Crews Work to Restore Power at Japanese Nuclear Plant

Repair crews were back at work Tuesday seeking to restore cooling systems at Japan's quake-crippled Fukushima nuclear plant, a day after being evacuated as smoke rose from two of the plant's six reactors.

Officials said electrical power cables have been laid to all six reactors and that they hope to restore some functions at all the reactors within days. However it remains unclear how much damage has been done to the pumps used to keep the reactors' nuclear fuel rods from overheating, or how soon they can be repaired or replaced.

Investors took heart at the improved prospects for averting a catastrophe, driving the benchmark Nikkei stock index up by more than 3 percent in morning trading.

However massive problems remain, with more than 21,000 people dead or missing and 350,000 left homeless by the March 11 earthquake and tsunami. The World Bank has estimated the economic cost of the twin disasters at up to $235 billion, more than twice as much as Japan's 1995 Kobe earthquake.

Japanese officials said white smoke continued to rise at two of the Fukushima plant's reactors Tuesday, but that it was probably water vapor and not an impediment to continued repair work. Defense Minister Toshimi Kitazawa said at a press conference that dark smoke seen rising from one of the reactors on Monday may have been caused by burning oil.

Officials said radiation levels outside the plant had receded since a brief spike on Monday. Constant monitoring is under way after elevated radiation levels have been detected in some food and tap water and in sea water outside the plant.

Japan's nuclear regulatory agency said it hopes to reconnect power to the Number 1 and Number 2 reactor units and to the plant's central control center by the end of Wednesday, and to restore power to the Number 3 and 4 units by the end of Thursday. Officials said Monday that the number 5 and 6 units have already been stabilized.

However the Associated Press quoted plant officials saying critical pumps at the Number 2 unit will need to be replaced. It was not clear how quickly the new pumps can be delivered.

Problems at the plant began when the earthquake and tsunami knocked out the main and auxiliary systems for pumping water into the reactors and adjacent cooling ponds where used fuel rods are stored. If the rods become too hot, they can burn off their outer casings and release dangerous radiation into the air.

Fuel rods in the inner core of two or three of the reactors are believed to have partially melted, but their radiation is contained by heavy concrete chambers. There are fears that the earthquake and several subsequent explosions may have damaged two of the containment chambers as well as one or more of the cooling ponds.

Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano said Tuesday that officials are closely monitoring radiation levels in sea water near the plant after unusual levels of radioactive iodine and cesium were detected. He said the iodine will quickly lose its radioactivity but that the cesium can build up over time in fish.

On Monday, the government suspended all raw milk shipments from Fukushima prefecture and spinach from four prefectures surrounding the plant after unacceptably high radiation levels were found in the products. Officials said the levels did not pose an immediate health risk.

Residents in one town have also been warned against drinking tap water after elevated radiation levels were found in the water supply.

Troubles Mount at Quake-Stricken Japanese Nuclear Reactor



An explosion blew the roof and outer walls off of the number 3 unit Monday at the Fukushima nuclear power plant in earthquake-stricken northern Japan.

A similar explosion struck the number 1 unit on Saturday at the plant, where cooling systems were knocked out by Friday's devastating earthquake and tsunami.

Officials said the inner containment vessel remained intact after Monday's explosion and they did not believe there had been a major release of radiation.

However engineers were still struggling to gain control of a new threat at the number 2 unit, where officials reported a total failure of the cooling system. The operators of the plant, Tokyo Electric Power Company, said the coolant had evaporated exposing the fuel rods, raising the risk of them melting down.

If the heat from a meltdown ruptures the containment vessel, that could permit a major release of radiation with serious health consequences. Engineers were desperately pumping sea water into all three units at Fukushima in an effort to cool them down.

Engineers have also vented steam from the plants to release a build-up of pressure. Hydrogen in the steam is believed to have mixed with oxygen, causing the two explosions.

Evacuations

Almost 200,000 people have already been evacuated from areas around Fukushima and other troubled nuclear power stations. About 600 people still in homes near the Fukushima plant were advised to remain indoors.

The commander of the aircraft carrier USS Ronald Reagan, which has been assisting in relief efforts from about 160 kilometers offshore, said the American fleet had moved away from the Fukushima plant after low levels of radiation were detected on 17 crewmen. He said the radiation was easily washed off.

The nuclear crisis has diverted attention away from a massive rescue and relief effort. The total death toll from the quake and tsunami is expected to reach more than 10,000.

The search for survivors

About 100,000 Japanese troops, backed by relief teams from more than a dozen countries, are searching for survivors in the debris of Friday's earthquake and tsunami, which reduced whole towns and villages to rubble. Power shortages and massive damage to infrastructure are complicating efforts to reach the hardest-hit areas.

More than 1,000 bodies were found Monday along the shores of one northeastern province, and the Kyodo news agency said another 1,000 bodies were found at a second location in hard-hit Miyagi province.

Also Monday, officials sounded tsunami warnings and ordered residents to head for higher ground along the devastated northeastern coast near the city of Sendai following a major aftershock. The alert turned out to be a false alarm but further jangled the nerves of a frightened population.

Markets tumble

In Tokyo, residents returned to shops and offices at the start of a new work week, coping with rolling blackouts and reduced transit service as authorities deal with limited power-generating capacity. Fears that industrial production will be disrupted helped push the main stock index to its lowest levels since November.

There is no electricity at all in vast stretches of the northeast region, where tens of thousands of homeless residents spent a third night in near-freezing temperatures without heat or running water. Relief crews are rushing to provide food and water, but are hard-pressed to reach many of those in greatest need.

Two U.S. search-and-rescue teams with 144 staff and 12 dogs were among the teams that began clawing through the ruins at first light Monday in search of survivors. A 15-member Chinese team was also at work and Japan's Kyodo news agency said the Defense Ministry will activate reserves to assist in relief operations, the first time it has ever done so.

Friday's earthquake had a magnitude of 8.9, making it the most powerful ever recorded in Japan and the fifth strongest since 1900.
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