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Monday, March 28, 2011

Nuclear watchdog's view


http://www3.nhk.or.jp/daily/english/28_20.html

ဂ်ပန္ႏုိင္ငံမွာ ျပင္းအား ၆.၅ ရွိတဲ့ ငလ်င္ ထပ္မံ လႈပ္သြားခဲ့တဲ့အတြက္ ဆူနာမီ သတိေပးခ်က္ ထုတ္ျပန္ထားပါတယ္။
ၿပီးခဲ့တဲ့ ငလ်င္နဲ႔ ဆူနာမီ ျဖစ္ပြားၿပီး ပ်က္စီးသြားခဲ့တဲ့ ႏ်ဴကလီးယားစက္႐ံုမွာ ေနာက္ဆံုး ေရဒီယုိ သတၱိႂကြမႈ အဆင့္က ပံုမွန္ထက္ အဆ ၁၀၀,၀၀၀ ျမင့္မားေနတယ္လို႔ စက္႐ံု တာ၀န္ရွိသူတေယာက္က ေျပာပါတယ္။ ဒီအဆင့္ဟာ တနဂၤေႏြေန႔ အေစာပိုင္းက ေျပာခဲ့တဲ့ အဆင့္ထက္ အမ်ားႀကီး ထိုးက်သြားတာပါ။
ဖူကူးရွီးမား (Fukishima) ႏ်ဴကလီးယား ဓာတ္အားေပးစက္႐ံုရဲ႕ နံပါတ္ ၂ ဓာတ္ေပါင္းဖိုရွိရာ အေဆာက္အဦးထဲက ေရထဲမွာ ေရဒီယို သတၱိႂကြမႈ အဆင့္ အဆ ၁၀ သန္း ျမင့္မားေနတယ္လို႔ ေစာေစာက မွားၿပီး စက္႐ံုတာ၀န္ရွိသူေတြက ဖတ္ခဲ့ၿပီး နာရီအေတာ္ၾကာမွာ ထပ္မံဖတ္႐ႈၿပီး ေျပာၾကားတာ ျဖစ္ပါတယ္။
အဲဒီလို မွားဖတ္ခဲ့တဲ့အတြက္ေၾကာင့္ စက္႐ုံ အလုပ္သမားေတြဟာ စက္႐ုံကေန ထြက္ေျပးခဲ့ၾကပါတယ္။ စက္႐ံုလုပ္သားေတြဟာ အလြန္အကၽြံ အႏၲရာယ္မ်ားလွတဲ့ အေျခအေနမွာ တိက်တဲ့ သတင္းအခ်က္အလက္ေတြ ရရွိေအာင္ စိတ္ပန္းကိုယ္ပန္းနဲ႔ အလုပ္လုပ္ေနၾကရာက အခုလို မွားဖတ္ခဲ့တာေတြ ျဖစ္ရတာပါလို႔ အေၾကာင္းျပၾကပါတယ္။
စက္႐ံုနဲ႔ မီတာ ၃၀၀ အကြာက ပင္လယ္ေရထဲမွာ ေရဒီယုိ သတၱိႂကြ အိုင္အိုဒင္း အဆင့္ျမင့္မားေနတာကို ရွိေဖြေတြ႕ရွိခဲ့တယ္လို႔ အာဏာပိုင္ေတြက တနဂၤေႏြေန႔ ေစာေစာပိုင္းကလည္း ေျပာခဲ့ပါတယ္။ ဒါေပမဲ့ သမုဒၵရာထဲမွာ ခုလို ေပ်ာ္၀င္ေနတဲ့ ပစၥည္းေတြက ပ်ံ႕သြားမွာမို႔ ေရထဲက သက္ရွိေတြကို ထိခုိ္က္ႏိုင္မွာ မဟုတ္ဘူးလို႔ တာ၀န္ရွိသူေတြက ေျပာပါတယ္။ ပင္လယ္စာေတြကလည္း စိတ္ခ်ရပါတယ္လို႔ သူတို႔က ဆိုပါတယ္။
Nuclear watchdog's view

Japan's nuclear safety watchdog says it believes radioactive elements from
melted nuclear fuel have found their way from one of the reactors at the damaged
Fukushima Daiichi plant to a turbine building here.

Radiation levels 100,000 times that found in water in an normally operating reactor were detected in water puddles in the Number 2 reactor's turbine building on Sunday. High
radiation figures were earlier recorded at similar locations at the Number 1 and
3 reactors.

The Nuclear Safety Commission, an independent body, says the
radiation level at the Number 2 reactor was dozens of times that of the other
two reactors.

The commission says that radioactive substances from
temporarily melted fuel rods at the Number 2 reactor had made their way into
water in the containment vessel and then somehow leaked out.

The commission says the radioactive water should be removed as soon as possible to
ensure the safety of workers.

The commission says the most immediate
concern is the possibility of highly radioactive water seeping into the ground
and the ocean. It said it has asked Tokyo Electric to monitor radiation levels
in the ground water and seawater more closely.

The commission added that
injecting water into the Number 2 reactor from outside should be continued
because the high levels of radiation are being detected only inside the turbine
building.

The watchdog said pumping water into the Number 2 reactor will
not be affected even if highly radioactive water continues to leak from the
containment vessel.

Monday, March 28, 2011 14:26 +0900 (JST)

More radioactive substances found in seawater

More high levels of radioactive material have been found in seawater near the
troubled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant.

Tokyo Electric Power
Company says samples collected 30 meters from one of the plant's water outlets
on Sunday contained 46 becquerels per cubic centimeter of iodine-131. That's
1,150 times higher than the regulated standard level.

On Friday and
Saturday, water samples collected 330 meters south of another outlet showed
levels of iodine-131 that were higher than 1,000 times the standard level.
However, on Sunday the levels had dropped to 250 times the standard
level.

The government's nuclear safety agency says radioactive materials
may have leaked from the plant and drifted with the current from south to
north.

TEPCO is struggling to remove highly radioactive water from the
turbine buildings of 3 reactors before work to restore their cooling systems can
begin.

On Tuesday, the company intends to pump fresh water, instead of
sea water, into spent fuel storage pools of 2 reactors.

Fresh water was
pumped into the reactors by Saturday, to prevent the salt water from corroding
the cooling system.

Radioactive levels in the air are decreasing at most
observation points in the surrounding areas on Monday.

The reading in
Fukushima City, 65 kilometers northwest of the nuclear power plant, was 3.84
microsieverts per hour at 1 AM.

The annual total limit of radiation
exposure considered safe for humans is 1,000 microsieverts based on standards
set by the International Commission on Radiological Protection.

Monday, March 28, 2011 14:26 +0900 (JST

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