
Aerial view of the Oi Nuclear Power Plant, Fukui Prefecture, Japan. (photo: Japan Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport via Wikipedia)
The massive disaster at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear facility that began with the March 11, 2011 Tohoku earthquake and tsunami could have been prevented and was likely made worse by the response of government officials and plant owners, so says a lengthy report released today by the Japanese Diet (their parliament).
The official report of The Fukushima Nuclear Accident Independent Investigation Committee [PDF] harshly criticizes the Japanese nuclear industry for avoiding safety upgrades and disaster plans that could have mitigated much of what went wrong after a massive quake struck the northeast of Japan last year. The account also includes direct evidence that Japanese regulatory agencies conspired with TEPCO (Fukushima’s owner-operator) to help them forestall improvements and evade scrutiny:
The TEPCO Fukushima Nuclear Power Plant accident was the result of collusion between the government, the regulators and TEPCO, and the lack of governance by said parties. They effectively betrayed the nation’s right to be safe from nuclear accidents.
. . . .
We found evidence that the regulatory agencies would explicitly ask about the operators’ intentions whenever a new regulation was to be implemented. For example, NISA informed the operators that they did not need to consider a possible station blackout (SBO) because the probability was small and other measures were in place. It then asked the operators to write a report that would give the appropriate rationale for why this consideration was unnecessary.
The report also pointed to Japanese cultural conventions, namely the reluctance to question authority–a common refrain in many post-Fukushima analyses.
But perhaps most damning, and most important to the future of Japan and to the future of nuclear power worldwide, is the Investigation’s finding that parts of the containment and cooling systems at Fukushima Daiichi were almost certainly damaged by the earthquake before the mammoth tsunami caused additional destruction:
We conclude that TEPCO was too quick to cite the tsunami as the cause of the nuclear accident and deny that the earthquake caused any damage.
. . . .
[I]t is impossible to limit the direct cause of the accident to the tsunami without substantive evidence. The Commission believes that this is an attempt to avoid responsibility by putting all the blame on the unexpected (the tsunami), as they wrote in their midterm report, and not on the more foreseeable earthquake.
Through our investigation, we have verified that the people involved were aware of the risk from both earthquakes and tsunami. Further, the damage to Unit 1 was caused not only by the tsunami but also by the earthquake, a conclusion made after considering the facts that: 1) the largest tremor hit after the automatic shutdown (SCRAM); 2) JNES confirmed the possibility of a small-scale LOCA (loss of coolant accident); 3) the Unit 1 operators were concerned about leakage of coolant from the valve, and 4) the safety relief valve (SR) was not operating.
Additionally, there were two causes for the loss of external power, both earthquake-related: there was no diversity or independence in the earthquake-resistant external power systems, and the Shin-Fukushima transformer station was not earthquake resistant.
As has been discussed here many times, the nuclear industry and its boosters in government like to point to the “who could have possibly imagined,” “one-two punch” scenario of quake and tsunami to both vouch for the safety of other nuclear facilities and counter any call for reexamination and upgrades of existing safety systems. Fukushima, however, has always proved the catastrophic case study that actually countered this argument–and now there is an exhaustive study to buttress the point.
First, both the quake and the tsunami were far from unpredictable. The chances of each–as well as the magnitude–were very much part of predictions made by scientists and government bureaucrats. There is documentation that Japanese regulators knew and informed their nuclear industry of these potential disasters, but then looked the other way or actively aided the cause as plant operators consistently avoided improving structures, safety systems and accident protocols.
Second, even if there had not been a tsunami, Fukushima Daiichi would have still been a disaster. While the crisis was no doubt exacerbated by the loss of the diesel generators and the influx of seawater, the evidence continues to mount that reactor containment was breached and cooling systems were damaged by the earthquake first. Further, it was the earthquake that damaged all the electrical systems and backups aside from the diesel generators, and there is no guarantee that all generators would have worked flawlessly for their projected life-spans, that the other external and internal power systems could have been restored quickly, or that enough additional portable power could have been trucked in to the facility in time to prevent further damage. In fact, much points to less than optimal resolution of all of these problems.
To repeat, there was loss of external power, loss of coolant, containment breach, and release of radiation after the quake, but before the tsunami hit the Fukushima nuclear plant.
And now for the bad news. . . .
And yet, as harsh as this new report is (and it is even more critical than was expected, which is actually saying something), on first reading, it still appears to pull a punch.
Though the failure of the nuclear reactors and their safety systems is now even further documented in this report, its focus on industry obstruction and government collusion continues in some ways to perpetuate the “culture of safety” myth. By labeling the Fukushima disaster as “Made in Japan,” “manmade” and “preventable,” the panel–as we are fond of saying here–assumes a can opener. By talking up all that government and industry did wrong in advance of March 11, 2011, by critiquing all the lies and crossed signals after the earthquake and tsunami, and by recommending new protocols and upgrades, the Japanese report fiats a best-case scenario for a technology that has consistently proven that no such perfect plan exists.
The facts were all there before 3/11/11, and all the revelations since just add to the atomic pile. Nuclear fission is a process that has to go flawlessly to consistently provide safe and economical electrical power–but the process is too complex, and relies on too many parts, too many people and too volatile a fuel for that to ever really happen. Add in the costs and hazards of uranium mining, transport, fuel milling, and waste storage, and nuclear again proves itself to be dirty, dangerous, and disgustingly expensive.
* * *
And, as if to put an exclamation point at the end of the Diet’s report (and this column), the Japanese government moved this week to restart the nuclear plant at Oi, bringing the No. 3 reactor online just hours before the release of the new Fukushima findings. The Oi facility rests on a fault line, and seismologists, nuclear experts and activists have warned that this facility is at risk much in the way Fukushima Daiichi proved to be.
Most of Japan’s reactors were taken offline following the Tohoku quake, with the last of them–the Oi plant–shut down earlier this year. In the wake of the disaster, Japan’s then-Prime Minister, Naoto Kan, suggested that it might be time for his country to turn away from nuclear power. Demonstrators across Japan seemed to agree and urged Kansai Electric Power Company and current Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda to delay the restart of Oi. But the government seemed to be hurrying to get Oi back up, despite many questions and several technical glitches.
Noda insists the rush is because of the need for electricity during the hot summer months, but Japan managed surprisingly well last summer (when more of the country’s infrastructure was still damaged from the quake and tsunami) with better conservation and efficiency measures. Perhaps release of this new report provides a more plausible explanation for the apparent urgency.



31 Comments

Good report. Rec’d. I didn’t know the ‘can opener’ joke, but the report from the UCS is eye-opening, a one third failure rate on inspected items would have any officer in the military relieved of command immediately. We need the same emphasis in the nuclear industry.
Highly recommended, Gregg – as always.
The Military have different measures and an unlimited budget.
Private industry has to control costs (operations & maintenance), and there is generally no slack in the operations budget — maintenance gets deferred.
Ask any slumlord.
The relationship betw govt & ind in Japan, a kind of central planning lite, is even closer than in the U.S., so no one should be surprised. MITI’s job is to promote industrial development, as just one example.
http://youtu.be/RmwqnqL3Hbg
Yeha who coud hve figured out ahead of time that in a nation straddling three separate, quake-prone tectonic plates, that there would ever be a major earthquake?
Actually the Japanese people understood just that. And in elections in 2006, the people of the Fukushima province attempted to oust the officials who guaranteed that the nuke plant would continue. immediately the Bush Administration sent its top nuclear industry cronies to Japan to ensure that despite the will of the Japanese people, there would be a continuance of the for-profit nuke industry in Japan, as that industry benefited Bush cronies such as the top dogs of General Electric.
Can you say cronyism? Any different anywhere this thing called capitalism is in place?
This nuclear plant was a General Electric product and a very bad design. It’s a good thing that this administration doesn’t have the same level of GE influence as the last. Can you imagine the potential for disaster if someone like Jeffrey Immelt was advising the Obama administration? /s
Actually, as the story indicated, this most recent report is still a whitewash.
There are ample, if indirect and scattered, admissions from TEPCO and the government to make it fairly certain that reactor 1 already had a core melt in progress before the tsunami even hit.
Corporate and governmental culpability was so great that this is the best whitewash they could come up with.
… and the fission products are still spreading…
If the pump that broke last week didn’t start working again last Sunday night, Fukushima would be exploding again right about this time. Yes, the disaster is still unfolding, and radionuclides are bioaccumulating in Pacific marine life, one thing this report did not seem to emphasize. As far as American media is concerned, it all out of sight out of mind…let’s build more reactors and then all go to Red Lobster!
Why every nuclear capable country in the world is not there and active in solving this most critical situation,is just sad. There are limits to Duct tape. Unit 4 storage pool almost was lost this past weekend. So much is being amassed about Iran’s nonexistent nuclear bomb. Fuck-u-shima is real.
There was a recent report that tuna being caught off the West Coast of the USA was displaying high levels of radioactivity, as if the elevated mercury levels weren’t bad enough.
DING!
And isn’t it great that landless peasants the world over have paid and paid and paid even with their own extermination for what’s passed off by the 1%ers/banstas as “nuclear power”?
A really good question, eh?:
“Why Should Nuke Guarantees Cost Less Than Home or Student Loans?” (Reader Supported News, by Harvey Wasserman, July 3, 2012)
But we already used Japan as a target for a nuclear attack last century, and the US war machine must manufacture new threats to justify the obscene amounts of funding for “defense” and to instill fear in the populace. It doesn’t matter that the targeted nation is actually in compliance with the treaty it signed, the NPT in this case. Hell, Obama tried to sell Chile on new nuclear plants on his last visit to Latin America, as if they don’t have earthquakes and aren’t susceptible to tsunamis.
I live in a place of much seismic activity not to forget 3 passive-active volcanoes. Potential for,geothermal,tidal,wind power is unreal. But i bet you could find the funding to place a nuke on a fault line here sooner than the alternative. That would make the Pebble mine look like littering.
recommended. thank you for the update gregg.
Gregg, the BBC news halfhour, which is broadcast in my area at 5:30 on PBS, just totally misrepresented the Japanese report, only giving the ‘manmade’ side of the report and actually stating that the tsunami caused the accidents at Fukushima. They said NOTHING about the side of the report you have explained that showed it was damage occurring before the tsunami from the earthquake which triggered the disaster – in fact they did not mention the earthquake at all!
Unbelievable. Thank you for presenting this analysis – I had already read it, and I kept waiting for the BBC to say something about the findings. They did not.
Highly recommended.
Why should I be surprised? The PBS Newshour also conveniently left out the damage caused by the earthquake. It’s not as if they didn’t spend enough time on the story, as might be said of the BBC. (And of course neither one had anything to say about the precarious sistuation at Fukushima today.)
This is not a minor omission. This is a disservice to the public’s right to know, to know the full story.
I cannot say enough times how indebted we are to FDL for the in depth news analysis you provide. Thank you.
Thanks, Juliana.
The reluctance of establishment media the world over to acknowledge that the quake damaged the reactors before the tsunami did is, I think, worth a diary in itself.
One wonders if GE, which famously owns NBC, is not the only nuke-involved media titan?
Excellent reporting by Greg Levine. I wonder if Greg would care to comment on allegations by Jim Stone (and evidence) that Fukushima was Japan’s 9/11 and that there was actually no earthquake but rather a nuclear blast caused the tsunami. While Stone appears to be a religious kook, his “conspiracy theory” has been hushed for some reason.
Not a chance.
Stone’s elaborate theory fails review in many respects… but three of those stood out to me on an initial appraisal…
The first is the fact that quakes can be and are measured globally.
A seismologist in Bogota can tell you quite a bit about the magnitude 3 quake that just hit 40 km south of Barcelona.
And increasing the numbers of the observers rapidly scales up the depth of knowledge about a particular event. When the seismological data from Bogota is combined the the data from Boca Raton and Bombay and Bristol etc etc etc a very detailed “map” of the exact location, nature and timing of the quake is generated.
Stone just waves his paws and says that Israel instructed Japan to say that a 6.66 quake was actually a +9 after the Israelis detonated a nuke offshore… as if the rest of the world’s seismologists weren’t watching in realtime as the quake happened.
… and, oh yeah, nukes have a very distinctive seismic footprint all their own that in no way whatsoever resembles an earthquake.
Second is Stone’s apparent ignorance of the complete disparity between the energy generated by natural events and the energy generated by our pathetically weak and puny nuclear weapons.
Yes, one of our pathetically weak nukes can destroy an entire city in a flash.
One magnitude 9 quake can devastate dozens of cities.
A nuke right offshore can devastate a coastal city.
A quake-generated tsunami can devastate the coastlines of entire states and provinces.
Stone… really has no clue as to what he’s talking about in regards to quakes, nukes and rectors.
Maybe the Israelis really did muck with the Japanese reactors, or maybe they didn’t. But Stone apparently cannot provide the technical insight to determine that.
From a technical viewpoint what Stone does provide is much sound and fury indicating… nothing coherent.
I stopped at the part about the Israeli nuclear bombs that Stone says were smuggled into and detonated inside the Fukushima reactors.
Thanks Gregg, I’ve been missing you.
What I posted to my facebook page today
When our useless, bought media bothers to pay attention at all to the 3/11/11 Fukushima calamity, it is still maddeningly presented in the past tense. In fact this monster continues to spew untold amounts of deadly radionuclides into the air, soil, and ocean. The location and condition of the coriums (melted fuel cores) of Units 1, 2, and 3 are unknown and impossible to assess. Much of the Fuku complex remains unapproachable even by robots. This situation continues to menace all biological life on earth, and has certainly finished Japan. There is no fix. None. It’s hard to wrap one’s head around. No wonder Japanese corporate/gov officialdom is like a deer in the headlights, unable to do anything but reflexive lying, happy talk, and coverup. This is truly a situation humanity has never faced. Not to mention the Unit 4 spent fuel pool. Google it and prepare to have your hair stand on end. This entire disaster has only begun.
All because of a single day and a loss of electricity to cooling pumps. Ponder that when you watch the latest bullshit happy nuke commercial on your tv. And let’s not forget that 26 years after Chernobyl, that mess still has numerous possible dangers and now requires new containment, costing billions of dollars nobody has. Not for any useful purpose, either – just to manage a massive, destroyed folly that will need to be contained for many hundreds of years.
Anybody who still thinks humans have the capacity to manage this insanely complex and absolutely unforgiving technology should have their freaking head examined.
Sorry for this extended bummer cri de coeur. What I feel for the people of Japan, and all of us, is impossible to truly express.
Those interested in other than corporate lies should bookmark the aggregator enenews.com.
Thanks Gregg, I’ve been missing you.
What I posted to my facebook page today
When our useless, bought media bothers to pay attention at all to the 3/11/11 Fukushima calamity, it is still maddeningly presented in the past tense. In fact this monster continues to spew untold amounts of deadly radionuclides into the air, soil, and ocean. The location and condition of the coriums (melted fuel cores) of Units 1, 2, and 3 are unknown and impossible to assess. Much of the Fuku complex remains unapproachable even by robots. This situation continues to menace all biological life on earth, and has certainly finished Japan. There is no fix. None. It’s hard to wrap one’s head around. No wonder Japanese corporate/gov officialdom is like a deer in the headlights, unable to do anything but reflexive lying, happy talk, and coverup. This is truly a situation humanity has never faced. Not to mention the Unit 4 spent fuel pool. Google it and prepare to have your hair stand on end. This entire disaster has only begun.
All because of a single day and a loss of electricity to cooling pumps. Ponder that when you watch the latest bullshit happy nuke commercial on your tv. And let’s not forget that 26 years after Chernobyl, that mess still has numerous possible dangers and now requires new containment, costing billions of dollars nobody has. Not for any useful purpose, either – just to manage a massive, destroyed folly that will need to be contained for many hundreds of years.
Anybody who still thinks humans have the capacity to manage this insanely complex and absolutely unforgiving technology should have their freaking head examined.
Sorry for this extended bummer cri de coeur. What I feel for the people of Japan, and all of us, is impossible to truly express.
Those interested in other than corporate lies should bookmark the aggregator enenews.com.
Fark this software, swear i hit submit only once
I, too, miss the edit button :)
Response to sharkbabe: I couln’t agree more to every word you wrote. What does it take to make people wake up? More Fukushimas? Many more? When it is truly too late? Why are the people not on the streets every day determined to shake up all the corruption that leads to business as usual?
Thanks for the kind words, everyone–hermit, ET, greenwarrior, Juliania, nr, Sharkbabe–everyone.
I had not heard the on-air BBC or PBS reports–I will have to look for them. The evening NPR/ATC version was unimpressive, as well, most notably because it treats the disaster as something in past tense and something far away and in no particular way related to anything here at home.
It is hard to listen/watch/read these establishment reports when you know a little more or at least have a memory capable of recalling the last 16 months. I sometimes feel like I am just repeating myself and boring everyone else when I keep pointing it out, but even if it feels like whack-a-mole, I expect smacking back at the lies will prove worthy in the end.
That is my hope, anyway.
thanks for the post and my intro to enenews.com
Didn’t GE sell their interest in NBC to Comcast in the not too distant past?
Thank you Gregg.