More akin to Chernobyl, I think. If it does turn out that way, it might well carry a cloud of radioactivity over to north America. What if that were to be dumped on the Prairies? And further on, on northern Europe? What price food then? (May be good for biofuels though.)TroubledTimes wrote:I am an advocate of nuclear energy, but if this turns into a full scale nuclear accident, the future will look very bleak. This will do to the nuclear industry what Deepwater Horizon did for deep sea drilling.
Latest news
That's not the latest (it is from the Bbc, taken from newswires) - latest is that people were hurt in that explosion.Japan quake: Nuclear meltdown feared at Fukushima reactor
Japanese officials fear a meltdown at a nuclear power plant hit by Friday's earthquake after radioactive material was detected outside it.
Japan's nuclear agency said this meant fuel from one of the reactor's cores may have started melting.
Japanese media reported an explosion and smoke at one of the Fukushima plants.
A huge relief operation is under way after the 8.9-magnitude earthquake and tsunami, which killed more than 400.
Another 784 people are missing.
Japan's Prime Minister Naoto Kan declared a state of emergency at the Fukushima 1 and 2 power plants as engineers try to confirm whether a reactor at one of the stations has gone into meltdown.
Cooling systems inside several reactors at the plants stopped working after Friday's earthquake cut the power supply.
Japan's nuclear agency said on Saturday that radioactive caesium and iodine had been detected near the number one reactor of the Fukushima 1 plant.
The agency said this may indicate that containers of uranium fuel inside the reactor may have begun melting.
Air has been released from several of the reactors at both plants in an effort to relieve the huge amount of pressure building up inside.
Mr Kan said the amount of radiation released was "tiny".
Thousands of people have been ordered to evacuate the area near the plants.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-pacific-12720219
12 March 2011 Last updated at 08:04
BTW, that Bbc reporter was stopped 60km, not 50km, away from the Fukushima plant.