[Correction: in the final round Tokyo was competing against Istanbul and Madrid, not Rio. Heckuva choice for the IOC this time.]
In order to secure the 2020 Tokyo Olympics for Tokyo, Japan’s
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe assured the IOC that the Fukushima situation was “under
control”, per AFP:
"Let me assure you the situation is under control," [Abe] said.
"It has never done or will do any damage to Tokyo."
Abe replied decisively when pressed by veteran Norwegian IOC member Gerhard Heiberg over Fukushima.
"You should read past the headlines and look at the facts," he said.
"The contaminated water has been contained in an area of the harbour only 0.3 square kilometres big.
"There have been no health problems and nor will there be. I will be taking responsibility for all the programmes with regard to the plant and the leaks."
It looks like the key point, to paraphrase Bill Clinton is “what
your definition of ‘situation’ is”.
If the “situation” is
currently officially stated radiological hazards to Tokyo and Olympic
participants thanks to Fukushima, the answer is a qualified “yes”.
That is, if the Japanese government continues to give public
credence to rather unfounded Tepco optimism that the Fukushima clusterfuck will
simply maintain the current trend of dumping radioactive water into the ocean
and the main danger to denizens of Tokyo involves getting radioactive sushi
from some tuna caught out in the Pacific.
After Shinzo Abe came home from scoring the Olympics, he announced
that the Japanese government would participate more actively in the faltering
Tepco effort.
At the same time, Abe took pains not to stint on the denialist
BS that underpinned the Olympics bid, as if the main problem was not hundreds
of tons of sizzling fuel rods and thousands of gallons of radioactive water, but
“rumours”:
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe ordered the
scrapping of two Fukushima nuclear reactors that survived the 2011 tsunami, a
write-off that threatens to complicate a turnaround plan the operator has
presented to creditors.
He also said he
stood by his commitments to the International Olympic Committee of insuring a
safe 2020 Summer Games.
"I will work
hard to counter rumours questioning the safety of the Fukushima plant," he
said.
Some fact if not rumour-obsessed locals explicitly rebutted Abe’s contention that the situation
was “under control”. Per Mainichi
Shimbun:
The town assembly of nuclear
disaster-hit Namie, Fukushima Prefecture, passed a protest resolution against
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe on Sept. 20 for declaring the situation surrounding
the radioactively contaminated water leaks at the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant
"under control."
The prime minister made the
controversial comments during Tokyo's final presentation at the International
Olympic Committee (IOC)'s general meeting in Buenos Aires on Sept. 7, saying,
"Some may have concerns about Fukushima. Let me assure you, the situation
is under control." He also said the effect of the water leak has been
"completely blocked" within the 0.3 square kilometers of the plant's
harbor.
The Namie Town Assembly unanimously
passed the Sept. 20 protest resolution stating that there is a "serious
problem" with Abe's remarks as they "contradict reality." The
protest also calls the situation at the plant, where some 300 metric tons of
radioactively contaminated water is leaking into the ocean every day,
"serious."
"The situation has never been
'under control,' nor is the contaminated water 'completely blocked,'" the
protest read.
There is no guarantee that the current Fukushima clusterfuck
will not get an upgrade. Per
anti-nuclear activist Harvey Wasserman:
Fukushima’s
owner, Tokyo Electric (Tepco), says that within as few as 60 days it may begin
trying to remove more than 1300 spent fuel rods from a badly damaged pool
perched 100 feet in the air. The pool rests on a badly damaged building that is
tilting, sinking and could easily come down in the next earthquake, if not on
its own.
…
The
engineering and scientific barriers to emptying the Unit Four fuel pool are
unique and daunting, says Gundersen. But it must be done to 100% perfection.
Should the
attempt fail, the rods could be exposed to air and catch fire, releasing
horrific quantities of radiation into the atmosphere. The pool could come
crashing to the ground, dumping the rods together into a pile that could
fission and possibly explode. The resulting radioactive cloud would threaten
the health and safety of all us.
Botching the removal could lead to a ghastly, if not apocalyptic nuclear accident. The possibility that Tepco is driven to try to remove the rods, not because it is ready to, but because the whole building is subsiding in water-soaked soil and may come crashing down, also inspires the heebie-jeebies.
Wasserman expressed a vote of no confidence in Tepco and launched
a petition drive to strip Japan of its control over the Fukushima clean up and
turn the effort over to the international community through the United Nations.
At the time I thought, hmmm, that doesn’t seem particularly
practical.
However, a radio report from ABC Australia also indicates that
the Japanese government now thinks it may not have the capabilities to handle
Fukushima by itself, despite Abe’s personal assurance to the IOC (which should
remind us of the lack of legal enforceability of brave statements made by
politicians on their own kick).
Reportedly, Abe talked with French president Hollande at the
UN this week and asked for French help to decommission two of the Fukushima
units.
The broadcast also made the interesting point that Russia
offered help shortly after the disaster, and also advised the Japanese government
that Tepco’s strategy of cooling the hot, collapsed cores with water would a)
not solve the problem and b) create a huge irradiated water mess. The Japanese government apparently ignored
the Russian approach and, guess what, the problem is not solved and there is a
huge irradiated water mess.
Cynical observers will perhaps conclude that the Abe
administration was aware of these major and currently insoluble issues from the git-go, but declined to involve itself in Tepco’s Fukushima work until after
the Olympics bid was safely under its belt, allowing the Japanese government to base its presentation on Tepco’s sunny assurances rather than the
somewhat grimmer reality prevailing at the site.
As for the Olympics bid itself, it looks like the Abe
administration followed the Karl Rove formula for political jiu jitsu, namely attack
your opponent’s strength and turn it into weakness (best typified by the
Swift-boating of John Kerry’s war record during his presidential race against
the service-dodging party-hearty history of George W. Bush in the Texas Air
National Guard’s “champagne squadron” during the Vietnam War).
Refusing to regard the Fukushima situation as a liability,
the Abe team turned on the waterworks to make the tsunami disaster the
emotional centerpiece of its bid:
The effects of the tsunami and earthquake – killing
over 18,000 people – was never far from the lips of the presentation team.
Princess Takamado – daughter-in-law of the Japanese
Emperor – spoke in French expressing the gratitude Japan owed to the IOC in the
way they had rallied round after the tsunami and how it had had an impact on
the young living there.
“The Olympic bid has given the young people in the
area affected something to dream for, the motivation to move forward with courage,”
said the 60-year-old, who is the first member of Japan’s Royal Family to
address the IOC.
“I know one of the IOC’s most important aspects is
the legacy a Games leaves. The IOC will certainly remain in the heart of these
young people.”
Mami Sato, two time Paralympian in the long jump,
spoke movingly about her personal experience of when the disaster struck.
“I was not there at the time and I was really
worried because I did not know if my family was still alive but luckily they
were,” she said tearfully to the backdrop of a photo of her reunited with her
parents.
Abe added: “Today, under the blue sky of Fukushima,
there are young boys playing football and looking into the future and not the
past.”
The Turks are probably kicking themselves for not packaging their sizable anti-government demonstrations as a non stop carnival of Olympic-worthy youthful passion by Istanbul's admittedly Olympics-hating young urban bourgeoisie. And Erdogan could have flown to Rio to assure the IOC that the Kurdish unrest and Syrian debacle were all "under control". Also, no princess--even though Europe is generously seeded with heirs to the house of Osman and attractive and articulate princesses like Princess Ayşe Gülnev Sultan
would have been available to lobby the royalty-besotted IOC. (Attaturk did make a clean break with the imperial aspirations of the Ottomans and exiled the house of Osman; I guess Princess Takamado can say There, but for the grace of General MacArthur, go I! However, the Erdogan government--while keeping one eye cocked at the disapproving Turkish army--is gingerly pursuing rapprochement with the house of Osman in order to burnish Turkey's claims to regional leadership.)
Madrid, for that matter, was unable to spin its substantial supply of existing Olympic-worthy venues and its desperate need for an economic kickstart into IOC support. Spain had badly botched its anti-doping image management by short-circuiting a massive investigation into the blood-doping and medication-dispensing activities of one Dr. Eufamiano Fuentes. A Spanish judge restricted Fuentes' testimony to his activities relating to traditional doping whipping-sport professional cycling, even when he offered in open court to name names in other sports as well. The rumor is that Spain's massively popular and economically powerful football clubs leaned on the court to keep out of the public eye allegations that Fuentes was doping their athletes.
As for princesses, Spain, with a reigning royal family, is chock-a-block with in-country talent. However, one of the byproducts of Spain's crushing economic crisis is growing disenchantment with the excesses and incapacities of the local aristocracy; the possible deposition of the royal family is now an item on the national agenda. But maybe Princess Leonor and Princess Sofia could have swayed the IOC with, perhaps, a little less hauteur than they displayed at Easter mass in 2010.
As to what’s really going on under the blue skies of Fukushima, this post-Olympics reportage gives a more honest picture (under the Irish Times’ typical feisty headline, Fukushima clean-up may be doomed):
would have been available to lobby the royalty-besotted IOC. (Attaturk did make a clean break with the imperial aspirations of the Ottomans and exiled the house of Osman; I guess Princess Takamado can say There, but for the grace of General MacArthur, go I! However, the Erdogan government--while keeping one eye cocked at the disapproving Turkish army--is gingerly pursuing rapprochement with the house of Osman in order to burnish Turkey's claims to regional leadership.)
Madrid, for that matter, was unable to spin its substantial supply of existing Olympic-worthy venues and its desperate need for an economic kickstart into IOC support. Spain had badly botched its anti-doping image management by short-circuiting a massive investigation into the blood-doping and medication-dispensing activities of one Dr. Eufamiano Fuentes. A Spanish judge restricted Fuentes' testimony to his activities relating to traditional doping whipping-sport professional cycling, even when he offered in open court to name names in other sports as well. The rumor is that Spain's massively popular and economically powerful football clubs leaned on the court to keep out of the public eye allegations that Fuentes was doping their athletes.
As for princesses, Spain, with a reigning royal family, is chock-a-block with in-country talent. However, one of the byproducts of Spain's crushing economic crisis is growing disenchantment with the excesses and incapacities of the local aristocracy; the possible deposition of the royal family is now an item on the national agenda. But maybe Princess Leonor and Princess Sofia could have swayed the IOC with, perhaps, a little less hauteur than they displayed at Easter mass in 2010.
As to what’s really going on under the blue skies of Fukushima, this post-Olympics reportage gives a more honest picture (under the Irish Times’ typical feisty headline, Fukushima clean-up may be doomed):
Across much of
Fukushima’s rolling green countryside they descend on homes like antibodies
around a virus, men wielding low-tech tools against a very modern enemy:
radiation. Power hoses, shovels and mechanical diggers are used to scour toxins
that rained down from the sky 30 months ago. The job is exhausting, expensive
and, say some, doomed to failure.
Today, a sweating
four-man crew wearing surgical masks and boiler suits clean the home of Hiroshi
Saito (71) and his wife Terue (68). Their aim is to bring average radiation at
this home down to 1.5 microsieverts an hour, still several times what it was
before the incident but safe enough, perhaps, for Saito’s seven grandchildren
to visit. “My youngest grandchild has never been here,” he says.
Saito’s house is outside the mandatory evacuation zone, from
which 160,000 people decamped by government order and have yet to return. Another 40,000 or so from Saito’s municipality,
Minamisoma, voluntarily evacuated and have yet to return. According to the article, one estimate for
the total cleanup bill for Fukushima may reach $600 billion.
And that’s only if things don’t get worse.
After this and this, you would have thought the Japanese would have learnt to pay attention to what the Russian tell them.
ReplyDeleteI am highly disappointed that I am mostly seeing this article only published on forums which require Facebook or twitter login to comment (in these times as far s I'm concerned that means "please register your opinions with the NSA for future reference if you want to comment publicly on this topic, as if it isn't probably intentional counter-intelligence anyway just to sucker you into registering your personal opinions here"). If you want me to respect and believe what you are saying as a journalist, don't require facebook or twitter login for people to comment. Thanks.
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