Japan —
"This fire and radioactive leakage reminds us yet again of the serious threats posed by nuclear power. There is a real risk in Japan, and globally, of larger earthquakes and other natural disasters, as well as of terrorist attacks that could lead to far more serious nuclear accidents," said Jan Beranek, Greenpeace International Nuclear Campaigner.
"Initially the Japanese nuclear industry
lied about the true impacts of the fire, saying there was no danger of
radioactive leakage," Beranek continued.
The Japanese and global nuclear industry has been marred by a series of
accidents and cover-ups(1). There are parallels with a similar incident at the
German nuclear power plant Krummel, in June of this year, where the industry
first claimed that the fire had no impact on reactor safety. In reality, the
fire led to serious malfunctions, which according to the German nuclear
regulators, directly threatened the safety of the reactor.
Beranek concluded, "Nuclear power undermines the real solutions to climate
change, by diverting resources away from the massive development of clean
renewable energy sources the world urgently needs. What's more, climate change
will increase natural disasters in turn posing a greater risk to nuclear power
plants, and to our safety."
Note 1: The Japanese nuclear industry have been exposed in a number of serious
incidents and cover-ups in recent years, including:
March 2007 - It was discovered that the Hokuriku utility did not inform
the public or nuclear inspectors about a serious incident at Shika nuclear
power plant. On July 18th, 1999, failure of control rods lead to an uncontrolled
chain reaction.
April 2006 - A radioactive spill of 40 litres of liquid containing plutonium occurred
in a brand new reprocessing plant in Rokkasho-Mura.
August 2004 - A pipe rupture in Mihama nuclear power plant killed five workers.
TEPCO utility - the same one operation Kashiwazaki-Kariwa plant - was forced to
shut down its 17 reactors when it was discovered that if faked documents about
safety inspections.
September 1999 - Workers at a fuel factory in Tokaimura failed to follow guidelines,
leading to an uncontrolled chain reaction that lasted for three days. Three
workers died due to high irradiation and local people had to be evacuated from
the neighbourhood.