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DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Japan resumes dousing smouldering nuclear plant

Power restored to Japan's reactor one control room
Osaka, Japan (AFP) March 24, 2011 - Technicians partially restored electricity at 0230 GMT Thursday to the control room of reactor one at Japan's stricken Fukushima nuclear power plant, the nuclear safety agency said. "The light went on in the control room of number one reactor at 11:30 am," a nuclear safety agency official said. "But we are still unsure whether this means the cooling system will be restored."
by Staff Writers
Osaka (AFP) March 24, 2011
Emergency crew using fire engines again aimed their high-pressure water jets at a quake-hit and charred nuclear reactor in Japan Thursday, a day after a plume of dark smoke forced them to evacuate.

Workers have struggled to avert a meltdown at the Fukushima plant northeast of Tokyo that has belched radiation, forcing tens of thousands to evacuate, contaminating farm produce and drinking water, and sparking wide anxiety.

White steam was seen rising from four of the six reactors in the morning.

Workers had been pulled back Wednesday after dark smoke rose from the number three reactor unit, which was badly hit by the massive 9.0-magnitude earthquake and towering tsunami which battered northeast Japan on March 11.

The quake severed external power to the plant. Reactors one to three, which were operating at the time, automatically shut down but the tsunami knocked out the backup generators and the cooling systems failed.

Early Thursday the Tokyo fire department engines again aimed their powerful seawater jets at the site to top up a spent fuel pool inside the unit.

The focus is on the number three reactor, of special concern since it uses volatile uranium-plutonium fuel. Retopping the containment pool aims to stop it from being exposed to air where it could release large-scale radiation.

Engineers have now linked up an external electricity supply to all six reactors and are testing system components and equipment in an effort to soon restart the cooling systems and stabilise the reactors.

Power has been partially restored to the control room of the number three unit. Previously workers had to grope around in the dark, using flashlights, without an air-conditioning system to extract elevated radiation.

The plant is located 250 kilometres (155 miles) northeast of Tokyo.

The government has declared an exclusion zone with a radius of 20 kilometres around the power station and evacuated tens of thousands of people, while telling those within 20 to 30 kilometres to stay indoors.



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DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Fukushima seawater may affect reactor cooling: France
Paris (AFP) March 23, 2011
Emergency use of seawater at Fukushima could harm longer-term efforts to cool the plant's crippled reactors, France's nuclear watchdog said Wednesday. The agency said it was "concerned" that salt from seawater used extensively to cool the reactor cores could be corrosive or build up in crystalline layers inside heat exchangers and valves, hampering their efficiency. This equipment will b ... read more







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