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WSWS : News
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: Japan
Second nuclear worker dies in Japan
By James Conachy
4 May 2000
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Masato Shinohara, aged 40, died on the morning of April 27
in the University of Tokyo Hospital. Along with two other workers,
he had been exposed to massive doses of radiation during last
September's nuclear reaction at the Tokai-mura nuclear fuel processing
plant. His fellow worker, Hisashi Ouchi, died of heart failure
on December 21, while Yutaka Yokokawa has, for now, been released
from hospital.
Shinohara remained alive for over six months, but doctors described
his body as ravaged by radiation sickness. The final
cause of death was given as multiple organ failure. Kazuhiko Maekawa,
head of the intensive care unit, told the media: I feel
powerless faced with this enormous problem which was caused by
human greed.
The findings of an investigation committee established by the
Nuclear Safety Commission, the official regulatory authority,
demonstrate that the disaster was the direct product of the neglect
of safety by the plant's owners, JCO Pty Ltd, and the Japanese
government.
The three workers had been instructed to produce the enriched
uranium oxide, which is required for a specialised nuclear fuel
used in the experimental Joyo reactor. Over recent years, the
company had slashed its staffing levels, due to falling profits.
Two of the workers had never done the work before and they were
not supervised by a manager or technician.
To speed up work, the company had altered a safety manual to
allow workers to mix uranium oxides in steel buckets, instead
of properly designed mixing tanks. JCO had not been inspected
by government regulators for 10 years, on the grounds that the
work it undertook posed no threat of a nuclear accident.
Untrained, unaware of the risks and under the pressure of a
management deadline, the workers bypassed one stage in the enrichment
process and, using the steel buckets, poured seven times the safe
level of a uranium mixture directly into a precipitation tank.
The mixture reached critical mass and passed into a sustained
nuclear fission reaction that was not finally controlled for 22
hours.
The plant was not designed to contain a radiation leak, despite
handling highly enriched fuel. The accident began at 10.35am but
the company did not inform the relevant government authorities
for 40 minutes. The fire brigade personnel dispatched to the site
were not even told they were attending a nuclear accident. Experts
from the Science and Technology Agency (STA) did not arrive at
Tokai-mura until 1pm. A decision to evacuate residents in the
immediate area was not made for five hours and a warning instructing
the more than 320,000 people living within a 10-kilometre radius
to remain indoors was not issued until 10pm.
The STA confirmed on January 31 that 439 people had suffered
potentially dangerous radiation exposures. They include 158 JCO
workers and contractors at the plant, 84 emergency service workers
and 207 local residents. Measuring the degree of exposure was
complicated by the fact that numbers of workers were not wearing
the mandatory film badges that absorb radiationanother reflection
of the general lack of safety supervised by JCO management. It
will be years, however, before the broader impact is revealed.
A Health Care Study Committee has been established to monitor
the long-term health implications on local residents, such as
increased cancer rates.
The accident has been followed by revelations of a culture
of disregarding safety in Japan's nuclear industry. Researchers
have accused nuclear employers of exposing thousands of unskilled
day labourers and contractors to dangerous levels of radiation
over the past decades. Workers have allegedly been paid bribes
not to report medical problems most likely caused by radiation
exposure. Nuclear industry trade unions have stood by in silence.
The Japanese nuclear industry is one of the most extensive
in the world, with 51 operating reactors, as well as fuel processing
and research facilities. It generates over 30 percent of Japan's
electricity supply.
Public concern with its lack of safety has steadily grown.
In the last four years there have been five major accidents and
numerous minor incidents requiring plants to close. Only last
week a nuclear reactor northwest of Tokyo closed for the second
time, due to cracks in cooling pipes. On April 24 a research reactor
shut down when its fuel rods malfunctioned.
In the aftermath of Tokai-mura, the Japanese government has
made belated efforts to regulate the industry in order to placate
public fears. After inspections discovered safety abuses at 15
nuclear facilities, legislation was passed in December requiring
periodic and unscheduled inspections by authorities. The STA denied
JCO's request to resume operations and on February 3 cancelled
its permit. Police are said to be considering criminal charges
against the management but, to this point, none have been laid.
The government's long record of self-regulation, however, highlights
its complicity in the death of Masato Shinohara and Hisashi Ouchi.
For decades, successive administrations have followed the self-responsibility
principle, effectively giving the nuclear companies a free
rein to put their workers and the broader population at risk.
See Also:
Worker's death exposes the
dirty secrets of Japan's nuclear industry
[6 January 2000]
Irish government edges towards
legal action against Britain's Sellafield nuclear plant
[19 April 2000]
British Nuclear Fuels accused
of deliberately falsifying safety checks
[21 March 2000]
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