05 August 2013 (14:11 UTC-07 Tango)/28 Ramadan 1434/14 Mordad 1392/29 Geng-Shen (6th month) 4711
“Right now, we have a state of emergency.”-Kinjo Shinji, Japan’s Nuclear Regulatory Authority
A Japanese government regulatory agency has declared the ongoing Fukushima Daiichi disaster an “emergency”, more than two years after the General Electric designed reactors melted down!!!
The Nuclear Regulatory Authority (NRA) basically called Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCo) the biggest failure in Japan’s history! NRA officials said all of TEPCo’s efforts since the end of March 2011 have only failed to stop intense levels of radiation from escaping into the Pacific Ocean. The NRA said TEPCo’s “sense of crisis is weak” at best, and has informed the Japanese government that “you can’t just leave it up to TEPCo alone”.
The NRA says their latest investigation shows that contaminated water with even higher levels of radiation is about to escape Fukushima Daiichi! The latest reports reveal that TEPCo has been pumping 400 tons(!) of groundwater per day(!) into the nuke site’s building basements, where it mixes with highly radioactive water. That water is then used to cool the China Syndrome reactors. Up ’till recently TEPCo denied that any of that water was spilling into the ocean, although they couldn’t explain where much of the water was going.
I’ve speculated that much of that water is ending up right back in the ground, pouring through the bottom of the melted reactors. This can be the only explanation for what TEPCo has repeatedly called unexplained highly contaminated groundwater showing up near the coastline.
Since admitting that the strontium, tritium and cesium contaminated water is pouring into the Pacific, TEPCo has tried injecting the ground with a hardener to stop the outflow. The NRA has declared all of TEPCo’s efforts to be failures!
The NRA says that the amount of contaminated groundwater is reaching saturation and will soon surface, then rush into the Pacific as a radioactive river. The main Pacific current eventually brings that contamination across the Hawaiian Islands and to the west coast of North America.