Reply to post: Re: Excellent news

Japan reverses course on post-Fukushima nuclear ban

Anonymous Coward
Anonymous Coward

Re: Excellent news

" What caused Fukushima was a flood due to the tsunami drowning the backup systems"

No. That was just one of many factors that led to the ultimate result. Many of them were known about, some of them had already been rreported, too many of them had been inconvenient and Tepco and the industry regulators chose to do nothing.

Repeated failures to carry out a proper maintenance regime, for example. "It works, people get electricity, who cares if the backup systems are unusable..."

Further reading see e.g.

https://carnegieendowment.org/2012/03/06/why-fukushima-was-preventable-pub-47361

which starts with these wise words:

Public sentiment in many states has turned against nuclear energy following the March 2011 accident at Japan’s Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station. The large quantity of radioactive material released has caused significant human suffering and rendered large stretches of land uninhabitable. The cleanup operation will take decades and may cost hundreds of billions of dollars.

The Fukushima incident was, however, preventable. Had the plant’s owner, Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO), and Japan’s regulator, the Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency (NISA), followed international best practices and standards, it is conceivable that they would have predicted the possibility of the plant being struck by a massive tsunami. The plant would have withstood the tsunami had its design previously been upgraded in accordance with state-of-the-art safety approaches.

The methods used by TEPCO and NISA to assess the risk from tsunamis lagged behind international standards in at least three important respects:

* Insufficient attention was paid to evidence of large tsunamis inundating the region surrounding the plant about once every thousand years.

* Computer modeling of the tsunami threat was inadequate. Most importantly, preliminary simulations conducted in 2008 that suggested the tsunami risk to the plant had been seriously underestimated were not followed up and were only reported to NISA on March 7, 2011.

* NISA failed to review simulations conducted by TEPCO and to foster the development of appropriate computer modeling tools.

At the time of the incident, critical safety systems in nuclear power plants in some countries, especially in European states, were—as a matter of course—much better protected than in Japan. Following a flooding incident at Blayais Nuclear Power Plant in France in 1999, European countries significantly enhanced their plants’ defenses against extreme external events. Japanese operators were aware of this experience, and TEPCO could and should have upgraded Fukushima Daiichi.

[continues]

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