Saturday, 12 March 2016

Fukushima cleanup robots overpowered by radiation

Bad news for bots:

A worker near the No. 3 reactor building at the tsunami-crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in Japan. © Toru Hanai
The Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant is still so toxic that even the robots tasked with cleaning up the site after three catastrophic meltdowns are struggling to ‘survive’.
Five years after a massive earthquake and 10ft-high tsunami laid waste to the energy plant in eastern Japan, the major operation to rid the area of nuclear debris continues.
An estimated $21 billion has been spent on cleanup efforts since 2011, including funding for a team of remote activated robots capable of going to high-dose radiation areas of the plant where humans cannot enter and survive.
However, it has now emerged that at least five of these robots have been lost to the dangers that lurk in Fukushima Daiichi’s severely damaged nuclear reactors and waste treatment buildings.
The machines were overpowered by the sheer scale of radiation during an effort to remove melted fuel rods, Reuters reports.
READ MORE: Fukushima 5yrs on: Botched response, radiation danger, murky prospects
According to Naohiro Masuda, the man heading up the plant’s decommissioning project, the harmful radiation short-circuits the wiring in the robots, causing them to stop working and leaving them stranded inside the disaster site.
A map released by the plant’s operators, Tokyo Electric Power Co. (TEPCO), just last month shows the high levels of radiation being recorded around the plant’s wrecked reactors.

Areas located close to the initial disaster zone contain levels of radiation above the highest level recommended by the International Commission on Radiological Protection (ICRP) for rescue workers in emergencies.

© tepco.co.jp
A guide by the World Nuclear Association indicates that exposure to radiation above 1,000 msv is “above the threshold for causing immediate radiation sickness” and increases risks of fatal cancer in humans.
Robot crew
TEPCO currently uses custom-built robots to tackle specific areas of the Fukushima reactors. The cleanup droids include models named Sakura and Rosemary - two robots which survey the source of radiation on the second and third floors of volatile reactor buildings.
New family of robots helping clean up Fukushima: A new family of robots that all fit onto a common base is being...
Posted by Tokyo Electric Power Company, Incorporated (TEPCO) on Wednesday, December 16, 2015
Meanwhile, dry ice blasters and a snake-like vacuum called the Raccoon are used to decontaminate parts of the plant.
A tractor-like device, called the Frigo-MA, has also been developed to “investigate small rooms in the reactor buildings,” TEPCO says.
Japanese company Toshiba is currently working on a specially designed device that could extract exposed fuel rods from the Fukushima plant unit 1. The large robotic arm is capable of slicing up nuclear waste and removing it from the site.

New born prince= 1 lakh trees

Star Online Report
Bhutan welcomes the birth of its new prince by planting over 1 lakh trees across the country.
The initiative took place a month after King Khesar and Queen Pema announced the birth of their first child, reports India Times.
Politicians of both the ruling and opposition parties organised the initiative of planting 108,000 trees across the Himalayan kingdom as prayers for the royal child to grow up happily.
Trees are considered sacred and symbolise longevity, beauty, health and compassion in Buddhism.
"108 is a holy number in Buddhism which denotes the cleansing of 108 degradations that delay souls from attaining enlightenment, hence 108 beads in a rosary", said Tenzin Lepkhell, one of the coordinators.
Bhutan has an inherent desire of reforestation in the country and has a constitution that calls for 60% of the land to be covered by forests. Photo: Reuters
Each of the 82000 households of the country planted a tree while the other 26000 trees were planted by volunteers, he added.
Bhutan, which broke a world record by planting over 49,000 trees in an hour last year, has an inherent desire of reforestation in the country and has a constitution that calls for 60 percent of the land to be covered by forests.
King Khesar’s father introduced the Gross Happiness Index in 1972 which balances economic growth with environmental conservation and overall well being of the people.
According to the index, happiness is connected with cleaner surroundings and passion for environmental conservation no matter what the political alignments of the country are.
Bhutan, which has recently become a democracy, still looks up to the monarchy for stability and prosperity of the nation.
Tourism Ministry of Bhutan has opened up a 'Happiness Garden', in line with the royal celebrations, where foreign visitors are invited to plant trees representing their home nation.
Giving life to something that sustains life being the key to happiness is the philosophy behind all this.
“Bhutan is known as a country of happiness. To have a happiness garden is therefore logical. With this garden, we hope to bring the peoples of the world closer,” said Damchoe Rinzin, a spokesperson for the Tourism Council of Bhutan.

Malaysia halts intake of all new workers including 15 lakh Bangladeshis Post title

The Star
The Malaysia government has decided to halt the recruitment of new foreign workers into the country, said Deputy Prime Minister Ahmad Zahid Hamidi.
This also meant that the initial plan to bring in 1.5 million Bangladeshi workers was officially scrapped, the minister said.
"There will not be one, let alone 1.5 million new foreign workers coming into our country.
"Employers who need workers will have to apply to legalise existing foreigners in the country without work permits or whose permits have expired," he told reporters after handing letters of appointments to new village Chiefs in the Bagan Datoh parliamentary constituency.
Ahmad Zahid who is also Home Minister said employers had until June 30 to legalise such foreign workers.
"The Government is bringing forward the deadline from Dec 31 because employers continuously ignore the chances given to them.
"Instead, the Government is criticised and pressured. If they can't hire anyone, they should just get the Malaysian Employers Federation, Federation of Malaysian Manufacturers and Malaysian Trade Union Congress to help them find locals to do the job," he said sarcastically.
Ahmad Zahid said following this, employers and recruitment agents would be dealt with more severely.
"We will be pushing for those found guilty of trafficking and harbouring illegal workers to be caned.
"Right now, they are not afraid because they think they can get away by paying a fine but that will not be the case anymore," he said.

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