Wednesday, June 08, 2011

Người VN nghĩ gì qua " Fukushima 'lessons' may take 10 years to learn" ???

8 June 2011 Last updated at 14:46 GMT
Fukushima 'lessons' may take 10 years to learn
By Richard Black
Environment correspondent, BBC News



Germany plans to close its nuclear stations in just over a decade - which has brought Czech derision


Learning all lessons from the accident at Japan's Fukushima nuclear power station could take a decade, according to France's top nuclear safety officer.



But all nuclear countries should carry out safety tests within a year, said Andre-Claude Lacoste.

The chairman of the French nuclear safety agency (ASN) was speaking at a forum in Paris organised by the OECD's Nuclear Energy Agency (NEA).

Regulators said international control of nuclear safety would be "difficult".

The forum follows a day of political discussions on nuclear safety organised by the French G8 presidency, and comes two weeks before ministers gather in Vienna for a week-long session at the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) that could set new international rules.


Fragmented picture


"Fukushima was a shock," Mr Lacoste told reporters at a news conference.

"We have to draw lessons from it - and drawing lessons from Fukushima could take up to 10 years, referring to the time it took to draw lessons from Three Mile Island and Chernobyl.


Germany's Metropolitan Opera stars pulled out of a Japan tour, citing radiation fears

"But this shouldn't prevent us from doing what needs to be done as soon as possible."

However, Gregory Jaczko, chairman of the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC), said 10 years was too long.

"Ten years is a reasonable timeframe based on previous experience," he said.

"But I think we need to challenge ourselves to learn in a faster timeframe - we should do better."

Earlier this week, Japan's nuclear regulator issued a report admitting that the country had been ill-prepared for an accident as serious as the one at Fukushima Daiichi.

It also doubled estimates of the amount of radiation released following the 11 March tsunami.

But Mike Weightman, the UK's chief nuclear inspector, said the picture of what had happened inside the reactors was still far from complete.

"It's very difficult to understand what the situation was inside the reactors in the early days," he said.

"Now they've been able to do some theoretical modelling, but they still haven't been able to go inside, and so the picture may change - with Three Mile Island, it took some time to find out what the real situation was inside."


Blurred transparency?



At the G8 meeting and the NEA forum, one of the issues under discussion has been how nuclear safety should be internationalised.

Switzerland's Energy Minister Doris Leuthard, whose government has just voted to close its nuclear stations within 25 years, said countries should have the right to inspect their neighbours' safety plans.

"Why don't we accept that peer reviews should be mandatory?" she asked earlier this week.

But the regulators at the NEA forum said this would be difficult.

"There's a strong view in the US that it's important for countries to participate in [existing international peer review] processes, that they're valuable," said Mr Jaczko.

"But I think making this mandatory is something that would take a long time and require some kind of international instrument, whether a treaty or some other kind of vehicle."

In many other countries, the civilian nuclear industry began its life under military constraints, and it is likely that measures requiring complete transparency would be unnacceptable to a number of nations including the US, Russia and China.

For politicians in Switzerland and Germany - where nuclear reactors are likely to close by 2022 - the irony is that they will still be able to buy nuclear electricity from their neighbours, without having any jurisdiction over plants close to their borders.

Speaking in Germany on Tuesday, Czech President Vaclav Klaus described the nuclear exit as "absurd", and said his government intended to expand its Temelin plant, situated about 60km from German territory.


'Remarkable' action


As the situation at Fukushima continues to develop, Mr Weightman - who has just visited the site on an IAEA fact-finding mission - paid tribute to workers who had battled to gain control of the stricken plant in the days following the tsunami.

"The way in which they dealt with the aftermath of the incident was very impressive," he said.

"It was dark, they'd lost all power, they'd lost instrumentation, they'd lost air with which to control valves, and they were having to control six reactors and spent fuel ponds with very little hope of external assistance.

"They did some remarkable things under very difficult circumstances, and I'd be surprised if others could do better."

Swift government action to evacuate people around the plant and subsequent monitoring of their exposure had also been "superb", he said .

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World's worst nuclear incidents


Level 7: Chernobyl, Ukraine, 1986 - explosion and fire in operational reactor, fallout over thousands of square kilometres, possible 4,000 cancer cases

Level 7: Fukushima, 2011 - tsunami and possibly earthquake damage from seismic activity beyond plant design. Long-term effects unknown

Level 6: Kyshtym, Russia, 1957 - explosion in waste tank leading to hundreds of cancer cases, contamination over hundreds of square kilometres

Level 5: Windscale, UK, 1957 - fire in operating reactor, release of contamination in local area, possible 240 cancer cases

Level 5: Three Mile Island, US, 1979 - instrument fault leading to large-scale meltdown, severe damage to reactor core

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Nhân đọc bài "Fukushima 'lessons' may take 10 years to learn", các anh chị có ý kiến gì về "World's worst nuclear incidents" ?

Và các anh chị có suy nghĩ, chia sẻ gì về việc bè lũ Việt gian csVN chuyên nghề ăn xin khắp thế giới, cái đảng chuyên nghề bán nước bán dân và làm chó cho ngọai bang sắp tới đây sẽ "chọn lò nguyên tử hiện đại" để xây ???

Lần này nếu lũ thú vật csVN chọn đúng "lò" thì không nói gì, chứ nếu lũ thú vật csVN mà chọn nhằm lờ thì khốn cho cả nước và cho dân VN vốn đã chịu quá nhiều nỗi Ô NHỤC .

Cứ mỗi lần mà bè lũ chóp bu chó đẻ csVN sang dập đầu khấu gối vấn an thằng chủ tàu cộng của chúng nó thì chúng nó lại được chọn lờ . Và cứ mỗi lần lũ súc sinh Việt cộng này chọn lờ thì đất nước VN lại thêm một lần què cụt .

Các anh chị nghĩ đã đến lúc dân tộc VN đem lũ súc sinh csVN ra xử tử vì cái tội chọn lờ mà bán nước diệt chủng của chúng hay chưa ? hay vẫn tiếp tục như những "trí thức" chồn lùi và những "kẻ sĩ" đặc và những ông bà chính trị gia chuyên nghề điếm miệng, tối ngày vẫn mồm năm miệng mười "chống cộng" nhưng cứ tô son trét phấn và rửa mặt chùi chân cho lũ thú vật csVN ? lo rửa tội BÁN NƯỚC DIỆT CHỦNG cho chúng nó hầu chia "phân" cùng với chúng nó trên xương máu nhục nhằn của đại khối dân Việt khốn cùng ???

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Kính chúc Sức Khỏe Quý Anh Chị .



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