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-- Japan's Tsunami 2011
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Posted by kotsy on Mar-12-2011 03:16:

quote:
Originally posted by Billche
Its awe inspiring.


lol. is it, now?

quote:
Originally posted by VDub
I've always kinda wanted to experience an earthquake but not like this!!!




agreed. amazing video!


quote:
Originally posted by Abercrombie
Guy at the end looked like he made a beeline to check if his pr0n collection survived.


reminded me of the 'toasty!' guy from mkII


Posted by ChemEnhanced on Mar-12-2011 03:23:

quote:
Originally posted by VDub





clean up in aisle six


Posted by E2EK1EL on Mar-12-2011 03:29:




Look at that helicopter get vaporized within seconds @ Chernobyl


Posted by Euphorica on Mar-12-2011 03:48:

was on another forum lastnight when someone posted up right away about it.....just figured eh, another quake....little did I/we know ...


Posted by Euphorica on Mar-12-2011 03:52:

quote:
Originally posted by Abercrombie
Guy at the end looked like he made a beeline to check if his pr0n collection survived.
buwahhahaa


Posted by Abercrombie on Mar-12-2011 04:08:

quote:
Originally posted by Euphorica
buwahhahaa


Posted by Abercrombie on Mar-12-2011 04:27:



Guy on left: "But I no see Gozilla over here"
Guy on right: "I no see him over here either"


Posted by devnull on Mar-12-2011 04:29:

quote:
Originally posted by exraver



extreme bumper cars


Posted by Abercrombie on Mar-12-2011 04:33:


Posted by exraver on Mar-12-2011 05:06:

quote:
Originally posted by E2EK1EL



Look at that helicopter get vaporized within seconds @ Chernobyl


Fuc*ing sheeple, will believe anything they see on the internets.


First of all, you can clearly see helicopter blades hitting some metal structure, obviously pilot's mistake.

Second, regarding Chernobyl:
quote:
The ensuing steam explosion and fire killed up to 50 people with estimates that there may be up to 4,000 additional cancer deaths over time among the approximately 600,000 most highly exposed people.

How did they get thousands, we'll never know.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chernobyl_disaster

Third, ever heard of Bhopal?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bhopal_disaster

15.000 people died and CEO of Union Carbide left India and 25 years later got fined $2124. THAT IS IT!




Posted by E2EK1EL on Mar-12-2011 05:40:

Talking to my friend in Japan right now, she's translating the live news for me


Another Tsunami warning, be prepare to evacuate at anytime and the nuclear rector is showing signs of melting, cesium is detected.


"Japanese nuclear authorities said Saturday afternoon the Fukushima Daiichi No. 1 nuclear reactor 240 kilometers north of Tokyo may be experiencing a meltdown after Friday's massive earthquake damaged the cooling system."

"TOKYO (Kyodo)--Radiation rose to an unusually high level in and near Tokyo Electric Power Co.'s Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant Saturday following the powerful earthquake that hit northern Japan the previous day, the nuclear safety agency said, making it the first case of an external leak of radioactive material since the disaster.

Residents evacuated from the vicinity of the Fukushima No. 1 plant.While the agency denied the radiation amount will pose an immediate threat to the health of nearby residents, the impact of the quake appeared to widen as the agency added the area close to the Fukushima No. 2 nuclear plant as a zone that requires evacuation.

Given the adjacent No. 2 plant also has quake-triggered malfunctions, the operator of the two plants in Fukushima Prefecture released pressure in containers housing their reactors under an unprecedented government order, so as to prevent the plants from sustaining damage and losing their critical containment function.

But the action would involve the release of steam that would likely include radioactive materials.

The amount of radiation reached around 1,000 times the normal level in the control room of the No. 1 reactor of the Fukushima No. 1 plant, the Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency said.

The agency also said radiation has been measured at more than eight times the normal level near the main gate of the plant.

The authorities expanded the evacuation area for residents in the vicinity of the No. 1 plant from a 3-kilometer radius to 10 km on the orders of Prime Minister Naoto Kan, who visited the facility.

The government also declared that the Fukushima No. 2 plant is under a state of atomic-power emergency, in addition to the No. 1 plant, and expanded the evacuation area to include the vicinity of the No. 2 plant.

The instruction covers residents living in a radius of 3 kilometers of the Fukushima No. 2 plant. Those living in a radius of 3-10 kilometers of the plant have been advised to stay inside.
"

http://e.nikkei.com/e/fr/freetop.aspx


Posted by The Potter on Mar-12-2011 09:08:

Uh-oh, meltdown and huge explosion at nuclear plant Is it wise to build such reactors in earthquake-prone areas?


Posted by jester on Mar-12-2011 09:34:

quote:
Originally posted by The Potter
Uh-oh, meltdown and huge explosion at nuclear plant Is it wise to build such reactors in earthquake-prone areas?




Now I am waiting for Mt. Fuji to wake up.


Posted by VDub on Mar-12-2011 14:31:

quote:
Originally posted by ChemEnhanced
clean up in aisle six, seven, eight, nine....


Fixed


Posted by VDub on Mar-12-2011 14:40:

I was reading that a melt down in Japan would not be anywhere close to a Cherbobyl...

They said that Chernobyl had weapons grade nuclear material and they had minimal containment as opposed to Japan's reactor...

I hope this is all true...


Posted by E2EK1EL on Mar-12-2011 16:06:

TOKYO (Kyodo)--Japanese authorities have confirmed there was an explosion at the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power plant Saturday afternoon but it did not occur at its troubled No. 1 reactor, top government spokesman Yukio Edano said.

The chief Cabinet secretary also told an urgent press conference that the operator, Tokyo Electric Power Co., has confirmed there is no damage to the steel container housing the reactor.

Edano said the 3:36 p.m. explosion resulted in the roof and the walls of the building housing the reactor's container being blown away.

The authorities expanded an evacuation area for all local residents from a 10-kilometer radius of the Fukushima No. 1 and No. 2 plants to a 20-km radius.

Officials of Japan's nuclear safety agency also said after examination that they believe there has been no serious damage to the container of the No. 1 reactor, judging from the latest radiation data monitored around the facility.

The incident came after the plant lost its cooling functions after it was jolted by a magnitude 8.8 earthquake Friday and radioactive substances of cesium and iodine were detected near the facility Saturday.

The detection of the materials, which are created following atomic fission, led Japan's nuclear safety agency to admit the reactor has been partially melting -- the first such case in Japan.

A partial core meltdown also occurred in a major nuclear accident at Three Mile Island in the United States in 1979. About 45 percent of nuclear fuel was melted in the incident, causing radioactive materials to be released.

According to the Fukushima prefectural government, the hourly radiation from the Fukushima plant reached 1,015 micro sievert in its premises before the explosion, an amount equivalent to that allowable for ordinary people in one year.

Four workers -- two from the company and two others from another firm -- were injured in the explosion, according to Tokyo Electric Power. The four were working to deal with problems caused by a powerful earthquake that hit northeastern Japan on Friday, it said.

The company said the injuries the four have suffered are not life-threatening and that they are conscious.

The operator of the quake-hit nuclear plants in Fukushima Prefecture, successfully released pressure in the container of housing one of its reactors to prevent a nuclear meltdown, the Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency said.

Even before Tokyo Electric Power succeeded in reducing the pressure, which would involve the release of steam that would likely include radioactive materials, radiation had risen to an unusually high level in and near the No. 1 nuclear plant.

Work to depressurize the containers, aimed at preventing the plants from sustaining damage and losing their critical containment function, has been conducted under an unprecedented government order.

The agency said the core at the No. 1 reactor of the No. 1 plant may be partially melting, and the work to depressurize the container was necessary to prevent the container from sustaining damage and losing its critical containment function.

The agency said that as a result of reducing the container's pressure radioactive levels at the plant went up. The depressurizing work involves the release of steam including radioactive materials.

But the agency denied that the radiation amount will pose an immediate threat to the health of nearby residents, as wind is currently blowing toward the sea in the northeastern Japan prefecture on the Pacific coast.

At the No. 1 plant, the amount of radiation reached around 1,000 times the normal level in the control room of the No. 1 reactor, and 70 times the normal level near the main gate of the plant.

It was the first time an external radioactive leak had been confirmed since the disaster


3 people have affected by radiation from Tokyo Electric Power Co.'s (9501) Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, Japanese media reported Saturday.

However, Kyodo News cited Fukushima Prefecture as saying that because the radiation was detected on their clothes, there was no immediate need to decontaminate the three people who were evacuated from within a three mile radius around the plant.


Posted by FunkyCrew on Mar-12-2011 16:24:

they will deny all the way through
this is exactly what the authorities did back in 1986 - if it wasn't for grandpa and his KGB connections, we wouldn't have known anything
fuck


Posted by E2EK1EL on Mar-12-2011 16:28:

TOKYO (Nikkei)--The Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency (NISA) said Saturday afternoon the explosion at the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant could only have been caused by a meltdown of the reactor core.

The same day, Tokyo Electric Power Co. (9501), which runs the plant, began to flood the damaged reactor with seawater to cool it down, resorting to measures that could rust the reactor and force the utility to scrap it.

Cesium and iodine, by-products of nuclear fission, were detected around the plant, which would make the explosion the worst accident in the roughly 50-year history of Japanese nuclear power generation.

An explosion was heard near the plant's No. 1 reactor about 3:30 p.m. and plumes of white smoke went up 10 minutes later. The ceiling of the building housing the reactor collapsed, according to information obtained by Fukushima prefectural authorities.

At a news conference Saturday night, Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano discounted the possibility of a significant leak of radioactive material from the accident. "The walls of the building containing the reactor were destroyed, meaning that the metal container encasing the reactor did not explode," Edano said.

The amount of radiation detected inside the plant after 4:00 p.m. slightly exceeded the dose people can safely receive in a year, according to information obtained by the Fukushima prefectural government.

The No. 1 reactor shut down automatically soon after a massive earthquake hit the area Friday, but its emergency core cooling system failed to cool the reactor's core sufficiently.

NISA is affiliated with the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry.


Posted by E2EK1EL on Mar-12-2011 16:40:

quote:
Originally posted by VDub
I was reading that a melt down in Japan would not be anywhere close to a Cherbobyl...

They said that Chernobyl had weapons grade nuclear material and they had minimal containment as opposed to Japan's reactor...

I hope this is all true...


I was watching this last night.


Posted by E2EK1EL on Mar-12-2011 17:19:




Sorry for the autoplay guys

"Thanks to Russia for helping out Japan, it's good to see the two countries put a side their differences, politics and childish bullshit, when the call for help is needed."


Posted by srussell0018 on Mar-12-2011 17:59:

I've never been more ashamed to be American.


Posted by jester on Mar-12-2011 18:07:

quote:
Originally posted by E2EK1EL
"Thanks to Russia for helping out Japan, it's good to see the two countries put a side their differences, politics and childish bullshit, when the call for help is needed."


China sets aside disputes, offers help
quote:
The earthquake and tsunami that devastated northern Japan may help temporarily ease Japan's strained relations with China, allowing the two Asian rivals for the moment to look past lingering territorial, economic, military and historic disputes.

When news of the disaster first spread Friday, Chinese leaders were quick to offer condolences and support. China is also earthquake-prone -- a deadly 5.8-magnitude tremor just hit southwestern Yunnan province Thursday -- and officials here immediately put a trained rescue team in place to dispatch to Japan if needed.

The Chinese defense minister, Liang Guanglie, called his Japanese counterpart, Toshimi Kitazawa, to offer military assets. The Chinese Red Cross Society pledged 1 million yuan, or about $152,087, to help Japan. Premier Wen Jiabao also had a telephone conversation Friday with Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan, and offered China's condolences and help.

China's rapid show of sympathy and solidarity toward an Asian neighbor in distress stands in sharp contrast to the heated rhetoric of the last half-year, which saw noisy anti-Japanese demonstrations in some cities and the canceling of some ministry-level exchanges and tour groups.

After the earthquake, officially sanctioned editorials -- which are regularly used to whip up anti-Japanese sentiment -- were instead talking about shared pain, and what China can learn from Japan's rapid and orderly response to the disaster.

An unsigned commentary Saturday from Xinhua, the official state-run news agency, recalled how Japan assisted China after a deadly earthquake in Sichuan province in 2008, with many ordinary Japanese lining up to make donations and a Japanese rescue team helping recover victims.

"The willingness and readiness to help each other is just a natural reflection of the time-honored friendly bond between the two neighboring Oriental civilizations," the commentary said. "The virtue of returning the favor after receiving one runs in the bloods of both nations."

Relations between the two Asian powers have long been strained, but reached a new low last September when a Chinese fishing trawler collided with two Japanese coast guard vessels around a small chain of disputed, Japanese-administered islands known as the Senkaku to the Japanese and the Diaoyu to the Chinese.

Japan briefly detained the Chinese trawler's captain and threatened to put him on trial, and China responded by blocking its exports to Japan of crucial rare earth metals used in the high-tech industry. The block on rare earth metals was widely interpreted as a de facto trade embargo imposed by Beijing, prompting Japan, the United States and other countries to scramble for alternatives to China's rare earth metals.

At the height of the fishing trawler incident last year, the Global Times newspaper - owned by the Communist Party's main mouthpiece, People's Daily, and typically giving voice to the party line - wrote a series of increasing vitriolic editorials calling for Japan to be punished.

"Now is the time to seriously examine Japan," one typical September editorial said. "It should be apparent by now that China will be forced to endure long-term conflicts with Japan, and emphasizing only friendly relations is not prudent. In addition, China needs to be certain of Japan's soft spots for clearly targeted reactions." It added, "The pain has to be piercing."

Japan has also been deeply concerned about China's growing military spending, with Beijing's Communist rulers earlier this month announcing a 12.7 percent rise in the defense budget for 2011. And China's growing economic clout has led to fears that Beijing is becoming increasingly assertive in pressing its territorial claims in the region. China officially surpassed Japan this year as the world's second largest economy, behind the U.S.

China, for its part, feels that Japan has never shown sufficient contrition for atrocities committed by the Imperial Army during World War II, including a massacre at Nanjing where the two sides continue to dispute the number of victims.

Since 1980, when Deng Xiaoping began China's market reforms and opening to the world, Japan has provided financial aid to China to help alleviate poverty. Many in China saw the aid money as de facto compensation for past Japanese war crimes. But when official figures this year showed China's economy is now larger than Japan's in GDP terms, some in Japan have said the aid is no longer needed -- creating another potential sore point between the two countries.

With the earthquake, Chinese leaders are also looking to how Japan deals with damage to its nuclear reactors, as China is set to embark on its own nuclear power plant expansion in the coming years.

Zhang Lijun, China's vice-minister of environmental protection, said China is "keeping a close eye" on the leakage at two of Japan's nuclear facilities. He spoke before an explosion Saturday destroyed part of a nuclear facility at Fukushima.

"Some lessons we learn from Japan will be considered in the making of China's nuclear power plans," he said. "But China will not change its determination and plan for developing nuclear power."

China now has 13 nuclear facilities, with plans for 34 others; 26 of those are already under construction, according to several published Chinese media reports.


(Courtesy Washington Post)


Posted by E2EK1EL on Mar-12-2011 18:13:

quote:
Originally posted by jester
China sets aside disputes, offers help


(Courtesy Washington Post)


WICKED! The war between China and Japan was serious shit too

quote:
Originally posted by srussell0018
I've never been more ashamed to be American.


Fuck them and everyone else who supports this naive thinking, long live the land of the retards.

Karma will return for you too.


Posted by devnull on Mar-12-2011 18:49:

quote:
Originally posted by srussell0018
I've never been more ashamed to be American.


Godzilla will find them!


Posted by E2EK1EL on Mar-12-2011 18:54:

Washington (CNN) -- President Barack Obama extended a helping hand to Japan on Friday as hundreds of people were dead and additional hundreds were missing after a devastating 8.9-magnitude earthquake and ensuing tsunami.

"I offer our Japanese friends whatever assistance is needed," he said during a news conference. "Today's events remind us how fragile life can be."

Obama said Friday that the main U.S. assistance to Japan for now would probably be "lift capacity" in the form of heavy equipment to help clean up damaged infrastructure.

The U.S. government is taking inventory of how many military personnel are in Japan to provide help, he said, adding that American citizens in Japan will also receive assistance.

Obama called the earthquake and tsunami "a potentially catastrophic disaster," saying the images of destruction were "simply heartbreaking."

At a session of the President's Export Council on Friday morning at the Old Executive Office Building, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton spoke about the U.S. delivering coolant to Japan for its nuclear reactors, CNN has confirmed.

"You know Japan is very reliant on nuclear power, and they have very high engineering standards. But one of their plants came under a lot of stress with the earthquake and didn't have enough coolant. So Air Force planes were able to deliver that. So we're really deeply involved in trying to do as much as we can on behalf of the Japanese and on behalf of U.S. citizens," she said.

Neither the Air Force nor the Pentagon could confirm that U.S. Air Force planes delivered coolant to the Japanese power plant.

Obama said he has been in touch with Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan about the potential vulnerability of any nuclear power plants in Japan.

"So far, they have not seen any evidence of a radiation leak, but obviously you have to take all potential precautions," Obama said.



Obama: Images of Japan 'heartbreaking'

Search and rescue in Japan after quake

Moment of the Japan quake RELATED TOPICS
Japan
Earthquakes
Accidents and Disasters
The president said he has spoken with his energy secretary, Steven Chu, "to make sure that if in fact there have any breaches in the safety of the nuclear plant, they are dealt with."

Five U.S. Navy ships were heading to Japan, and two others were already docked in the country, according to the Pentagon. The State Department on Friday said there were no immediate reports of casualties among the tens of thousands of U.S. citizens -- tourists, military personnel and others -- in Japan.

The nuclear-powered aircraft carrier USS George Washington is in the maintenance yard in Japan and unable to get underway. Another nuclear-powered aircraft carrier, the USS Ronald Reagan in the western Pacific, is the only carrier heading to Japan.

"We currently have an aircraft carrier in Japan, and another is on the way." Obama said Friday. "And we also have a ship en route to the Mariana Islands to assist as needed."

Among the 38,000 U.S. military personnel, 43,000 dependents and 5,000 Department of Defense civilians assigned to Japan, there are no reports of loss of life and no reports of major damage to U.S. warships, aircraft or facilities in Japan, said Pentagon spokesman Col. David Lapan.

Obama was awakened at 4 a.m. ET with news of the disaster and received a briefing from his top security and emergency response advisers at 9:30 a.m., the White House said.

In a statement, Obama sent his condolences to the people of Japan and declared that the United States stands ready to offer aid, citing the strong ties between the two nations. Obama also spoke by telephone with Kan, White House spokesman Tommy Vietor said.

Clinton pledged "immediate disaster relief assistance" and said "we are working closely with the government of Japan to provide additional help," according to a State Department statement.

Pentagon spokesman Lapan said Japan's foreign minister had formally asked the United States for help, launching the process of figuring out what is needed and what the U.S. military can provide.

The State Department issued an alert against nonessential travel to Japan because of the earthquake and tsunami. The alert said that Tokyo airports were closed and others also may be closed or restricted, and that public transportation in Tokyo and other areas has been interrupted.

The alert also said strong aftershocks were likely "for weeks" and included instructions for what to do if caught in another earthquake or aftershock. It urged U.S. citizens in Japan to contact family and friends to let them know of their well-being.

Two U.S. airlines -- Delta and American -- announced the cancellation of flights to Tokyo. It was unclear if flights to other Japanese airports also would be affected. In addition, Delta, United and Continental airlines announced they were waiving change fees for people whose travel plans involving Japan were affected by the disaster.

At the State Department, Assistant Secretary of State for Consular Affairs Janice Jacobs said a 24-hour consular task force has been set up to help Americans affected by the earthquake.

Americans in Japan who need help, or people seeking information about a loved one in Japan, can send an e-mail to [email protected][/email], Jacobs said. Americans outside Japan but in tsunami-affected areas who need help, or people seeking information about an American in affected areas outside Japan, can e-mail [email][email protected], she said.

A telephone information line also has been set up at 1-888-407-4747, said Jacobs, who encouraged people to use the e-mail options if possible. When seeking information about Americans in Japan or other affected areas, Jacobs said, provide the full name, birth date and location of the person, as well as any pre-existing medical conditions, and if they are elderly or a child.

Obama, who was first informed of the earthquake before dawn by Chief of Staff Bill Daley, said he has instructed the Federal Emergency Management Agency "to be ready to assist Hawaii and the rest of the U.S. states and territories that could be affected" by tsunamis.

"The United States stands ready to help the Japanese people in this time of great trial," Obama said.

Vice President Joe Biden, traveling in Moldova, called the disaster a "mega-earthquake" and said "the thoughts and prayers of the American people ... are with our friends in Japan."

"We the United States stand ready to do anything we can to help our Japanese friends as they deal with the aftermath of this tragedy," Biden said, according to a pool report of his remarks.


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