GPS News  
BLUE SKY
Where the winds blow: Experts ponder fallout risks

by Staff Writers
Paris (AFP) March 15, 2011
Experts monitoring weather patterns for any fallout from Japan's stricken nuclear plant said Tuesday the winds had so far been favourable but they were less confident about the outlook later this week.

The World Meteorological Organisation (WMO) said winds on Saturday and Monday -- when two blasts occurred at Fukushima -- were blowing to the northeast and east, in other words out over the Pacific.

"All the meteorological conditions are offshore, there are no implications inshore for Japan or other countries near Japan," said Maryam Golnaraghi, who heads the WMO's disaster risk reduction programme.

But on Tuesday, the winds temporarily shifted, coming instead from the northeast, the Geneva-based WMO said, quoting the Japanese Meteorological Agency.

For Wednesday, "the forecast is for northerly winds and later westerly, (for winds that are) near-surface and at 1,000 metres (3,250 feet)," it said. Thereafter, conditions "will fluctuate as weather systems develop and progress."

In Tokyo, 250 kilometres (155 miles) southwest of Fukushima, the authorities said higher-than-normal radiation levels had been detected in the capital on Tuesday but not at harmful levels.

The WMO activated a so-called environmental emergency response mechanism on Saturday, with three regional centres in Beijing, Tokyo and Obninsk, Russia, monitoring weather patterns.

The benchmark for fallout from a nuclear disaster is the April 26, 1986, explosion at Chernobyl, which spewed radioactive dust across parts of Ukraine, Russia and Belarus and even reached as far as Ireland, more than 1,600 kilometres away.

In the Russian Far East, the meteorological service at Vladivostok, less than 1,000 kilometres west of Fukushima, said radiation levels were within normal limits.

The service's spokeswoman, Varvara Koridze, said that air samples "contained the usual background components. Radionuclides that would have been the result of an explosion were not found."

Boris Lamash, head of the climate department at Far Eastern Federal University, said prevailing winds at this time of year in the region were westerlies and northwesterlies, which helped push harmful material away.

In the United States, meteorologist Jeff Masters used a modelling program from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration to determine where radioactivity would spread.

"The great majority of these runs have taken plumes of radioactivity emitted from Japan's east coast eastwards over the Pacific, with the plumes staying over water for at least five days," he said.

"It is highly unlikely that any radiation capable of causing harm to people will be left in the atmosphere after seven days and 2,000 miles-plus of travel," said Masters, founder of the Weather Underground online weather forecasting service.

Cyril Honore, deputy head of forecasting at the French state weather service, Meteo France, was cautious.

"Japan lies in temperate latitudes, so winds are generally west-to-east, but this prevailing direction does not rule out the possibility of very strong variations," he told AFP.

He also noted that contaminated dust from Fukushima could disperse in wide patterns.

"A cloud, or air mass, is not an enclosed bloc. It is exposed to horizontal and vertical turbulence, so matter is dispersed or diluted according to atmospheric directions," Honore said.



Share This Article With Planet Earth
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit
YahooMyWebYahooMyWeb GoogleGoogle FacebookFacebook



Related Links
The Air We Breathe at TerraDaily.com



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


BLUE SKY
Measuring Methane
Madison WI (SPX) Mar 04, 2011
Methane is an extremely potent greenhouse gas. Wetlands, gas hydrates, permafrost, termites, oceans, freshwater bodies, non-wetland soils, are all natural sources of atmospheric methane; however, the majority of methane presence ca n be accredited to human-related activities. These activities include: such as fossil fuel production, biomass burning, waste management and animal husbandry. T ... read more







BLUE SKY
Forgotten forage grass rediscovered

Japan to start screening food for radioactivity

Tainted pork is latest food scandal to hit China

Untapped Crop Data From Africa Predicts Corn Peril If Temperatures Rise

BLUE SKY
Taiwan's UMC to triple stake China chip maker

NIST Electromechanical Circuit Sets Record Beating Microscopic Drum

New Generation Of Optical Integrated Devices For Future Quantum Computers

JQI Physicists Demonstrate Coveted Spin-Orbit Coupling In Atomic Gases

BLUE SKY
Rolls-Royce forecasts helicopter boom

Flights to Japan cut as foreigners scramble to leave

Air China, Taiwan's EVA cut back Japan flights

Budget airlines open up Asia's skies to the masses

BLUE SKY
Japan quake to hit supplies of popular cars in US

Better Batteries For Electric Cars

Google adds charging stations to maps

Buffett-backed China carmaker BYD sees profit slip

BLUE SKY
Norway oil fund drops Chinese firm over tobacco

Mercosur-EU trade pact far from certain

Honduras dumps neighbors, opens to China

Japan quake hits Taiwan tourism

BLUE SKY
Canada's unique wetlands under threat: report

Colombian Amazon village bans prying tourists

US scientists recruit crocodiles to save wetlands

Trading places: Kenyans swap carbon roles to save forest

BLUE SKY
DLR Releases Satellite Images Of Japanese Disaster Area

NASA Images Tsunami Impact Across Northeastern Japan

OSI Geospatial to supply New Zealand navy

NASA And Other Satellites Keeping Busy With This Week's Severe Weather

BLUE SKY
Republican opposition to C02 regulations gain steam

EPA updates emissions, resource database

Australia plans carbon pricing

Curved Carbon For Electronics Of The Future


The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2010 - SpaceDaily. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement