TOKYO - Japanese authorities evacuated workers on Sunday from a reactor building they were working in after radiation in water at the crippled nuclear power plant reached potentially lethal levels, the plant's operator said.
Tokyo Electric Power Co said radiation in the water of the No. 2 reactor at the Fukushima Daiichi plant was measured at more than 1,000 millisieverts an hour. That compares with a national safety standard of 250 millisieverts over a year. The US Environmental Protection Agency says a dose of 1,000 millisieverts is enough to cause hemorrhaging.
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Japanese nuclear regulators said the water contained 10 million times the amount of radioactive iodine than is normal in the reactor, but noted the substance had a half life of less than an hour, meaning it would disappear within a day.
A Tokyo Electric official said workers were evacuated from the No. 2
reactor's turbine housing unit to prevent them from being exposed to
harmful doses of radiation. They had been trying to pump radioactive
water out of the power station after it was found in buildings housing
three of the six reactors.
Tokyo Electric engineers have struggled the past two weeks to prevent a
catastrophic meltdown at Fukushima Daiichi, after an unprecedented
earthquake and tsunami knocked out the backup power system needed to
cool the reactors.
The work has had to be suspended several times due to explosions and
spiking radiation levels inside the reactors, in a crisis that has
become the worst nuclear emergency since Chernobyl a quarter-century
ago.
On Thursday, three workers were taken to hospital from reactor No. 3
after stepping in water with radiation levels 10,000 times higher than
usually found in a reactor.
The latest radiation scare was confined to inside the reactor. Radiation
levels in the air beyond the evacuation zone around the plant and in
Tokyo have been in normal ranges.
Yukiya Amano, the director general of the International Atomic Energy
Agency (IAEA), cautioned that the nuclear emergency could go on for
weeks, if not months more.
"This is a very serious accident by all standards," he told the
New York Times. "And it is not yet over."
Radiation levels in the sea off the Fukushima Daiichi plant rose on
Sunday to 1,850 times normal just over two weeks after the disaster
struck, from 1,250 on Saturday, Japan's Nuclear and Industrial Safety
Agency said.
"Ocean currents will disperse radiation particles and so it will be very
diluted by the time it gets consumed by fish and seaweed," said
Hidehiko Nishiyama, a senior agency official.
Several countries have banned produce and milk from Japan's nuclear
crisis zone and are monitoring Japanese seafood over fears of
radioactive contamination.
OVERSHADOWING RELIEF EFFORT
The crisis at the plant, 240 km (150 miles) north of Tokyo, has
overshadowed a relief and recovery effort from the magnitude 9.0 quake
and the huge tsunami it triggered on March 11 that left more than 27,100
people dead or missing in northeast Japan.
The Japanese government estimated last week the material damage from the
catastrophe could top $300 billion, making it the world's costliest
natural disaster.
In addition, power cuts have disrupted production while the drawn-out
battle to prevent a meltdown at the 40-year-old plant has hurt consumer
confidence and spread contamination fears well beyond Japan.
Amano, a former Japanese diplomat who made a trip to Japan after the
quake, said authorities were still unsure about whether the plant's
reactor cores and spent fuel were covered with the water needed to cool
them.
He told the newspaper he saw a few "positive signs" with the restoration
of some electric power to the plant, adding: "More efforts should be
done to put an end to the accident."
UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said it was time to reassess the international atomic safety regime.
Japan's nuclear crisis also looks set to claim its first, and unlikely,
political casualty. In far away Germany, Chancellor Angela Merkel's
party faces a defeat in a key state on Sunday, largely because of her
policy U-turns on nuclear power.