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This is an archive article published on March 13, 2011

Japan N-plant explosion raises fears

Radiation leak expands evacuation area * Govt calls for calm: Reactor Intact * Plan to cool it with Sea water

MARTIN FACKLER & MATTHEW L WALD

An explosion at a crippled nuclear power plant in northern Japan on Saturday blew the roof off one building and caused a radiation leak of unspecified proportions,escalating the emergency confronting Japans government a day after an earthquake and tsunami devastated parts of the countrys northeastern coast.

Japanese television showed a cloud of white-gray smoke from the explosion billowing up from a stricken reactor at the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station Saturday afternoon,and officials said leaks of radiation from the plant prompted them to expand the evacuation area around the facility to a 12-mile radius.

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Government officials said that the explosion,caused by a build-up of pressure in the reactor after the cooling system failed,destroyed the concrete structure surrounding the reactor but did not collapse the critical steel container inside. They said this raised the chances that they could prevent release of large amounts of radioactive material and could avoid a core meltdown at the plant.

Weve confirmed that the reactor container was not damaged. The explosion didnt occur inside the reactor container. As such there was no large amount of radiation leakage outside, Japans Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano said in a news conference Saturday evening. At this point,there has been no major change to the level of radiation leakage outside,so wed like everyone to respond calmly.

Tokyo Electric Power,which operates the plant located 160 miles north of Tokyo,now plans to fill the reactor with sea water to cool it down and reduce pressure. The process would take five to 10 hours,Edano said,expressing confidence that the operation could prevent criticality.

But the crisis at the aging plant confronted Japan with its worst nuclear accident and perhaps the biggest mishap at a nuclear plant since the Chernobyl nuclear disaster in 1986. Japanese nuclear safety officials and international experts said that because of crucial design differences the release of radiation at the Fukushima plant would likely be much smaller than at Chernobyl even if the Fukushima plant has a complete core meltdown,which they said it had not. But the problems at the plant are certain to worsen concerns about the safety record and reliability of Japans extensive nuclear power facilities,which have been criticized for major safety violations in the past.

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The vulnerability of nuclear plants to earthquakes was also underscored by ongoing problems at the cooling system of reactors at a second nearby plant,known as Daini,which prompted a smaller evacuation from surrounding communities.

Tokyo Electric Power said the explosion happened near the No. 1 reactor at Daiichi at around 3.40 pm Japan time on Saturday. It said four of its workers were injured in the blast. Officials said even before the explosion that they had detected cesium,an indication that some of the nuclear fuel was already damaged.

In the form found in reactors,radioactive cesium is a fragment of a uranium atom that has been split. In normal operations,some radioactivity in the cooling water is inevitable,because neutrons,the sub-atomic particles that carry on the chain reaction,hit hydrogen and oxygen atoms in the water and make those radioactive. But cesium,which persists far longer in the environment,comes from the fuel itself.

Naoto Sekimura,a professor at Tokyo University,told NHK,Japans public broadcaster,that only a small portion of the fuel has been melted. But the plant is shut down already,and being cooled down. Most of the fuel is contained in the plant case,so I would like to ask people to be calm.

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Both the Daiichi and Daini plants were shut down during Fridays earthquake. But the loss of power in the area and damage to the plants generators from the subsequent tsunami crippled the cooling systems,which need to function after a shut down to cool down nuclear fuel rods. Malfunctioning cooling systems allowed pressure to build up beyond the design capacity of the reactors. Early Saturday officials had said that small amounts of radioactive vapor were expected to be released into the atmosphere to prevent damage to the containment systems and that they were evacuating tens of thousands of people living around the plants as a precaution.

Those releases apparently did not prevent the buildup of hydrogen inside the reactor,which ignited and exploded Saturday afternoon,government officials said. They said the explosion itself probably did not result in dramatic increases in the amount of radioactive material being released into the atmosphere,but they expanded the evacuation area around the Daiichi plant from a six-mile radius to a 12-mile radius.

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