margotbworldnews.com/WordPress/wp-content/May/May12/1810943.png

Alternative World News        

  • Home
  • Archives
  • Contact Us
  • Featured
  • Health
  • Jokes
  • Radiation
  • Search News
  • Translate
  • Travel


The safer, easier way to pay online
paypal donations
Make a Donation

*********

Commentaries

Treaty Threatens Global Government – Run by Giant Corporations

A Mother’s Love, Still Strong at 104

CAFR $8 trillion update: Senator Liu, Assemblyperson Portantino so far silent

Business is Booming in the Boondocks

Is Rand Paul plotting to insert
himself as a double agent?

VIDEOS/IMAGES

Robert Reich: Why taxes have to be raised on the rich

Finally! The truth about Syria comes out

Support the Troops

Logan Symposium: The New Initiatives

John Fire Lamedeer, Native Indian Chief

Fermenting vegetables to increase food security.

Rense & Dr Bill Deagle - Fukushima Radioactive Death & Economic Destruction

Ernestine Shepherd: The 75-year-old bodybuilding grandma

Jason Ringenberg – Bible and a Gun

‘Pentagon sanitizes movies to make Americans warlike’

Fukushima plant operator: We weren’t prepared for nuclear accident

From Chie Kobayashi, for CNN
updated 7:51 AM EDT, Wed June 20, 2012
The quake-damaged nuclear power plant in the town of Futaba, Fukushima prefecture, is shown in March 2011.
The quake-damaged nuclear power plant in the town of Futaba, Fukushima prefecture, is shown in March 2011.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • NEW: A TEPCO executive says a power outage caused delays in getting data
  • Tokyo Electric Power Co. announces its final report on the Fukushima Daiichi crisis
  • TEPCO vice president: We need to make improvements in disclosing information
  • A separate investigation by a government panel said operators were poorly trained

Tokyo (CNN) -- The operator of Japan's crippled Fukushima Daiichi power plant admitted Wednesday that it was not fully prepared for the nuclear disaster spurred by last year's devastating earthquake and tsunami.

"All who were related to the nuclear plant could not predict an occurrence of the event which was far beyond our expectation," said Masao Yamazaki, executive vice president of Tokyo Electric Power Co. (TEPCO). "We did not have enough measures to prevent the accident."

Report: Japan to restart first nuclear reactors since Fukushima

Yamazaki, who also chairs a TEPCO committee investigating the disaster, spoke at a news conference announcing the company's final report on the crisis that spewed radiation and left tens of thousands of residents displaced.

The report acknowledged criticism that TEPCO took too long to disclose information and accusations that the company has been hiding information.

Anger over Fukushima suicide
Nuclear disaster spreads to houses, food
Japan tsunami debris hits U.S.

"Losing power caused less plant data (to be) available," which caused a delay in retrieving information, the report stated.

Residents call for criminal charges against nuclear officials

The company added, "We did not mean to hide information, but there was a lack of enough explanation."

"We recognize these points should be improved," Yamazaki said.

Though no deaths have been attributed to the nuclear accident, the earthquake and tsunami killed more than 15,000 people in northeastern Japan.

Yamazaki said the company considered evacuating some employees after the disaster, and it decided to leave staff members "who were working on the necessary measures. ... We were determined to continue dealing with the situation, even risking our lives at that time."

Evacuee's suicide sad reminder how Fukushima continues to claim victims

TEPCO's probe is one of several investigations into the worst nuclear accident since Chernobyl.

In December, a government-formed panel of investigators released an interim report saying poorly trained operators misread a key backup system and waited too long to start pumping water into overheating reactor units.

The government's 10-member panel, led by Tokyo University engineering professor Yotaro Hatamura, also said neither TEPCO nor government regulators were prepared for the chance that a tsunami could trigger a nuclear disaster.

Former Japanese leader: 'I felt fear' during nuclear crisis

CNN's Yoko Wakatsuki, Matt Smith and Holly Yan contributed to this report.

BACK to margotbworldnews.com

Co–editors: Larry B; Eric G; Vince Guarisco
Contact Us | Environmentally friendly: Margot B World News is hosted on servers powered solely by renewable energy. |
Affiliates Links; Contributors; Donations; Jokes; Editorial Staff; News: Indian Country; Sports
© Margot B 2003–2012
Template design by Margot B Alternative World News
website analysis