By Ken BelsonTOKYO - With the power out, trucks were parked in a circle with their lights on, creating a shadowy stage. A manager from the Tokyo Electric Power Company explained how the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant had been slammed by a mammoth tsunami and rocked by hydrogen explosions and had become highly radioactive. Some workers wept.
That was the scene at J-Village, 12 miles south of the plant, on the night of March 15. Hundreds of firefighters, Self-Defense Forces and workers from Tokyo Electric Power convened at the sports training center, arguing long and loudly about how best to restore cooling systems and prevent nuclear fuel from overheating. Complicating matters, a lack of phone service meant that they had little input from upper management.
"There were so many ideas, the meeting turned into a panic," said one longtime Tokyo Electric veteran present that day. He made the comments in an interview with The New York Times, one of several interviews that provided a rare glimpse of the crisis as the company's workers experienced it. "There were serious arguments between the various sections about whether to go, how to use electrical lines, which facilities to use and so on."
To Those who still dare to say that Nuclear Power is safe and Nuclear Accidents and / or Nuclear Power Risks are manageable.Do we have to wait till the next time before you acknowledge you are terribly mistaken ?????
Ak Malten, Pro Peaceful Energy Use
Workers Give Glimpse of Japan's Nuclear Crisis - IHT
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