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CIVIL NUCLEAR
Today's plants far safer than Fukushima: US expert
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Sept 15, 2011

Today's nuclear reactors are "much safer" than the Japanese plant damaged in this year's earthquake and tsunami, a US expert said Thursday, citing dramatic improvements that could prevent similar disasters.

The first of Fukushima Dai-ichi's six nuclear reactors came online in 1970, a full nine years before the Three-Mile Island crisis in the United States and 16 years before Chernobyl, the world's worst nuclear disaster.

"The Fukushima plants were early plants, and so... more modern designs would be much more robust in their capability to deal with the situation" that Japan faced, said former US Nuclear Regulatory Commission chairman Richard Meserve.

"Plants are much safer in their designs today."

On March 11, a 9.0-magnitude quake rocked Fukushima, and the resulting 14-meter (46-foot) ocean wave drowned the plant, knocking out the power supply, the reactor cooling systems and back-up diesel generators.

The resulting meltdown of reactors forced the evacuation of thousands of people and the banning of local farm produce. Six months on, engineers are still fighting to stop radiation leaking out.

Meserve said Fukushima's designers should have looked at historical data which showed a similar-sized tsunami hit the area in the year 869. The plant, he said, was designed to be able to accommodate a 5.7-meter tsunami.

Meserve, an advisor to the UN's International Atomic Energy Agency, said plant developers in the United States always look at "what's the maximum probable event in that environment," and design accordingly.

"It appears that this was not the case with regard to the Fukushima plant," he said.

While its layout and design would not be considered by today's builders, Meserve stressed that Fukushima, for its day, was not seen as unsafe.

Designs have improved substantially in large part because engineers are "continuously learning from what has happened in the past and making sure that you learn from experience so that history is not repeated."

Aside from advances like high-quality construction and passive safety systems that override human failures, today's designers incorporate what's known as "probabalistic risk assessment," which looks at the likelihood of events that could cause damage.

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Second Fukushima plant unlikely to reopen: Japan minister
Tokyo (AFP) Sept 16, 2011 - Japan's new industry minister has acknowledged it will be difficult to restart the companion nuclear plant to the one at the heart of the country's atomic crisis, media reports said.

The Fukushima Daini (number one) nuclear complex is about 12 kilometres (7 miles) from the stricken Fukushima Daiichi (number two) plant where reactors went into meltdown following the March 11 earthquake and tsunami.

The Daini plant was less badly hit but was unlikely to gain approval to restart operations, Yukio Edano said in an interview Thursday with local media including the Kyodo news agency.

"I do not believe that we can obtain local approval," Kyodo quoted him as saying, adding that approval from local authorities was a "precondition" for any plant to restart operations.

Four reactors at the Fukushima Daini plant were damaged in the twin natural disasters and have been brought to a stable state of "cold shutdown", but two remain undamaged.

The six reactors at the Daiichi plant will be taken out of operation, the previous government of Naoto Kan said. Tens of thousands of people were forced to leave their homes by the nuclear crisis and still do not know when they can return.

Edano -- who served as the face of the government after the natural disasters -- was named industry minister by the new prime minister, Yoshihiko Noda, this week after his predecessor resigned over a series of gaffes.





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