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Wednesday, August 21, 2013

‘Serious’: Japan hikes Fukushima radiation danger level — RT News

Editor's Note: We reported on numerous occasions in the past going back to March 2011 that the Japanese and the Global Nuclear conglomerate were lying about the level of the threat posed to Japan and the world by the Fukushima catastrophe. Now 2½ years later, the truth is beginning to come out, and as speculated back in 2011, the threat, firstly to Tokyo and Japan, and then to the Northern Hemisphere is very real, and the consequences of this extinction level event will be felt for decades to come. 
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‘Serious’: Japan hikes Fukushima radiation danger level — RT News
Published time: August 21, 2013 04:15
Edited time: August 21, 2013 09:24

Reporters and Tokyo Electric Power Co workers look up the unit 4 reactor building during a media tour at TEPCO's Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant in the town of Okuma, Fukushima prefecture in Japan on June 12, 2013.(AFP Photo / Noboru Hashimoto)
Reporters and Tokyo Electric Power Co workers look up the unit 4 reactor building during a media tour at TEPCO's Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant in the town of Okuma, Fukushima prefecture in Japan on June 12, 2013.(AFP Photo / Noboru Hashimoto)

Japan will drastically raise the gravity of the latest Fukushima leak to Level Three, which is considered a “serious radiation incident” on the International Nuclear Event Scale (INES) for radiological releases.  "Judging from the amount and the density of the radiation in the contaminated water that leaked...a Level Three assessment is appropriate," read the document used during Wednesday’s weekly meeting of Nuclear Regulation Authority (NRA) commissioners.

Earlier on Tuesday, TEPCO reported that another tank with highly radioactive water had leaked at the crippled Fukushima nuclear power plant. The NRA first classified the leak as a Level One "anomaly.”
The contaminated water contains an unprecedented 80 million Becquerels of radiation per liter – compared to the normal level of around 150 Bq/l. This is considered to be the most serious setback to date for the clean-up of the worst nuclear accident since Chernobyl. 

The increase to ‘Level Three’ will be formally adopted later on Wednesday after a meeting that is currently under way, a spokesman for the agency told Reuters by phone.This is the first time Japan has issued an INES rating for Fukushima since the accident, which was caused by a massive earthquake and tsunami, took place in 2011.The most dangerous ‘Level Seven’ has only been applied twice - for the Chernobyl catastrophe in 1986 and for the meltdown of three reactors at the Fukushima plant.
According to the International Atomic Energy Agency, each increase on the INES scale represents a 10-times increase in radiation severity.

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