Monday, July 9, 2012

TEPCO Releass 33 Additional Photos of Tsunami As It Hit #Fukushima I Nuke Plant on March 11, 2011


Following the almost artistic tsunami photograph in the previous post, here's TEPCO releasing 33 additional photographs of the tsunami that hit Fukushima I Nuclear Power Plant on March 11, 2011.

There are people (including the Diet Investigation Commission on the accident, who just released the report) think the earthquake may have caused the initial damage to the plant that led to the core melt of Reactor 1. It may have indeed. But that doesn't in any way diminish the destructive effect of the tsunami.

After all, a tsunami is not a one-off high wave on the beach but a manifestation, so to speak, of the massive amount of ocean water behind it moving toward the land.

According to Jiji Tsushin (7/9/2012), TEPCO originally released 11 photographs in May last year. In September, NISA requested TEPCO to release all the photographs it took of the tsunami, but the company didn't. The final report by the Diet Independent Investigation Commission on the Fukushima accident pointed to the existence of these additional photographs, and finally TEPCO released them on July 9. The photographs were taken by a worker at a TEPCO affiliate company from the building located to the south of Reactor 4.

TEPCO's explanation was that the company thought the photographs were redundant.

The worker who took these photos was apparently inside the building when the tsunami was approaching the plant, then moved to the rooftop of the building after it hit the facilities just outside the building where he was.

In the first several photographs, you can see a small oil tanker hurrying out of the breakwater to avoid the on-coming tsunami.

The earthquake hit at 2:46:18 PM on March 11, 2011, Japan Standard Time.

From TEPCO's Photos and Video Library, 7/9/2012:

3:35:16 PM


3:35:50 PM

3:36:18 PM

3:36:42 PM

3:40:16 PM

3:40:28 PM

3:41:24 PM

3:41:36 PM

3:41:52 PM

3:41:58 PM

3:42:20 PM

3:42:24 PM

3:42:58 PM


3:43:12 PM

3:44:06 PM

3:44:30 PM

3:46:06 PM

3:47:10 PM

3:48:32 PM

3:49:58 PM

The entire 33 photographs at the link.

The most telling picture (to me) is the very last one, taken at 4:01:04 PM. It shows the terraced hillside, showing the original elevation of the plant location. If the plant had been built on that level, instead of digging down to the near-sea level, there might not have been the Fukushima I Nuclear Power Plant accident. The earthquake might have still caused damages, but the cooling of the reactors might have continued as the emergency power generators wouldn't have been swept away in the tsunami and the basement control panels wouldn't have been flooded.



13 comments:

Beppe said...

The reason tbe Diet commssion says that it cannot be excluded that, even without a tsunami, there could have been a meltdown is because it suspects that the emergency generators could have been knocked off by the earthquake itself, especially for reactor 1.

This has far reaching implications for the safety of the other plants.

Then of course the flooding (originated by the tsunami) inflicted the generators a further final blow.

Also, it was the earthquake that cut all external supplies of electric power and even power cables and eone electric panel inside Fukushima 1 that plainly collapsed.

Anonymous said...

Also, April 7th quake severed all external power lines at Higashidori plant, which had to resort to emergency generators. However two out of three generators were offline for maintenance; had the third one failed to start it would have been a problem because batteries only last a few hours.
Similarly for Onagawa npp: it survived April 7th quake using only its only available generator (the other diesel generator was offline to fix a seal that was installed the other way around, if I recall correctly).
As far as I can see earthquakes often cause severe damages to npps electricity supply and plants barely survive the event. Way too close to Russian roulette.
Beppe

Anonymous said...

The panel suggested that some of the emergency generators at reactors 2 and 3 also might have been knocked out by the quake.

Tepco has consistently claimed that the initial tsunami that smashed into the power station at 3:35 p.m. on March 11 knocked out all the emergency generators, resulting in a total power outage.

But the panel pointed out that a wave gauge set up about 1.5 km off Fukushima's coast recorded the first tsunami sweeping by at exactly 3:35 p.m., and estimated that it would have taken at least two more minutes for it to reach the No. 1 plant.

This would mean that the power generators were knocked out sometime after 3:37 p.m.

But it is believed the power generator in question was disabled between 3:35 p.m. and 3:36 p.m., implying the quake rather than the waves was responsible, according to the report.

http://www.japantimes.co.jp/text/nn20120707a5.html

Anonymous said...

The ship inside the breakwater got out just in time they were very lucky to get clear.

Anonymous said...

At 3:44:06 what looks to me like the generator building is flooded and the generators are gone.

At that moment, anybody with knowledge of the systems knew that a meltdown was imminent within hours.

It was revealed that the "battery backups" are not backups at all. They merely operate the instrumentation. That's like having a backup for the flight instruments of your airplane - you might know how fast you're going down and where you're going down, but the instruments can't keep you in the air if the engine fails.

At that moment, the 100% focus should have been getting generators and pumps online as quickly as possible. No calling out to have somebody send them in.

Call for the US military to airlift generators - They probably have a dozen of them within 100 km. They could have had some onsite and running in 3 hours.

If that doesn't work, or even if it's in process,drive to a local farm, borrow, or steal a tractor or an off-road forklift (since the roads were broken up), Drive to the nearest cellular phone station, or factory - grab their back up generators and the fuel tanks and bring them back to the plant. Get an electrician to hook it up, and get them running immediately.

Instead, they stayed on site and waited for help from outside. Help didn't even get started in their direction for nearly 24 hours.

Ridiculous lack of assertiveness in dealing with this - unless the plants were already melting because the control rods didn't insert because of the earthquake.

James.

arevamirpal::laprimavera said...

I remember screaming (in my blog) "Call the US military, get the chinock, airlift generators!" Instead, PM Kan and his officials sat while the generator trucks got stuck in the traffic mess after the quake.

Anonymous said...

Battery backups are also useful to remotely operate valves. When Fukushima 1 lost the batteries too they had to climb into some awkward place using flashlights and operate valves manually (valves were not designed to be easily operated by hand).

Also, Fukushima 1 had a system to use the steam produced by the stopped reactor to operate the reactor cooling pump; this safety net did not work either (can't remember why, some valve problem?).

Beppe

Anonymous said...

pffft ... all harmless photos.
there are photos, where the 50 meter high reactor buildings look like a 2x2 lego block on a regular beach surf.
all just down playing.

Apolline said...

@ anonymous at 5:34 PM, just please give a link to these photos.
I agree with you, TEPCO downplays all the time.

Anonymous said...

Wasn't there something with the water intake pumps at the ocean also having been destroyed or washed away? In which case, even working generators wouldn't have been much good?
*mscharisma*

Dr. Bob said...

As Gunderson and others have pointed out, the emergency generators were doomed because the SERVICE WATER PUMPS, which provide cooling to the emergency diesel generators, were located almost at sea level. The tsunami washed those pumps away. From that point, the fate of the plant was sealed. I have not seen any recognition of this problem in regard to restarting Oi or other plants. It is a serious oversight. Placement of the diesels (in waterproof basements or on high ground) is irrelevant as long as they depend on sea level pumps for cooling.

Anonymous said...

I believe Arnie Gundersen mentioned that at Fukushima 2 the pumps were a newer model and therefore survived the tsunami. Tepco knew Fukushima 1 pumps were more vulnerable yet did not replace them.

Ditto for the electric board that collapsed because of the earthquake.

Amazing how much Tepco could have done but didn't, so much that it becomes hard to determine what was the decisive fault.

Beppe

Anonymous said...

The release of these pictures is a diversion by Tepco, it means they have something bigger to hide.

They've never released anything unless it was to obscure other problems.

Now my question is Asahi sent a chopper over Unit 4, where are the other pictures? What other damage is going on at Fukushima?

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