1. 11:55 11th Mar 2011

    Notes: 114

    Reblogged from formerlyroxy

    Tags: earthquakepsa

    Japan’s Quake Could Have Irradiated the Entire United States

    roxanneritchi:

    spankingboy | killerkaleidoscope | feraldreamer:

     

    By HARVEY WASSERMAN

    Had the violent 8.9 Richter-scale earthquake that has just savaged Japan hit off the California coast, it could have ripped apart at least four coastal reactors and sent a lethal cloud of radiation across the entire United States.

    The two huge reactors each at San Onofre and Diablo Canyon are not designed to withstand such powerful shocks. All four are extremely close to major faults.

    All four reactors are located relatively low to the coast. They are vulnerable to tsunamis like those now expected to hit as many as fifty countries.

    San Onofre sits between San Diego and Los Angeles. A radioactive cloud spewing from one or both reactors there would do incalculable damage to either or both urban areas before carrying over the rest of southern and central California.

    Diablo Canyon is at Avila Beach, on the coast just west of San Luis Obispo, between Los Angeles and San Francisco. A radioactive eruption there would pour into central California and, depending on the winds, up to the Bay Area or southeast into Santa Barbara and then to Los Angeles. The cloud would at very least permanently destroy much of the region on which most Americans rely for their winter supply of fresh vegetables.

    By the federal Price-Anderson Act of 1957, the owners of the destroyed reactors—-including Pacific Gas & Electric and Southern California Edison—-would be covered by private insurance only up to $11 billion, a tiny fraction of the trillions of dollars worth of damage that would be done. The rest would become the responsibility of the federal taxpayer and the fallout victims. Virtually all homeowner insurance policies in the United States exempt the insurers from liability from a reactor disaster.

    The most definitive recent study of the 1986 Chernobyl disaster puts the death toll at 985,000. The accident irradiated a remote rural area. The nearest city, Kiev, is 80 kilometers away.

    But San Luis Obispo is some ten miles directly downwind from Diablo Canyon. The region around San Onofre has become heavily suburbanized.

    Heavy radioactive fallout spread from Chernobyl blanketed all of Europewithin a matter of days. It covered an area far larger than the United States.

    Fallout did hit the jet stream and then the coast of California, thousands of miles away, within ten days. It then carried all the way across the northern tier of the United States.

    Chernobyl Unit Four was of comparable size to the two reactors at Diablo Canyon, and somewhat larger than the two at San Onofre.

    But it was very new when it exploded. California’s four coastal reactors have been operating since the 1970s and 1980s. Their accumulated internal radioactive burdens could exceed what was spewed at Chernobyl.

    Japanese officials say all affected reactors automatically shut, with no radiation releases. But they are not reliable. In 2007 a smaller earthquake rocked the seven-reactor Kashiwazaki site and forced its lengthy shut-down.

    Preliminary reports indicate at least one fire at a Japanese reactor hit by this quake and tsunami.

    In 1986 the Perry nuclear plant, east of Cleveland, was rocked by a 5.5 Richter-scale shock, many orders of magnitude weaker than this one. That quake broke pipes and other key equipment within the plant. It took out nearby roads and bridges.

    Thankfully, Perry had not yet opened. An official Ohio commission later warned that evacuation during such a quake would be impossible.

    Numerous other American reactors sit on or near earthquake faults.

    The Obama Administration is now asking Congress for $36 billion in new loan guarantees to build more commercial reactors.

    It has yet to reveal its exact plans for dealing with a major reactor disaster. Nor has it identified the cash or human reserves needed to cover the death and destruction imposed by the reactors’ owners.

    http://www.counterpunch.org/wasserman03112011.html

    Bolded for emphasis. I live near there, ‘kay? I’ve been to the beach next to Diablo Canyon—next to, I say, because I could walk from the water’s edge to the front door of the reactor without even getting winded if I weren’t worried about security. On a clear day my dad can see the nuclear reactor from his back porch. If this shit breaks down, I’m gonna die. That’s it, plain and simple. I think nuclear technology has the potential to be, theoretically, safe-ish—but not here. Not in along a fucking fault line.

    GODDAMN JESUS SHITFUCK this is actually terrifying

    D: D: D: D: D: 

    Yeah, this pretty much covers everywhere anyone in my entire family lives. Where do I join the protest?

     
    1. stheno reblogged this from formerlyroxy
    2. sleepswithangels reblogged this from green-street-politics
    3. borken reblogged this from nebulust and added:
      Japan’s Quake Could Have Irradiated the Entire United States
    4. nebulust reblogged this from formerlyroxy
    5. sandwichocracy reblogged this from sunisup and added:
      I live in California and so does most of my family. When you lived in California you’re whole life you get used to...
    6. micromys reblogged this from formerlyroxy and added:
      I’ve pretty much accepted that moving back to California means I will die if any of the major earthquakes it is overdue...
    7. sunisup reblogged this from pseudo-tsuga and added:
      nextian:roxanneritchi:spankingboy | killerkaleidoscope | feraldreamer: Bolding mine. I live in California. So does most...
    8. green-street-politics reblogged this from custerdiedforyoursins
    9. awayfromjays reblogged this from ceepers
    10. haroldtsaxon reblogged this from phantomqueen and added:
      isn’t human kind brilliant! (sarcasm)
    11. chonklatime reblogged this from formerlyroxy and added:
      Y’know, just for today, I think I’m going to stick my fingers in my ears and go “LA LA LA LA LA” instead of allowing...
    12. phantomqueen reblogged this from formerlyroxy and added:
      (sorry if this giant wall of text bothers anyone, like people who don’t live in the U.S.) why are there nuclear reactors...
    13. crossedwires reblogged this from nextian
    14. koji-ma-oshi reblogged this from custerdiedforyoursins
    15. villettas reblogged this from xybutt
    16. nymbus reblogged this from fyrusmoved
    17. goombellas reblogged this from ceepers and added:
      holy shit fuck shit D:
    18. pseudo-tsuga reblogged this from nextian and added:
      I go to school in Santa Barbara and my family lives in San Francisco. Holy shit.
    19. jediemma reblogged this from formerlyroxy
    20. theladyofdogtown reblogged this from exxcliffs
    21. proletarianinstinct reblogged this from bohemianarthouse
    22. nextian reblogged this from formerlyroxy and added:
      Yeah, this pretty much covers everywhere anyone in my entire family lives. Where do I join the protest?
    23. bat-wishes reblogged this from exxcliffs
    24. ziggyplayed reblogged this from formerlyroxy
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    26. elystia reblogged this from formerlyroxy