Fukushima Fifty

haffajappahaffajappa Posts: 5,955
edited March 2011 in All Encompassing Trip
Fukushima Fifty on whose bravery all hope rests
They work sweating in airtight suits, fighting disaster in a plant collapsing at their feet. They brave explosions and fires that have already killed five of them and may have blasted the others with life-changing radiation. They are the "Fukushima Fifty", the handful of people who are all that now stands between Japan and the world's second-worst nuclear accident.

In a country already brimming with stoic courage, this skeleton crew is surely the bravest of the lot. From fragments of information, we can build a picture of their desperate struggle to save their countrymen, and themselves. They are not just technicians, but also soldiers and firemen. They are middle-class control room and health personnel and working-class technicians. There are 50 or so at any one time, but the total, with shifts and rotations, may be as many as 180. The odds against them are great, and growing.

"It doesn't look good at all," said Matt Tuck, a 22-year veteran of the British nuclear industry who is now business director of Matom, a consultancy specialising in nuclear plant operation and emergency management. "Fifty is a very small number, given that there are six reactors. They are at pretty serious risk."

On Wednesday night, the Japanese government raised the legal limit of radiation the Fifty could be exposed to by 150 per cent, from 100 to 250 millisieverts, more than 12 times the British legal dose for radiation staff. The Fifty themselves have been silent. They have higher priorities than media interviews. But they appear to be under no illusions about the gravity of their position. A control room technician at the plant told a colleague who has been evacuated that he was perfectly prepared to die. It was, he said, his job.

The wife of another of the Fifty, speaking on Japanese television on Wednesday night, said her husband had not been able to talk to her since the disaster, but had managed to send an email. "His replies indicated a serious situation," she said. "He told me to take care of myself because he wouldn't be home for a while."

The terror of their experience is clear. Danny Eudy, from Texas, was one of a number of American technicians working at the plant when the earthquake struck. "He was in shock when he called," said his wife, Janie. "He said everything was falling from the ceiling. He walked through so much glass that his feet were cut." Then came the tsunami, carrying away homes and vehicles and, crucially, destroying the pumps that kept the radioactive fuel rods cool.

After backup systems also failed, the workforce, at first about its normal strength of 1,800, fought to maintain cooling by pumping seawater. This is being done by fire engines, their hoses jerry-rigged into the plant's coolant system. But when a series of explosions rocked successive reactors, and even seawater cooling started to fail, the vast majority of the workforce was pulled out.

Five workers have already died since the quake and 22 more have been injured, while two are missing. One worker was taken to hospital after grasping his chest and finding himself unable to stand, and another needed treatment after receiving a blast of radiation near a damaged reactor. The remaining workers are trying frantically to bring multiple crises under control. They are building a temporary road for the fire trucks to reach perhaps the biggest problem of all, an overheating spent fuel pool at reactor four. The plant's narrow corridors and the need to work for only short periods because of the intense radiation are hampering efforts.

Tepco, the plant's operator, has refused to say how the Fifty were chosen, or what choice they themselves had in the matter. At Chernobyl - where 28 plant workers died of radiation poisoning within months, including 19 whose skin fell off - it emerged that many were not told about the risks.

Japan's defence ministry has already made the same complaint on behalf of some of its soldiers involved in emergency operations on the site. But for the professional nuclear technicians, this is a scenario that must have been played out in a thousand canteen conversations.

"They will be wearing full protective gear the whole time," said Mr Tuck. "It doesn't protect against everything, but you can work for several hours in that. You would also dose-manage to have very short potential exposures, as short as a few minutes.

"If three guys have got to do an operation on a pipe, say, you might only have one of them using the spanner at any one time and the others taking it in turns to hang back."

The Fifty were pulled out for 45 minutes on Wednesday, retreating 500 metres after radiation spiked to new highs. Their final evacuation would signal that the authorities have given up.

Ultimately, however, if other people's lives can be saved by sacrificing theirs, the Fifty will, says Mr Tuck, be asked to pay the price. "Would the authorities make that decision? I think they probably would," he said.

That choice might be the same in any country, and could well still be avoided. But in Japan, with its culture steeped in memories of noble self-sacrifice, the "Fukushima Samurai" are already starting to become pre-emptive folk heroes.

In a post on Mixi, the Japanese social networking site, Michiko Otsuki, an evacuated fellow worker at a different Fukushima nuclear plant, lionised them as "fighting without running awayÖ working to protect everyone's lives in exchange for their own".

Even Naoto Kan, the prime minister, has told the crew: "You are the only ones who can resolve the crisis. Retreat is unthinkable."

http://www.canada.com/news/Fukushima+Fi ... story.html
live pearl jam is best pearl jam
Post edited by Unknown User on

Comments

  • polaris_xpolaris_x Posts: 13,559
    i believe these workers are doing so voluntarily ... the suits do not protect them from the gamma rays ... only the radioactive particles that land on your body ... their point of no return i suspect was days ago ...
  • haffajappahaffajappa Posts: 5,955
    :(
    live pearl jam is best pearl jam
  • 8181 Posts: 58,276
    nice article.
    81 is now off the air

    Off_Air.jpg
  • arqarq Posts: 8,012
    real heroes :cry:
    "The good thing about science is that it's true whether or not you believe in it"
    Neil deGrasse Tyson

    Why not (V) (°,,,,°) (V) ?
  • unlost dogsunlost dogs Posts: 12,553
    That level of determination, courage and self-sacrifice is unimaginable.
    15 years of sharks 06/30/08 (MA), 05/17/10 (Boston), 09/03/11 (Alpine Valley), 09/04/11 (Alpine Valley), 09/30/12 (Missoula), 07/19/13 (Wrigley), 10/15/13 (Worcester), 10/16/13 (Worcester), 10/25/13 (Hartford), 12/4/13 (Vancouver), 12/6/13 (Seattle), 6/26/14 (Berlin), 6/28/14 (Stockholm), 10/16/14 (Detroit)
  • ShimmyMommyShimmyMommy Posts: 7,505
    Inspiring yet sad. It is amazing the loyalty of people to their countrymen in a time of crisis. Thank you for sharing that, even though it is so heartbreaking. :clap:
    Lots of love, light and hugs to you all!
  • As much as I try to keep away from reading all these articles, i cant. I cant even begin to imagine what is going through those peoples minds. And while some are quick to criticize how the Japanese are handling this, can anyone really say we would do better, if it happened to us, in our home town? No one knows what they would actually do in a time of real crisis.

    Living so close to a nuclear power plant myself (w/in about 20 miles), you cant help but think, what if this happened here? What would we really do? Sure, they have "evacuation routes" set up, and those living within close proximity are given calcium iodine pills just in case of an emergency...but is that really enough?

    I read from one of the many yahoo articles today, "The worst-case scenario doesn't bear mentioning and the best-case scenario keeps getting worse" and frankly, I dont think anyone could have said it any better.

    All I know, is that if I were in Japan right now, I would want to get the hell out of there. Get as far away as possible, and never go back.

    Mother nature is a bitch. We're no match.
    Mansfield, MA - Jul 02, 2003; Mansfield, MA - Jul 03, 2003; Mansfield, MA - Jul 11, 2003; Boston, MA - Sep 29, 2004; Reading, PA - Oct 01, 2004; Hartford, CT - May 13, 2006; Boston, MA - May 24, 2006; Boston, MA - May 25, 2006; Hartford, CT - Jun 27, 2008; Mansfield, MA - Jun 28, 2008; Mansfield, MA - June 30, 2008; Hartford, CT - May 15, 2010; Boston, MA - May 17, 2010; [EV - Providence, RI - June 15, 2011; EV - Hartford, CT - June 18, 2011]; Worcester, MA - Oct. 15, 2013; Worcester, MA - Oct. 16, 2013; Hartford, CT - Oct. 25, 2013; Boston, MA -  August 5, 2016; Boston, MA - August 7, 2016...



  • he.who.forgetshe.who.forgets Posts: 4,593
    great article. It's pretty astounding how the human race can pull together during times of crisis. Bravo to these brave men & women.
    We were but stones your light made us stars
  • Thoughts_ArriveThoughts_Arrive Posts: 15,165
    Don't they have suits to protect them from radiation exposure?
    Adelaide 17/11/2009, Melbourne 20/11/2009, Sydney 22/11/2009, Melbourne (Big Day Out Festival) 24/01/2014
  • polaris_xpolaris_x Posts: 13,559
    Don't they have suits to protect them from radiation exposure?

    see my first post ... second from the top ...
  • Thoughts_ArriveThoughts_Arrive Posts: 15,165
    polaris_x wrote:
    Don't they have suits to protect them from radiation exposure?

    see my first post ... second from the top ...

    sighted. That sucks that there is nothing to protect them :(
    Adelaide 17/11/2009, Melbourne 20/11/2009, Sydney 22/11/2009, Melbourne (Big Day Out Festival) 24/01/2014
  • PureandEasyPureandEasy Posts: 5,799
    I'm sure these people are staying, knowing well the risk. That's what makes them special, their willingness to die to potentially save hundreds of thousands of others.
  • HeavyHandsHeavyHands Posts: 2,130
    This is the kind of strength and resolve we are all capable of. Those people are amazing.

    In the coming weeks and months after this situation has been resolved (whatever that means), I hope there is good documentary work about this crisis and the brave man and women who worked so hard to stave it off.
    "A lot more people are capable of being big out there that just don't give themselves a chance." -Stone Gossard
  • haffajappahaffajappa Posts: 5,955
  • Given to...Given to... Posts: 4,989
    Humble. I.

    How incredible, the human spirit that these honored people have given.
    "...would you like some forks?" EV 12-02-06
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