Monday, April 25, 2011

"Mark I" Reactors




This is an excerpt from an April 24th article appeared on Asahi newspaper. It was written by Toshihiro Yamanaka, chief of the Asahi Newspaper New York bureau.


Fukushima Daiichi reactors No.1 through No. 4 are called Mark I which was made by GE in 60s. Yamanaka captured the news that once there was a furious debate within GE about the safety issues on Mark I. It was in 70s. I will translate and summarize one of two interviews he has reported.






Dale Bridenbau, 79 year old, started to work at GE in 1953. It was the year President Eisenhower pitched the usage of nuclear power for peace at an UN conference. Bridenbau worked as an expert on the safety inspection and travelled to Switzerland, India, Italy, and Japan. In Japan, he made visits to Suruga and Fukushima. He said,




“Of course, the Fukushima accident was caused by the earthquake followed by tsunami. It wasn’t that Mark I self-destroyed itself. But, if I pleaded louder for its improvement at the time, it could have avoided that serious situation. That leaves me regret as an early-stage developer.”



1975 was the year that Mr. Bridenbau and his superior fought on a safety issue. As the result of the Mark III development and tests, he discovered the weakness in the containment vessel of Mark I. If an out-of-ordinary event occurred, and that caused the cooling system to malfunction, then the containment vessel cannot withstand the inner pressure and will be damaged. He suffered with this fact. He told his superior,



“What we need to do right away is to study the threshold of the pressure again and improve on it. For that purpose, we need to stop the operation of all the Mark I reactors.”



The opinion of most GE’s employees differed from his. They said, “If we stop the operation, it will be looked at as a serious problem” and “It would make the surrounding residents uneasy.” At the time, 20 Mark I were already operating worldwide. His plead was rejected. He and two young employees left the company on that day of the argument as the result. It was February 1976.



Then and now, GE has maintained that Mark I has been updated and reinforced, so it has no defect.



In early ‘70s, Japan was behind on nuclear technology. Japanese engineers put all their effort in learning by imitating the U.S. technology. Nobody dared to ask hard questions and investigate themselves, I guess. Right now, 32 Mark I exist in the world. We need to confirm if all the Mark I reactors have been followed up with all the appropriate updates and reinforcement GE claims they have. No time to wait.



I read that, so far, the total number of nuclear reactor accidents is 12. The U.S. had 4, France, 2, Germany, Scotland, and Russia, 1, and Japan, 3. We must stop the accident from Japan. Japanese cannot afford to sit and being agreeable anymore.



No matter how bad the situation is, we need to know. How people would react to the news is each person’s responsibility. We still need to know.



Today’s Asahi, I found the following sentence under the article “Question into Japan’s Global Accountability.” “The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) has cancelled the partnership with Toshiba to further set up nuclear reactor plants.”

8 comments:

keiko amano said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
keiko amano said...

I received this email.


Keiko,
You're right. This is very serious business.
No matter how frightening the information is--the world has to know!

Take care of you,
Dolores




Dolores Cullen
The lyf so short, the craft so long to lerne.
CelebrateChaucer.com

Luciana said...

I think you´re absolutely right, my friend. And I admire your courage to say what´s on your mind. It´s really patronizing to manipulate or omit information from people on the account that they might not take it well.
Take care, Keiko.

Ashok said...

Keiko, you have become an expert in Nuclear Safety.

The Greed of mankind forces it again and again in harmful directions but whereas the harm with other things is often manageable it is hardly so whe nuclear radiation is involved.

keiko amano said...

Lu,

Thank you for your comment. I stated to write and ended up so long, so I made a new blog. I name it "Reply to Lu."

keiko amano said...

Ashok,

You're right. The fishermen and farmers are saying, without the nuclear reactor problem, they could start to work now. The ocean went back to normal. People died, but the land is still there.

keiko amano said...

An interview with Dale G. Bridenbaugh:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L6v2vhCmALI

keiko amano said...

Finally, Asahi Shimbun came up with the following report in English, "Fukushima's emergency power failure traced to U.S. design. BY KAZUO YAMAGISHI STAFF WRITER." I think the word "traced" is weak.

I hope to see similar news in the US newspapers soon.

http://www.asahi.com/english/TKY201106160177.html