In 2010, “Japan had more than 46 tons (8.7 Tons in
Japan, approximately 37 tons in Europe) of separated plutonium in stock, but
its MOX recycling program has made little progress.” (Suzuki, 2010). 46 tons of
plutonium equals to 41,730 kilograms.
Argonne National Laboratory reports that the US
stockpiled about 110,000 kilograms (kg) of plutonium between 1944 and 1994, and
about 100,000 kg remains in inventory.
http://www.evs.anl.gov/pub/doc/Plutonium.pdf
Majia
here: So Japan has stockpiles of plutonium that are about 40% of the US
stockpiles.
Keep in mind this figure for Japan is the official number. Japan may have more given its stockpiling craze.
(see my links at the bottom of this post for background)
Japan has a major fuel storage problem and spent
fuel management purportedly has been a driver in Japan’s reprocessing
requirements, according to Suzuki who contributed a chapter on Japan’s
plutonium breeder program to Fast Breeder
Reactor Programs: History and Status: A research report of the International
Panel on Fissile Materials,.
Majia
here: So Japan had a lot of spent fuel and it had a lot of plutonium stored in
Japan.
It
is now being widely recognized that the amount of plutonium stored around Japan
is at problematic levels.
Yet, Japan
wants to keep on processing plutonium and convened a secret panel to authorize
it within its government (see my blog posts linked at bottom
of essay).
Piers Williamson summarizes a speech
given May 31st, 2012 by Professors Frank von Hippel (Princeton
University) and Gordon MacKerron (University of Sussex) on the issues
associated with reprocessing and stockpiling this volume of enriched fuel.
Williamson's summary is published as “Plutonium
and Japan’s Nuclear Waste Problem: International Scientists Call for an End to
Plutonium Reprocessing and Closing the Rokkasho Plant” and appeared in the Asia
Pacific journal.
Williamson notes academics like
von Hippel are claiming that Japan has a credibility problem when it comes to
its unwillingness to stop enriching plutonium (I posted on this yesterday
http://majiasblog.blogspot.com/2012/06/more-on-japans-efforts-to-resume.html).
Williamson notes that it
would be very easy for Japan to quickly assemble nuclear weapons.
Majia here: No doubt Japan has a just-in-times nuclear
weapons program. Think about it: why would Japan need to actually assemble the weapons before they are needed when it is so much
more efficient to simply build them with vital parts stored strategically for
that very purpose.
Of course, Japan may actually have hidden nuclear
weapons; but I’m betting on just-in-time.
The Japanese have that system down.
So, why is this
relevant for the Fukushima disaster?
The problem is
that storing plutonium is dangerous. Plutonium is very dangerous stuff. One
alpha particle emitted from Plutonium can break your DNA. It is a very bad
thing to have an alpha particle lodged in your body.
(See http://majiasblog.blogspot.com/2012/05/on-internal-emitters.html and this post
here for a discussion of what happened when people started ingesting radium in
the US, which is less radiotoxic than plutonium. http://majiasblog.blogspot.com/2012/05/interesting-tidbits-in-history-of.html)
Japan had a lot
of plutonium that was vaporized given it is being detected all around the
northern hemisphere, including Lithuania.
The thing is we
don’t know how much plutonium was vaporized.
It was surely
quite a bit.
The range for Mox assemblies believed to have been inside reactor 3 range from 164 assemblies to 32 mox assemblies. At the low end estimate
of 32 mox assemblies, we still get a scary total of 5.5 tons of fuel containing
more than 300 kg of plutonium.
“300 kg is therefore equivalent to 300 billion
lethal doses” (MOX fuel-Corium-Plutonium in Fukushima Daiichi http://www.fukushima311watchdogs.org/biblio/9/Mox%20fuel-corium-plutonium%20in%20Fukushima%20Daiichi.pdf)
So, at the very
low end of risk, up to 300 kilograms of fuel may have been vaporized from the
reactor alone. (The article's authors actually felt far more plutonium was involved).
A critic might
say, "we don’t know how much of the assemblies were actually vaporized. So, 300
kilograms is an unlikely figure and 300 billion lethal doses absurd."
And there are all
sorts of random variables impacting dispersal and we really don’t know how much
of the fuel in reactor 3 is still intact, particularly because it has been
burning and steaming for the last 15 months, as evident on the Tepco webcam and
in screen shots I’ve taken.
That said, we
must also consider that we don’t know whether mixed oxide fuel was stored in
any of the spent fuel pools or whether there might even have been separated
plutonium stored at the site.
I certainly would not take Tepco's word at face value on the subject of fuel stored at the site.
That raises the
question: Where does Japan store all of its plutonium? Where do you store 8.7
tons of separated plutonium?
Plutonium was
produced at the Tokai complex. It is probably stored there.http://majiasblog.blogspot.com/2012/05/tokai.html
Tokai is a huge
complex and they’ve been processing fuel there for a while. See background
on Japan’s reprocessing http://www.jaea.go.jp/english/04/tokai-cycle/01.htm
Tokai had earthquake damaged and has had reports
of radioactive water leaking and a fire.
CONCLUSION
Japan
had a lot of mixed oxide fuel in Daiichi unit 3’s reactor. Japan may have had
mixed oxide fuel stored on site as well. Japan could have even had separated
plutonium on site. Some of that fuel was damaged in March of 2011 and the plant
has been steaming and smoking ever since.
Lots of plutonium may have been vaporized.
Plutonium
may have been vaporized at other locations as well.
Japan’s
crisis may very well have led to the greatest atmospheric and ocean dispersal
of plutonium ever. (I will have to see how much was projected as being
dispersed by Chernobyl but Chernobyl used U-235 not plutonium-infused mox fuel).
Inhaling
or ingesting plutonium is more than simply increasing our background gamma.
Plutonium emits high energy atoms that are capable of breaking DNA and can do
terrible things to bodies when lodged inside them.
This
is the real threat I believe from Fukushima.
SOURCE DETAILS (NOT LINKED IN TEXT OF ESSAY)
Piers Williamson Japan’s Nuclear
Waste Problem: International Scientists Call for an End to Plutonium
Reprocessing and Closing the Rokkasho Plant. The
Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan Focus, Vol 10, Issue 24, No
4, on June 11, 2012.
Suzuki, Tatsujiro. Japan’s Plutonium Breeder Reactor
and its Fuel Cycle. In Thomas B. Cochran, Harold A. Feiveson, Walt Patterson,
Gennadi Pshakin, M.V. Ramana, Mycle Schneider, Tatsujiro Suzuki, Frank von
Hippel Fast Breeder Reactor Programs: History and Status: A research report of
the International Panel on Fissile Materials (53-61). February 2010. http://fissilematerials.org/library/rr08.pdf
Great Post Majia.
ReplyDeleteI am not sure about the rate of exposure your blog has, and others, like myself, have been raising this issue since day one. Especially when I learned that the Spent Fuel Pools right on top of the reactors in this design were full or spent fuel. (they were designed for other purposes, maintenance, replacing the rods etc) When I learned that shortly after the explosions, I consistently raised the plutonium issues, because each reactor creates 500 lbs ( could be kilograms, both are cited in various sources) every single year. Shortly after the accident it was reported that the Spent Fuel Pools inside the reactor containments held upwards of 10 years of spent fuel. The easy math back then, one week after the accident, had me thinking upwards of 10 years times 500 lbs/kg or 5000 lbs/kg of the stuff could have gone up. Since I learned of the numbers of the rods, as you cite in this post, claimed to be in reactor three SFP. However the sources over the many months since the accident that published this data, were in my opinion not neccesarily credible which is why I asked about this data repeatedly on ENENEWS and if TEPCO ever released anything definitive on the matter. Moreover, I consistently wondered aloud why the plutonium threat was ignored by virtually everyone and Arnie in particular. I dont believe I have ever heard him say plutonium unless prompted and even then he was reluctant to go into detail.
Sad reality, but a reality all the same.
Thanks for your work
Kevin
This is an extinction process and the enenews section on effects of low level ionising radiation gives telling information on plutonium 239's lethality also via genomic instabilty(epigenetic damages). The physicians for social responsibilty in Oregon have also assembled health effect data on Hanford downwinders and others. Its horror is infinite. Reveal and reveal Majia. Go on. Your work helps enormously in stopping more of these mass murders now.
ReplyDeletePersonally I am annoyed by the US nuclear hegemony.
ReplyDeleteIn fact this forces other countries to develop nuclear armament to protect themselves from US belligerence.
And, please keep in mind that the Japanese plutonium is low-quality reactor-grade plutonium, almost useless for precise nuclear weapons.
The Japanese don't even have delivery systems. In this aspect, the North Koreans are much more straightforward. They have very little low quality plutonium, but as they developed rockets suitable for a NEMP attack on the US, the US war drums suddenly quieted down.