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Author: mysweetisha

Gempa Bumi & Tsunami Jepun Versi 2 : Post #143 Utk Info Lanjut Nuklear

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Post time 26-3-2011 03:38 AM | Show all posts





        
















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Post time 26-3-2011 06:26 PM | Show all posts
adus.. org citer pasal pentadbiran.. dia citer dalam kubur lak... pegi board muslimin muslimat l ...
totokreturn Post at 16-3-2011 08:47



    hoi tutuh!!!!!! lu yg start meratib pasal umno dulu.. dasar penutuh!!
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Post time 26-3-2011 07:00 PM | Show all posts
mcm2 jadi akibat kepandaian manusia
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Post time 27-3-2011 12:33 PM | Show all posts
Jepun kesan paras radioaktif iodin tertinggi

OSAKA 26 Mac - Operator loji nuklear Fukushima hari ini mengesan paras radioaktif iodin 1,250 kali lebih tinggi daripada had yang dibenarkan di perairan Lautan Pasifik berhampiran dengan loji tersebut.

Menurut Agensi Keselamatan Nuklear dan Industri Jepun (NISA), ujian yang dijalankan oleh Tokyo Electric Co. (TEPCO) itu menunjukkan paras radiasi iodin berhampiran reaktor No. 1 berada pada tahap 131 iaitu 1,250.8 lebih tinggi daripada paras yang dibenarkan.

Seorang jurucakap agensi, Hidehiko Nishiyama pada sidang akhbar yang disiarkan di televisyen menyatakan, paras itu secara relatifnya tinggi tetapi kesannya kepada kehidupan marin dan hidupan laut adalah kecil.

"Ia bermakna jika anda meminum 500 mililiter air yang mengandungi tahap radiasi iodin seperti ini, ia akan sampai ke tahap di mana seseorang boleh mengambilnya dalam tempoh satu tahun iaitu bersamaan satu millisievert.

"Jumlah itu secara relatifnya agak tinggi. Jadi kita perlukan lebih banyak rumpai laut dan hidupan marin untuk menyerap radioaktif ini," katanya.

Bercakap mengenai kesannya kepada hidupan laut Nishiyama berkata, secara umumnya bahan radioaktif yang dilepaskan ke laut akan tersebar akibat pasang surut air.

"Sejak berita mengenai peningkatan tahap radiasi dilaporkan lapan hari lalu, jumlah pengguna yang makan makanan laut turut berkurangan," katanya.

Paras itu merupakan yang tertinggi berbanding beberapa ujian yang diambil minggu lalu di kawasan sama iaitu kira-kira 300 meter ke luar pesisir pantai.

TEPCO pada Selasa lalu melaporkan paras radiasi iodin di laut berada pada paras 126 kali lebih tinggi daripada yang ditetapkandan pada Khamis lalu menyatakan paras iodin berada 145 kali lebih tinggi. - AFP
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Post time 27-3-2011 09:02 PM | Show all posts
Tokyo Electric Power Company says it has detected radioactive materials 10-million-times normal levels in water at the No.2 reactor complex of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant.

The plant operator, known as TEPCO, says it measured 2.9-billion becquerels of radiation per one cubic centimeter of water from the basement of the turbine building attached to the Number 2 reactor.

And to be clear, this isn't radiation 10-million times that normally found in tap water, but rather "10-million times the usual radioactivity of water circulating within a normally operating reactor."

Meanwhile, sustained radiation levels of 1.4 millisieverts per hour have been detected 30 km from the crippled plant. That's about how much background radiation a typical person is exposed to in a year.
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Post time 27-3-2011 09:04 PM | Show all posts
Workers trying to cool the reactor at the Japanese quake-damaged Fukushima Nuclear Power Plant have been evacuated over very high levels of radiation.

Radioactivity in water at reactor 2 has reached 10 million times the usual level, company officials, cited by BBC, inform.

Earlier, Japan's Nuclear Agency said that levels of radioactive iodine in the sea near the plant had risen to 1 850 times the usual level.

It is believed the radiation at Fukushima is coming from one of the reactors, but a specific leak has not been identified.

The plant's operator Tokyo Electric Power Co (TEPCO) has been criticized for lack of transparency, failing to provide information more promptly, and making a number of mistakes, including worker clothing.

Hidehiko Nishiyama, a spokesman for Japan's Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency (NISA), said the workers, who are listed in the hospital over radiation exposure, were wearing boots that only came up to their ankles and provided little protection.

He pointed out TEPCO also knew of high air radiation at one reactor several days before the incident at the Fukushima Daiichi plant 240km north of Tokyo.

Emergency workers are continuing to cool the reactors in an effort to prevent a meltdown. They have now switched to using fresh water, rather than sea water, because it is believed the latter could further corrode machinery. The team of more than 700 engineers has found radioactive water in three of the six reactors.

The US is sending barges loaded with 500 000 gallons of fresh water.

Four of the reactors are still considered volatile. The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) has dispatched extra teams to the Japanese nuclear plant.

Meanwhile, the Japanese government said that airbone radiation around the plant was decreasing.

The plant was damaged in the deadly March 11 9 point on the Richter scale earthquake and the 10-meter tsunami which followed it.

China, Singapore, Hong Kong and other Asian importers, Australia, the European Union, the United States and Russia have banned some imports of vegetables, seafood and milk products from Japan.

Meanwhile in Japan's tsunami disaster zone, the military has helped supply food and water and has continued clearing areas to try to recover more bodies.

The death toll has now passed 10 000, and more than 17 440 people are missing and there has been a need for mass burials in some areas along the coast.

Hundreds of thousands of displaced people are still housed in temporary shelters. The Japanese government estiamtes the damage cost at USD 309 B.
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Post time 28-3-2011 12:59 PM | Show all posts
mcm makin teruk je..
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Post time 28-3-2011 01:24 PM | Show all posts
serabut betul la iklan earth hours ni
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Post time 28-3-2011 01:34 PM | Show all posts
miyagi bergegar lagi..
kali ni 6.5..
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Post time 28-3-2011 01:37 PM | Show all posts
teruk juga, abis la pekerja loji.
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Post time 29-3-2011 07:20 PM | Show all posts
apa jadi dah
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Post time 29-3-2011 08:15 PM | Show all posts
apa latest news sekarang??
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Post time 29-3-2011 08:15 PM | Show all posts
serabut btul laa iklan earrth hour
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Post time 29-3-2011 09:27 PM | Show all posts
serabut btul laa iklan earrth hour
honam Post at 29-3-2011 20:15



    GETdaHELL dgn iklan2 mcm tu.  
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Post time 30-3-2011 06:47 PM | Show all posts
dah tak dak update ke
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Post time 5-4-2011 06:05 PM | Show all posts
Post Last Edit by Manami at 6-4-2011 09:40

Hehari dok hadap thread Anwart, habih terbengkalai thread tsunami neh... UP!

World
Japan's nuclear plant operator pays condolence money
April 05, 2011



Tokyo Electric executive vice-president Takashi Fujimoto (second left) bows with the company’s operating officers at the news conference at the company headquarters in Tokyo, April 5, 2011. — Reuters pic

TOKYO, April 5 — The operator of Japan’s crippled nuclear power plant started paying “condolence money” today to victims of the worst nuclear crisis since Chernobyl while it kept pouring radioactive water into the sea.

In desperation, engineers at the Fukushima Daiichi plant have turned to what are little more than home remedies to stem the flow of contaminated water. Today, they used “liquid glass” in the hope of plugging cracks in a leaking concrete pit.

“We tried pouring sawdust, newspaper and concrete mixtures into the side of the pit (leading to tunnels outside reactor No. 2), but the mixture does not seem to be entering the cracks,” said Hidehiko Nishiyama, deputy director-general of Japan’s Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency (NISA).


“We also still do not know how the highly contaminated water is seeping out of reactor No. 2,” said Nishiyama.

Workers are struggling to restart cooling pumps — which recycle the water — in four reactors damaged by last month’s 9.0-magnitude earthquake and tsunami.


Their problem is that until those are fixed, they must pump in water from outside to prevent overheating and meltdowns. In the process that creates more contaminated water that has to be pumped out and stored somewhere else or released into the sea.


There are 60,000 tonnes of highly contaminated water in the plant after workers frantically poured in sea water when fuel rods experienced partial meltdown after the tsunami hit northeast Japan on March 11.

Tokyo Electric Power Co (Tepco) was forced yesterday to start releasing 11,500 tonnes of low-level radioactive sea water after it ran out of storage capacity for more highly contaminated water. The release will continue until Friday.

Radioactive iodine of up to 4,800 times the legal limit has been recorded in the sea near the plant. Caesium was found at levels above safety limits in tiny “kounago” fish in waters off Ibaraki prefecture, south of Fukushima, local media reported.


Iodine-131 in the water by the sluice gate of reactor No. 2 hit a high on April 2 of 7.5 million times the legal limit. It fell to 5 million times the legal limit yesterday.



Takashi Fujimoto: Tokyo Electric has ditched plans to build two more nuclear reactors. — Reuters pic


Tokyo Electric said today it had started paying “condolence money” to local governments to help people evacuated from around its stricken plant or affected by the radiation crisis.


Tokyo Electric faces a huge bill for the damage caused by its crippled reactors, but said it must first assess the extent of damage before paying actual compensation.


“We are still in discussion as to what extent we will pay on our own and to what extent we will have assistance from the government,” Tokyo Electric executive vice-president Takashi Fujimoto told a news conference.


He said Tokyo Electric offered ¥20 million (RM719,000) in condolence money to towns near the reactors whose residents were forced to evacuate. A second Tokyo Electric official said they offered that sum to 10 towns but one refused to take the money.


He said Tokyo Electric had given up plans to build two more nuclear reactors at its Fukushima Daiichi plant.


Shares of Tokyo Electric plunged to a record low of ¥363 today on uncertainty over the nuclear crisis. The shares have lost more than 80 per cent of their value since the quake struck.

The quake and tsunami have left nearly 28,000 people dead or missing, thousands homeless, and Japan’s northeast coast a wreck.


The world’s costliest natural disaster has caused power blackouts and cuts to supply chains, threatening Japan’s economic growth and the operations of global companies, from semiconductor makers to shipbuilders.



Tokyo Electric’s headquarters building in Tokyo, April 5, 2011: Shares in Tokyo Electric have lost more than 80 per cent of their value since the quake struck. — Reuters pic


Fujimoto said Tokyo Electric wanted to avoid having to impose rolling power blackouts in summer, when demand surges due to heavy use of air-conditioning. Analysts say blackouts could cause the biggest economic damage to Japan.  


The world’s biggest motor manufacturer, Toyota Motor Corp, will idle some US factories due to supplies in Japan drying up. The company, which built nearly 1.5 million cars and trucks in North America last year, said it did not know how many of its 13 plants would be affected.


The nuclear crisis alone is likely to lead to one of the country’s largest and most complex ever set of claims for civil damages, handing a huge bill to the fiscally strained government and debt-laden Tokyo Electric.

Russian help


After seeking help from France and the United States, Japanese officials say they are considering asking Russia to lend it a floating radiation treatment plant used to decommission Russian submarines.


The “Suzuran”, one of the world’s largest liquid radioactive waste treatment plants, treats radioactive liquid with chemicals and stores it in a cement form.

Tokyo Electric said it would also build tanks to hold contaminated sea water, was towing a floating tank that will arrive next week, and was negotiating the purchase of three more.

Engineers also plan to build two giant “silt curtains” made of polyester fabric in the sea to block the spread of more contamination from the plant. — Reuters

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Post time 5-4-2011 06:08 PM | Show all posts
Post Last Edit by Manami at 6-4-2011 09:41

道がないアルプスの山の上までトラックを運ぶ方法。

(Disebabkan tiada jalan, trak dihangkut hingga ke atas pergunungan Alps utk menyelamat mangsa di pendalaman)



問題です。(ギズモード・ジャパン)  2011年4月3日 11時30分

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Post time 5-4-2011 06:11 PM | Show all posts


仙台塩釜港の様子(マピオンより)(RBB TODAY) 2011年4月5日 11時15分

(Permandangan dari atas Perlabuhan Sendai - Pic from Mapion)


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Post time 5-4-2011 06:17 PM | Show all posts
[size=-1]THIS letter, written by Vietnamese immigrant Ha Minh Thanh working in Fukushima as a policeman to a friend in Vietnam, was posted on New America Media on March 19. It is a testimonial to the strength of the Japanese spirit, and an interesting slice of life near the epicenter of Japan 's crisis at the Fukushima nuclear power plant. It was translated by NAM editor Andrew Lam, author of "East Eats West: Writing in Two Hemispheres." Shanghai Daily condensed it.
[size=-1]
[size=-1]=============================================================
[size=-1]Brother,
[size=-1]
[size=-1]How are you and your family? These last few days, everything was in chaos. When I close my eyes, I see dead bodies. When I open my eyes, I also see dead bodies.
[size=-1]
[size=-1]Each one of us must work 20 hours a day, yet I wish there were 48 hours in the day, so that we could continue helping and rescuing folks.
[size=-1]
[size=-1]We are without water and electricity, and food rations are near zero. We barely manage to move refugees before there are new orders to move them elsewhere.
[size=-1]
[size=-1]I am currently in Fukushima , about 25 kilometers away from the nuclear power plant. I have so much to tell you that if I could write it all down, it would surely turn into a novel about human relationships and behaviors during times of crisis.
[size=-1]
[size=-1]People here remain calm - their sense of dignity and proper behavior are very good - so things aren't as bad as they could be. But given another week, I can't guarantee that things won't get to a point where we can no longer provide proper protection and order.
[size=-1]
[size=-1]They are humans after all, and when hunger and thirst override dignity, well, they will do whatever they have to do. The government is trying to provide supplies by air, bringing in food and medicine, but it's like dropping a little salt into the ocean.
[size=-1]
[size=-1]Brother, there was a really moving incident. It involves a little Japanese boy who taught an adult like me a lesson on how to behave like a human being.
[size=-1]
[size=-1]Last night, I was sent to a little grammar school to help a charity organization distribute food to the refugees. It was a long line that snaked this way and that and I saw a little boy around 9 years old. He
[size=-1]was wearing a T-shirt and a pair of shorts.
[size=-1]
[size=-1]
[size=-1]It was getting very cold and the boy was at the very end of the line. I was worried that by the time his turn came there wouldn't be any food left. So I spoke to him. He said he was at school when the earthquake happened. His father worked nearby and was driving to the school. The boy was on the third floor balcony when he saw the tsunami sweep his father's car away.
[size=-1]
[size=-1]I asked him about his mother. He said his house is right by the beach and that his mother and little sister probably didn't make it. He turned his head and wiped his tears when I asked about his relatives.
[size=-1]
[size=-1]The boy was shivering so I took off my police jacket and put it on him. That's when my bag of food ration fell out. I picked it up and gave it to him. "When it comes to your turn, they might run out of food. So here's my portion. I already ate. Why don't you eat it?"
[size=-1]
[size=-1]The boy took my food and bowed. I thought he would eat it right away, but he didn't. He took the bag of food, went up to where the line ended and put it where all the food was waiting to be distributed.
[size=-1]
[size=-1]I was shocked. I asked him why he didn't eat it and instead added it to the food pile. He answered: "Because I see a lot more people hungrier than I am. If I put it there, then they will distribute the food equally."
[size=-1]
[size=-1]When I heard that I turned away so that people wouldn't see me cry.
[size=-1]
[size=-1]A society that can produce a 9-year-old who understands the concept of sacrifice for the greater good must be a great society, a great people.
[size=-1]
[size=-1]Well, a few lines to send you and your family my warm wishes. The hours of my shift have begun again.
[size=-1]
[size=-1]Ha Minh Thanh
[size=-1]
[size=-1]************ LESSON TO LEARN FROM JAPAN ***********
[size=-1]10 things to learn from Japan[size=+1].
[size=-1]
[size=-1]1. THE CALM
[size=-1]Not a single visual of chest-beating or wild grief. Sorrow itself has been elevated.
[size=-1]
[size=-1]2. THE DIGNITY
[size=-1]Disciplined queues for water and groceries. Not a rough word or a crude gesture.
[size=-1]
[size=-1]3. THE ABILITY
[size=-1]The incredible architects, for instance. Buildings swayed but didn't fall.
[size=-1]
[size=-1]4. THE GRACE
[size=-1]People bought only what they needed for the present, so everybody could get something.
[size=-1]
[size=-1]5. THE ORDER
[size=-1]No looting in shops. No honking and no overtaking on the roads. Just understanding.
[size=-1]
[size=-1]6. THE SACRIFICE
[size=-1]Fifty workers stayed back to pump sea water in the N-reactors. How will they ever be repaid?
[size=-1]
[size=-1]7. THE TENDERNESS
[size=-1]Restaurants cut prices. An unguarded ATM is left alone. The strong cared for the weak.
[size=-1]
[size=-1]8. THE TRAINING
[size=-1]The old and the children, everyone knew exactly what to do. And they did just that.
[size=-1]
[size=-1]9. THE MEDIA
[size=-1]They showed magnificent restraint in the bulletins. No silly reporters. Only calm reportage.
[size=-1]
[size=-1]10. THE CONSCIENCE
[size=-1]When the power went off in a store, people put things back on the shelves and left quietly!
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Post time 5-4-2011 06:19 PM | Show all posts


こんなにも高い防潮堤。備えは万全と思われたが・・・





破壊された防潮堤に降る雪。倒されなかったとしても津波は防潮堤の高さを超えていた






集落を守れなかった防潮堤。家屋などはがれきと化した






高台にあった住宅は被害を免れた






破壊された集落。もう動くことはないであろうマッサージチェアが、むき出しになった家屋の基礎部分にポツンと乗っていた






小白浜漁港には漁船がさみしげに浮かんでいた






倒れた防潮堤。その先の、高台の住宅にも津波が迫った形跡がうかがえる






「浪を砕き郷を護る」力強い言葉の碑は残った






雪の中、自宅の跡地で写真などを探す被災者
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