Two dead as new tremor hits Japan disaster zone , japan ,earth quiek
SENDAI, Japan (AFP) - A powerful aftershock rocked Japan's tsunami zone, killing at least two and triggering new concerns over nuclear power plants in a region still grappling with an atomic emergency.
Electricity was cut across a huge area of northern Japan, forcing cooling systems at three nuclear plants to switch to emergency power, and as of Friday night, nearly 24 hours later, more than 600,000 households remained without power.
At least one backup supply remained online at all three plants, but the 7.1-magnitude aftershock highlighted the potential risks of nuclear generation in an earthquake zone amid a battle to stabilise reactors at the tsunami-hit Fukushima plant.
Officials at the Fire and Disaster Management Agency said two people had been killed, and reports suggested another two might have died in the tremor.
The quake struck off the coast near Sendai -- one of the most powerful to hit Japan since the country's worst post-war disaster four weeks ago.
Thursday's quake swayed buildings in the capital Tokyo, more than 300 kilometres away from the epicentre, and generated unease even well away from the coast, where a tsunami warning was briefly issued.
In the town of Kitakami, northwest of the epicentre, an AFP reporter witnessed queues forming at convenience stores as people tried to stock up anew on food, water and batteries.
"It was so scary," said Kazuyuki Shiroiwa, who had been to four shops in central Kitakami in a vain effort to find batteries.
"The midnight quake reminded me of the fear I felt a month ago," he said. "I'm fed up with earthquakes. No more quakes, please."
Workers battling to control the stricken Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant on the northeast coast were ordered to evacuate temporarily but have since returned, plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Co. (TEPCO) said.
The evacuation order came less than 24 hours after the workers began pumping nitrogen, an inert gas, into reactor No. 1, where engineers were concerned a build-up of hydrogen might react with oxygen to cause an explosion.
Work at the plant was remotely controlled and had continued uninterrupted, the company said.
The loss of external power sources at Fukushima in the March 11 tsunami left reactor cores heating up uncontrollably, resulting in the world's worst nuclear emergency since Chernobyl 25 years ago.
The crippled plant has leaked radiation that has made its way into tap water and farm produce, sparking food export bans covering a large area.
Some highly radioactive water has leaked into the Pacific Ocean and this week TEPCO began dumping 11,500 tonnes of low-level radioactive water from the plant into the sea to free up urgently needed storage space.
The move has angered the Japanese fishing industry and raised concerns in neighbouring countries including China, which on Friday urged Tokyo to ensure the marine environment was protected.
The nuclear agency said Thursday's quake had knocked out some external power sources used for cooling at plants in Onagawa in Miyagi prefecture and at Rokkasho and Higashidori in Aomori prefecture.
But at least one emergency power source remained operational at each, and there was no indication that the loss of regular power was causing a problem.
Operator Tohoku Electric Power said some water overflowed from pools housing spent fuel at the Onagawa plant and spilled onto the floor, but that radiation levels remained normal.
The Onagawa plant was already in cold shut-down, while the Higashidori plant's only reactor was under maintenance and the Rokkasho plant is a reprocessing facility.
A spokesman for the Onagawa plant's operator, Tohoku-Electric Power Co, said radiation levels were still "far below the level that would require us to report to authorities".
Hundreds of aftershocks have rocked Japan since the 9.0 magnitude quake last month and the resulting tsunami, which killed more than 12,600 people and left around 15,000 unaccounted for.
March's record quake has exacted a heavy cost on the world's number three economy, and rippled across industries worldwide as parts supplied from Japan run short.
But auto giants Toyota and Nissan said Friday they would restart all domestic assembly plants from around mid-April, joining Honda, which said earlier it would be resuming production.
Also on Friday, All Nippon Airways and Japan Airlines said they would restart flights next week to and from Sendai Airport, which was closed after being inundated by the tsunami.
Japan said it would ease shipping restrictions on milk and some vegetables from near the Fukushima plant, while New Delhi overturned a blanket ban on importing Japanese produce.
Several countries and territories, including China, Taiwan, Singapore and the United States, have banned shipments of produce from certain Japanese prefectures near the plant, but India had been the first to announce a complete ba
0 comments:
إرسال تعليق