said.

 

People packed school gymnasiums and community centers in the city, camping out

on traditional Japanese futon mattresses and fanning themselves from the muggy

summer heat.

 

Thunderstorms and flooding were expected Tuesday throughout the quake zone,

increasing the likelihood that the quake-softened, water-logged ground would

give way on hillsides and cause even more damage, officials said.

 

Light rain began to fall by early afternoon in Kashiwazaki and up to 2.4 inches

were expected by Wednesday morning, according to the local observatory.

 

" The damage is more than we had imagined, " Kashiwazaki Mayor Hiroshi Aida said

while inspecting damaged areas of his town. " We want to restore the water supply

as soon as possible so more people can return home. "

 

Nine people in their 70s or 80s -- six women and three men -- were killed in the

quake, and 47 were seriously injured.

 

The Defense Ministry dispatched 450 soldiers to the devastated area to clear

rumble, search for any survivors under collapsed buildings and provide food,

water and toilet facilities. People formed long lines to fill bottles with fresh

water.

 

About 50,000 homes were without water and 35,000 were without gas as of Tuesday

morning, local official Mitsugu Abe said. About 27,000 households were without

power.

 

The Japanese Meteorological Agency put the initial quake's magnitude at 6.8,

while the U.S. Geological Survey said it was 6.6. The quake, which hit the

region at 10:13 a.m., was centered off the coast of Niigata, 160 miles northwest

of Tokyo.

 

The area was plagued by a series of aftershocks, though there were no immediate

reports of additional damage or injuries from the aftershocks.

 

Near midnight, Japan's Meteorological Agency said a 6.6-magnitude quake hit off

the west coast, shaking wide areas of Japan, but it was unrelated to the Niigata

quake to the north and there were no immediate reports of damage.

 

Source: Associated Press

 

 

“The Earth is not dying - she is being killed. And those who are killing her

have names and addresses.†— Utah Phillips

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