German newspaper Der Tagesspiegel publishes the original NRC Assessment about Fukushima

From Der Tagesspiegel :

Read the NRC Report Here.

“Unfortunately, the report also shows that Tepco series of catastrophic errors made ??one and given false information has. For example, is only now clear that the reactor fuel rods 1 are likely to be in the dry – according to Tepco figures they were at least half covered with water cooling. Also, the question arises whether one much earlier instead of fresh sea water for cooling would not pick up – after all, is not just the northern Japanese nuclear power plant in the desert. Generally nervous right now makes the discovered fact that Tepco today without boric acid used!) In a reactor cooling water to avoid a re-criticality would be an essential standard procedure

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Fission Criticality In Cooling Ponds Threaten Explosion At Fukushima

Photo: DigitalGlobe’s Natural Color Satellite Image
Photo: DigitalGlobe’s Natural Color Satellite Image

The threat of a fission explosion at the Fukushima power facility emerged today when the roof of the number three reactor exploded and fears that a spent fuel pool, located over the reactor, has been compromised.  The pool,  designed to allow reactor fuel to cool off for several years, was constructed on top of the Fukushima reactors instead of underground. As of 2010, there were 3450 fuel assemblies in the pool at the number three reactor. The destruction of the number three reactor building has experts concerned about whether the spent fuel storage pool, which sits just below the roof, could have survived intact the hydrogen explosion. The explosion was much more severe than Saturday’s blast at the number one reactor.

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Midwest Mining Rush Threatens Water: Part VI: Minnesota: This Land is Your Land, This Land is My Land

Acid mine drainage from Spruce Road in Minnesota. Photo: Friends of the Boundary Waters Wilderness
Acid mine drainage from Spruce Road in Minnesota. Photo: Friends of the Boundary Waters Wilderness

More than a quarter of a million people a year visit the legendary Boundary Waters Wilderness in Minnesota to hike, camp and canoe its million acres of untouched forests, ancient rocks and fresh water lakes. The natural wilds abound free from the sound of motors, the glare of lamplight, or the views of telephone poles and wires. There are no roads to the inner lakes. It is one of 50 “Destinations of a Lifetime,” according to National Geographic.

Continue reading Midwest Mining Rush Threatens Water: Part VI: Minnesota: This Land is Your Land, This Land is My Land

Midwest Mining Rush Threatens Water: Part I: Foreign-owned Mining Companies vs. U.S. Regulators

Photo: EPA
Photo: EPA
Some of this nation’s most pristine ancient forests, glacial wetlands and fresh water lakes are under threat from large, multinational mining companies that plan to extract billions of dollars in copper and nickel using methods untested in a water-rich environment. The Great Lakes Basin – America’s largest supply of surface fresh water – faces the duel dangers of increasing prices for industrial metals and a failing economy in desperate need of good paying jobs. These economic realities have weakened efforts to protect the region.

Continue reading Midwest Mining Rush Threatens Water: Part I: Foreign-owned Mining Companies vs. U.S. Regulators

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