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Four workers die in Japanese nuclear plant accident
By Joe Lopez
27 August 2004
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On August 9, a fatal accident at a Japanese nuclear power plant
raised new concerns about the safety of the countrys nuclear
energy program. Four contract workers were killed at a plant in
Mihama, a small city 320 kilometres west of Tokyo, and seven were
seriously injured when a cooling pipe carrying super-heated water
burst.
The four workers killedHiroya Takatori, 26, Kazutoshi
Nakagawa, 41, Tom oki Iseki, 30, and Eiji Taokasuffered
severe burns, and heart and lung damage. They were employed by
contractor Kiuchi Keisoku Co, which was preparing the reactor,
owned by Kansai Electric Power Co (KEPCO), for a weekend maintenance
inspection.
According to a doctor who treated the victims at the nearby
Tsuruga City Hospital, they suffered horrible injuries. Dr Yoshihiro
Sugiura, quoted in the Guardian newspaper of August 11,
said: The ones who had died had stark white faces. This
shows that they had been rapidly exposed to heat.
According to media reports in Japan, two workers remain critically
injured, three suffered serious injuries and two received minor
injuries. A lack of cooling water in the reactors turbine
was said to have caused the tragedy. Steam with an estimated temperature
of 270 degrees Celsius was released from the burst pipe and hit
the workers.
Company officials told reporters that no radiation leaked from
the burst pipe in the secondary cooling system, as it did not
carry radioactive water, and there was no need to evacuate the
plant or the surrounding area in Mihama, which has a population
of around 11,500.
The No. 3 nuclear reactor at the plant, which began operation
in 1976, is said to have automatically shut down after the steam
began leaking. Later, it was revealed that a steam generator detected
a lowered water level as the result of the leak. Officials at
the plant learnt of the accident only when a fire alarm sounded.
According to a report in Yomiuri Shimbun, The
disaster could have been prevented if the abnormality had been
detected earlier with a system to locate minor leaks. A system
to detect abnormalities before a fire alarm is the minimum required
for the main piping system.
Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi told reporters: We must
put all our effort into determining the cause of the accident
and to ensuring safety. His government would respond resolutely,
after confirming the facts.
However, a review of the events leading up to the accident
and the history of other nuclear industry incidents over more
than a decade reveals that far from ensuring safety,
the government, together with the self-regulated nuclear power
companies, is squarely to blame for the horrific deaths and injuries
suffered at the KEPCO plant.
KEPCO admitted this week that the burst pipe had not been checked
in the 28 years since the nuclear reactor began operating, even
after a maintenance sub contractor notified it of the urgent need
for inspection in November 2003. Further reports emerged that
up to 17 such pipes at up to 10 other nuclear power plants operated
by KEPCO throughout Japan have never been inspected.
Government investigators and police are conducting searches
and interviews with workers and senior officials at the Mihama
plant, and criminal charges may be laid over company negligence.
An August 13 article in the Asahi Shimbun reported: Police
said the companies should have learned a lesson from a similar
steam-leakage accident in 1986 at the Surry nuclear power plant
in the US state of Virginia. The 1986 accident also killed four
workers when a ruptured pipe spewed out steam.
The article explained that the Virginia accident was caused
by corrosion wastage, due to water turbulence at high temperatures,
which over time reduced a pipes thickness. Police investigating
the Mihama disaster believed that the risky section of the
pipe would have been discovered if an ultrasonic checkup was properly
conducted.
According to the article, no checkups were made on the pipe
after Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Ltd, which was in charge of
inspections at the plant until 1996, failed to enter the pipe
section on its checklist. The Osaka-based Nihon Arm Company, which
took over the inspection contract in 1996, stated that it did
not notice the omission until April last year.
KEPCO claimed that it was not informed of the lack of inspection
until later in 2003. Nevertheless, even then it put off an examination
of the section until a routine inspection that was due to take
place two days after the fatal accident.
A Daily Yomiuri report raised concerns about KEPCOs
laxity in precautions to prevent accidents at the Mihama plant
and four other nuclear reactors it operates in the Fukui Prefecture.
Comments by a senior KEPCO official revealed that the company
concerned itself only with the safety and maintenance of primary
cooling systems linked to the reactor vessel, not so-called secondary
equipment. The main problem in terms of the plants
equipment and facilities is that the ruptured section was part
of the main piping system of a nuclear power plant, the
article stated.
A visiting professor from Tohoku Universitys Fracture
and Reliability Research Institute, Tatsuo Kondo, commented: The
main piping requires the highest attention since an accident in
this section can lead to a catastrophe. His remarks are
a chilling warning of future calamities, given the self-regulation
regime that exists in Japans nuclear industry, the advanced
age of the 23 pressurised water reactors similar to the Mihama
plant and the inferior materials used in secondary piping.
Primary piping is made of stainless steel, which is much stronger
than the carbon steel used in secondary systems. A source
close to the power industry said it would cost a fortune if stainless
steel was used for all piping, Daily Yomiuri reported.
The Yomiuri Shimbun article referred to additional concerns
over the software used to run the Mihama plant. Under a
security system provided for the primary system, a minor leak
can be located quickly to prevent a small crack in a pipe from
developing into a blowout. The primary system is also equipped
with various other detectors. But there are few safety features
protecting the secondary system.
A disturbing record
This months incident is the worst since a radiation leak
in a uranium processing plant at Tokaimura in September 1999 killed
two workers and irradiated hundreds of others. But numerous other
less-reported accidents have happened. On August 20, the Japan
Times said the Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency had reported
nine steam leakages over an unspecified time period.
In 1991, the KEPCO Mihama plant leaked 55 tonnes of radioactive
water from its No. 2 reactor. In 2000, just a little under six
months after the Tokaimura radiation leak, a fire was reported
to have broken out at a nuclear power plant in Onagawara.
Two years ago, Tokyo Electric, Japans largest power company,
was forced to close its 17 nuclear power plants temporarily after
admitting that it had covered up inspection reports revealing
dozens of cracks in its reactors during the 1980s and 1990s.
In February 2004, eight nuclear workers were exposed to low-level
radiation when they were accidentally sprayed with radioactive
contaminated water.
Despite this troubling record, the Koizumi government plans
to build several new reactors by 2010, adding to the 52 already
in operation. To offset Japans dependence on oil imports,
the government wants to increase the nuclear power output from
30 to 40 percent of the countrys energy consumption.
The accident at Mihama on August 9, the anniversary of the
1945 atomic bombing by the US of the city of Nagasaki will understandably
raise the concerns of the Japanese people over the safety and
regulation of this industry. Since the accident at Tokaimura,
numbers of communities throughout Japan have voted against the
construction of nuclear power plants in their regions.
On August 10, Aileen Mioko Smith, director of Green Action
in Japan, told the Guardian: There is already widespread
mistrust beneath the surface. But when something like this happens,
those feelings will come to the fore. There have been fewer inspections
and a reduction in the number of items that are checked ... the
continuing deregulation of the Japanese nuclear power industry
would encourage power companies to cut costs when they should
be investing more in safety.
On August 13, Economy, Trade and Industry Minister Shoichi
Nagakawa told reporters that the Mihama accident was a disaster
caused by human factors. But what has been revealed since
the accident points to more underlying causes: an official policy
that serves the interests of profit-driven power companies.
See Also:
Worker's death exposes
the dirty secrets of Japan's nuclear industry
[6 January 2000]
Safety violations produce
Japan's worst nuclear accident
[4 October 1999]
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