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WSWS : News
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: Japan
Safety violations produce Japan's worst nuclear accident
By Richard Phillips
4 October 1999
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Forty-nine people, including three nuclear workers, were exposed
to massively high levels of radiation after an uncontrolled nuclear
chain reaction at a uranium processing plant in Tokaimura, Japan,
last Thursday. Two of the three workers directly involved are
unconscious and not expected to live. Thousands of workers and
local residents may suffer from long-term radiation poisoning.
Public authorities have admitted that it may take years before
they are able to make a full assessment of the damage.
The worst nuclear accident in Japanese history began at 10.35am
at the JCO plant, owned by Sumitomo Metal Mining, one of Japan's
largest business groups. According to media reports, the three
employees mistakenly loaded 16 kilograms of uranium dioxidenearly
eight times the safe amountto hand mix a uranium-nitric
acid solution. The three were inexperienced; two had never performed
the task before and the third had carried it out a few times.
JCO employees were given no instructions about the dangers
they faced and there was no procedure in place, or even a safety
manual, instructing workers what to do in the event of an accident.
The company did not report the accident to the government for
two hours. The chain reaction continued out of control for 18
hours, producing atmospheric radiation levels up to 20,000 times
the normal levels. One hundred and fifty residents living within
a 350-metre radius had to be evacuated from their homes and 300,000
residents in a 10-kilometre radius were forced to remain indoors
for at least 36 hours. Evacuated residents returned to their homes
last Sunday after an aluminum and sandbag retaining wall was erected
around the plant.
Tokaimura, 140 kilometres north-east of Tokyo, is a major nuclear
research centre. The town hosts reprocessing, enrichment and laser
isotope enrichment plants and is the site of Japan's previous
worst nuclear accident in 1997 when 37 workers were irradiated
after an explosion at a nuclear plant. Housing is located within
metres of these plants, as are farms and other agricultural produce
facilities.
Company and government coverup
Predictably, the company issued a public apology and then attempted
to blame the three workers for the accident. Likewise, the government
and public authorities admitted their response to the accident
had been "lax" but then claimed the accident did not
reflect on the rest of the nuclear industry. Prime Minister Keizo
Obuchi offered his apologies.
Company officials at first claimed the accident was a result
of "human error". Later, under questioning from the
media, they admitted violations of national safety procedures.
Three senior JCO officials acknowledged that the company lacked
proper safety procedures; used illegal production methods for
at least two years; and changed its procedure manuals to allow
workers to carry processed uranium in stainless steel containers.
The officials have been questioned by police and could face criminal
charges,
Some Japanese newspapers have suggested that the accident was
caused by company demands for increased productivity. Dr Jinzaburo
Takagi, founder of the Citizens Nuclear Information Centre, suggested
that the accident could have been caused by government demands
that the company boost production.
He said the accident proved that the company and the government's
safety authorities were "incapable of handling nuclear materials".
"This accident has brought to light the dissembling nature
of the Japanese government's nuclear policy, which has been concealing
the danger of nuclear utilisation with the myth of the safety
of nuclear energy," he said.
A major element in the accident is the free rein given to nuclear
industry companies by the Japanese government. JCO and other nuclear
processing companies, state- and privately-owned, are allowed
to operate without any serious safety checks or controls.
According to internal company documents leaked last weekend,
the government approved the construction and operations of the
JCO plant, even though the building was incapable of containing
radiation leaks and the company had no accident emergency plans.
The government simply accepted JCO's statements that it was not
necessary to prepare for a critical accident because the company's
safety procedures and production methods would prevent it. JCO
claimed that the density and mass of material used would be measured
and kept within safety guidelines.
Government response to accident
But the most damning feature of the disaster was the government's
response. Prime Minister Obuchi and senior government officials
treated it as a minor event. While Obuchi spent the day conferring
with party bureaucrats over a cabinet reshuffle, his department
issued a routine instruction for further information.
Chief Cabinet Secretary Hiromu Nonaka, after several meetings
with the company and government nuclear safety officials, told
a press conference at 4pm, five hours after the accident, that
the situation was under control and would not worsen. An hour
later he was forced to retract his statement and issue emergency
evacuation orders.
Senior government officials were not given expert briefings
on the escalating crisis until 6pm and an emergency meeting of
senior government ministers was not held until 9pm. The Home Affairs,
Labor and Health and Welfare Ministers did not attend the meeting.
Members of Japan's Self-Defense Force chemical warfare unit
were eventually dispatched to site, but, not equipped to deal
with nuclear accidents, withdrew. At one point the government
issued a call for assistance from US forces stationed in Japan.
With anger rising among nuclear scientists and local residents,
the government has been forced to announce an investigation into
the JCO's operations. Special investigators have begun raiding
JCO's offices. Whatever is revealed by these investigations, the
government's last concern is the health and welfare of local residents.
Osamu Yatabe, a local lawyer and former National Assembly representative
for the district, told one Japanese newspaper that the government
had constantly ignored warnings about the danger of the nuclear
plants to local residents.
"A few of us tried to sound the alarms of danger for this
industry. We were always in the minority though, because officers
were able to convince people that accidents like Chernobyl and
Three Mile Island could never happen here. In fact, Japan's safety
precautions were supposed to be perfect," he said.
Japan, which lacks oil resources, is one of the most nuclear-dependent
countries in the worldwith 51 nuclear reactors producing
35 percent of its electricity. Most existing Japanese nuclear
plants are 20 years old and accidents are numerous and increasing.
There have been 19 low-level incidents this year and several major
accidents, which have closed plants, over the last four years.
Some of these include:
* Serious leakage of radioactive coolant from a fast-breeder
reactor at Monju in western Japan in 1995.
* Explosion and fire at a plutonium reprocessing plant in Tokaimura,
which irradiated 37 workers in March 1997.
* A major accident in April 1997 at an advanced thermal reactor
at Fugon, in western Japan. Eleven workers were irradiated.
* In July 1999, radiation 11,500 times higher than the maximum
allowed leaked from faulty pipes at a nuclear reactor owned by
the Japan Atomic Power Company at Tsuruga, 350 kilometres west
of Tokyo.
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