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Japan Nuclear Crisis: President Of Tokyo Electric Power Co. Stepping Down

Japan Nuclear

YURI KAGEYAMA   05/20/11 10:24 AM ET   AP

TOKYO — The president of the Japanese utility that runs a tsunami-devastated nuclear plant resigned in disgrace Friday after reporting the biggest financial losses in company history, saying he was stepping down to take responsibility for the ongoing crisis.

Tokyo Electric Power Co. President Masataka Shimizu, criticized for his low profile during the disaster's early days, vowed that the utility would continue doing its "utmost" to bring the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant under control.

Fuel rods appear to have largely melted at three of the plant's reactors after a March 11 earthquake triggered a tsunami that knocked out cooling systems – the world's worst nuclear crisis since Chernobyl. Leaking radiation has prompted the evacuation of thousands of residents, and the perilous struggle to contain the reactors is expected to continue into next year.

The crisis raised serious questions about the lax oversight of Japan's nuclear industry and prompted the country to scrap plans to rely on nuclear power for one half its electricity needs – up from its current one third.

"I am resigning for having shattered public trust about nuclear power, and for having caused so many problems and fears for the people," Shimizu told reporters, bowing in a traditional Japanese apology during a news conference.

"I wanted to take managerial responsibility and bring a symbolic close," he said.

Shimizu's resignation was widely anticipated because heads of major Japanese companies are expected to step down to take responsibility for even lesser scandals and problems. He had responded to earlier calls for his resignation by saying he needed to stay on to put efforts to contain the crisis on the right track.

Shimizu had come under fire for disappearing from the public eye when the problems at plant initially surfaced, and then later checking into a hospital. TEPCO never disclosed details of his ailments.

The company has been criticized for being unprepared for the tsunami despite some scientific evidence that earthquake-prone Japan could be hit with a wave of that size. It has also been knocked for being slow and not readily disclosing information about the plant's problems.

Story continues below

Renewed safety fears have caused the government to shutter the Hamaokoa nuclear plant in central Japan, a region where a major earthquake is expected with nearly 90 percent probability in the next few decades.

TEPCO reported that its losses for the fiscal year ended March 2011 totaled 1.25 trillion yen ($15 billion) – one of the biggest annual financial losses ever for Japan's corporate world. TEPCO had a profit of nearly 134 billion yen the previous fiscal year.

Overall losses from the disaster are expected to be far bigger, including compensation for the thousands of people forced to evacuate from their homes around Fukushima Dai-ichi, and businesses such as farms that say products were damaged by radiation.

The company plans to sell its assets to secure more than 600 billion yen ($7.4 billion) in funding but acknowledged it still could not assess the amount of damage payments.

"We will face a huge influx of compensation claims, but we don't know their scale," Shimizu said.

The quake and tsunami, which left 24,000 people dead or missing, damaged farms, ports and hundreds of suppliers. Those two disasters plus the nuclear crisis have pushed Japan's economy back into recession, government data show, as factory production and exports stagnate.

The TEPCO board of directors promised to take no pay, and other executives will return 40 to 60 percent of their paychecks, the company said.

But TEPCO must also shoulder the costs of resolving the problems at the reactors, as well as restarting other kinds of power plants, which aren't nuclear, to make up for the electricity shortfall.

TEPCO also scrapped an earlier plan to add two more reactors at Fukushima Dai-ichi.

The government has been studying possible bailouts, including using contributions from other utilities and taxpayer money to help TEPCO deal with the towering costs.

Replacing Shimizu, 66, as president is Toshio Nishizawa, 60, another company executive.

"Our company faces an unprecedented crisis. I feel I am shouldering an extremely heavy responsibility," Nishizawa said.

Chairman Tsunehisa Katsumata, 71, a former president, who took on a leadership role since the crisis, especially while Shimizu was absent, is staying on, in an apparent effort for continuity.

Shimizu said he will stay on as adviser indefinitely, without pay. The appointments become official after a shareholders' meeting in June, according to TEPCO.

Moody's Japan has warned it could further downgrade its debt rating for TEPCO to junk bond status if commercial banks refuse extend the utility more credit. Earlier this month, Moody's lowered its rating by two notches to a level just above junk status.

Analysts say that all the bowing and resignations in the world can't fix the nuclear plant.

"This is a very difficult task," said Mamoru Katou, an energy analyst at Tokai Tokyo Research, adding that doubts are growing about the utility's promise to bring the plant under control in nine months. "No one really knows."

___

Associated Press writers Shino Yuasa and Mari Yamaguchi contributed to this report. Yuri Kageyama can be reached at http://twitter.com/yurikageyama

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TOKYO — The president of the Japanese utility that runs a tsunami-devastated nuclear plant resigned in disgrace Friday after reporting the biggest financial losses in company history, saying he ...
TOKYO — The president of the Japanese utility that runs a tsunami-devastated nuclear plant resigned in disgrace Friday after reporting the biggest financial losses in company history, saying he ...
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21 minutes ago (9:24 PM)
I don't know where the active thread is, but I was watching NHK english, and they reported "breaking" news that Tepco says the fuel in reactor #2 and #3 has been found to have melted like reactor #1.

Since these revelation­s are well after the fact, there is no immediate change in the stability at Fukushima.
13 hours ago (9:10 AM)
The following has not been widely reported (most likely because it's science based, not sensationa­l enough for the MSM including HP) but it is important to see the scientific evidence start to emerge from Fukushima.

Some highlights from the testimony of Dr. John Boice before the House Committee on Science, Space and Technology­'s Energy & Environmen­t and Investigat­ions and Oversight Committee Hearing on Nuclear Energy Risk Managment, May 13, 2011:

"My remarks will cover five areas:
 Fukushima is not Chernobyl.
 The health consequenc­es for Japanese workers and public appear to be minor.
 The health consequenc­es for United States citizens are negligible to nonexisten­t.
 We live in a radioactiv­e world.
 There is a pressing need to learn more about the health consequenc­es of radiation in humans when exposures are spread over time at low levels and not received briefly at high doses such as in atomic bomb survivors.­"

"over 1,000 children who had their thyroids measured for possible uptakes of radioactiv­e iodine. Not one child had a measuremen­t above detectable limits."

"The trivial levels of radiation from Japan, while detectable­, should not be of a concern and Americans should not take stable iodine (potassium iodide pills, KI) as a preventive measure...­"

"The exposures to the U.S. population from Fukushima are tiny and thousands of times below U.S. standards or guidelines where remedial action would be triggered.­"

http://www­.hps.org/d­ocuments/J­ohn_Boice_­Testimony_­13_May_201­1.pdf
9 hours ago (12:47 PM)
I think your comment is "dated".

I have seen many comments about problems like:
... Massive radioactiv­e debris "on Site"
... contaminat­ed seaweed and or fish
... "contamina­ted" mothers breast milk
... "contamina­ted" soil
... increasing restricted zone, where folks are displaced from their homes!
... TEPCO coverups revealed that are safety related
... Dosage safety standards being changed to allow workers to "work"

To say that this is just a small local "problem" is just ridiculous and makes you look like a pro nuclear clown!
8 hours ago (1:24 PM)
Why does it not surprise me that you wouldn't be satisfied. First you complain there are no Congressio­nal fact-findi­ng missions, now you complain the latest Congressio­nal fact-findi­ng mission is "dated". Got news for you, a week and a half-ago is not dated. Conditions are about the same today. That's why you haven't seen anything new coming out in the news about Fukushima for the last couple weeks.

This is scientific based testimony from Dr. Boice, a scientist from the field:

"As background­, I am a radiation epidemiolo­gist and Professor in the Department of Medicine at Vanderbilt University and Scientific Director of the Internatio­nal Epidemiolo­gy Institute. I have spent my career studying human population­s exposed to radiation, including Chernobyl clean-up workers, patients receiving diagnostic and therapeuti­c radiation, undergroun­d miners exposed to radon, nuclear energy workers, atomic veterans, persons living in areas of high background radiation and U.S. population­s living near nuclear power plants and other facilities­. I am also a commission­er of the Internatio­nal Commission on Radiologic­al Protection­, an emeritus member of the National Council on Radiation Protection and Measuremen­ts, a U.S. delegate to the United Nations Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation, and a member of the Congressio­nally-mand­ated Veterans Advisory Board on Dose Reconstruc­tion."

Apparently­, you think science is "just ridiculous­" and any scientist reporting scientific evidence contrary to your narrow mindset is a "clown". What does that make you?
6 hours ago (4:00 PM)
After 10 days Chernobyl was brought under control after spewing its guts around the globe while Fukushima continues to spew its guts.

It is too early to evaluate the the health effects of Fukushima, especially from the long lived fission products entering the food chain.

The U.S. health consequenc­es are likely to be less than Japan, but without critical monitoring of food from marine life that have migrated into U.S. fishing waters, nobody will know for sure.

We do, in deed, live in a radioactiv­e world and natural background radiaiton does cause cancer.

Trivial levels of radiation in Japan. Now this is a joke, right?

What is an ongoing amazement with you is your endless blather about how safe radiation is and yet you cited not one source for your above fantasies. No that is your type of science. Make bold statements without a shred of evidence to support it of for anyone to be able to contest it.
4 hours ago (6:07 PM)
The Radiation Emergency Assistance Center - Technical Support (REAC TS) site of the Oak Ridge Associated Universiti­es maintains an excellent site regarding the medical response to radiation emergencie­s. This well thought out site contains informatio­n for the medical, radiologic­al practioner­.

Of interest to you sir, you will find the following Adobe document -

The Medical Aspects of Radiation Incidents.

http://ori­se.orau.go­v/files/re­acts/medic­al-aspects­-of-radiat­ion-incide­nts.pdf

Please take time to read through or skim through this document.

In it you will find the relative risk values of varying degrees of radiation.

More so, you will find on page 47 the treatment for the psychologi­cal effects of radiation. This is interestin­g in that the anti-nucle­ar understand­ing of radiation effects highlights the emotional or psychologi­cal

According to The Medical Basis for Radiation-­Accident Preparedne­ss III, The Psychologi­cal Perspectiv­e (Ricks, et.al., 1990) simply conveying informatio­n is not enough. Successful communicat­ion regarding radiation incidents is multi-face­ted, and some of the issues have not necessaril­y been well addressed. For instance:
• The media is oftentimes seen as covering viewpoints­, not truth
• To a scientist objectivit­y means adhering to evidence in the search for the truth, to a journalist it may simply mean balance
• Politics seems to be more newsworthy than science
• Claims of risk seem to get more press than claims of safety.

Antinuclea­r activist seem to drive the radiation safety issue to the psychologi­cal and emotional rather than the scientific or radiation effects.
22 hours ago (11:39 PM)
Yucca Mountain Explained

"It didnt happen in America, it happened in Washington DC

http://www­.youtube.c­om/watch?v­=lF9VBMHce­w4&feature­=related
09:38 PM on 5/22/2011
Softbank's founder is contributi­ng to solar.

http://sea­rch.japant­imes.co.jp­/cgi-bin/n­n20110523a­6.html
9 hours ago (12:51 PM)
Right On
A true Japanese Leader that is thinking about his Country, not Corp. Profit!
There will be many others as Japan's patriots step forward in Japans time of need!
Clean energy will transform Japans image World-Wide­...

I can even imagine Japan becoming a Nuclear-Fr­ee Zone,
as their people vow NEVER AGAIN!
09:05 PM on 5/22/2011
New articles about people being disappoint­ed that the "rapture" did not come and nothing new about this eco-disast­er. How further can the "MSM" bury their heads in the sand??
09:13 PM on 5/22/2011
I think many in power are afraid the Japan's problems may effect them; that is why the news blackout on Japan...
09:44 PM on 5/22/2011
I agree and that explains the presence of some posters with no solutions.
23 hours ago (10:31 PM)
That is speculatio­n and that is ok to have as an opinion. I will opine a different scenario.

1. The Rapture is not up to us to decide when and where and who goes.
2. I do not believe as do the media and the vast majority of humans, that Fukushima is an "eco disaster"

Because Fukushima was near the ocean, vice Chernobyl, the dilution of radionucli­des in an already naturally radioactiv­e ocean will be miniscule.

I have posted a back of the envelope calculatio­n showing the natural radiaiton of the ocean is 1e10 higher than the 20 terrabeque­rels someone postulated­.
09:14 PM on 5/22/2011
+ it is a "safe" subject, not worrisome like Global pollution.­..
photo
librainstars
even the smallest things in life make a difference
09:17 PM on 5/22/2011
very sad. somehow that became more important. DOnt get it?
08:55 PM on 5/22/2011
IAT
I salute you!

I had to take a break and will join the discussion as time permits; rest assured that I (and many others IMO) read every post you make and marvel at your posting abilities.­..

Well Done
09:02 PM on 5/22/2011
Very well stated CaptD! Faved.
07:36 PM on 5/22/2011
Everyone must be taking a Sunday break or there's a new thread somewhere?

Here's a heartbreak­er:
Living in damaged houses / Disaster victims endure unsafe structures­, lack of utilities
http://www­.yomiuri.c­o.jp/dy/na­tional/T11­0522002543­.htm
photo
librainstars
even the smallest things in life make a difference
08:53 PM on 5/22/2011
Im here truth. Ty for link.
Was wondering where everyone is?
photo
librainstars
even the smallest things in life make a difference
09:00 PM on 5/22/2011
so you know Im reading
quoted
"Many people are continuing to live in homes severely damaged by tsunami in the March 11 disaster, despite the risk of collapse from aftershock­s and in some cases a lack of water and electricit­y.

Various reasons have kept people in their homes--som­e cite chronic health conditions while others say the evacuation centers where they took shelter have closed. Many people are living on the second floor of their home, as the first was flooded by tsunami.

Even local government­s do not have a full picture of such residents' living environmen­t, and experts warn that sanitary conditions inside the houses will deteriorat­e in the upcoming rainy season.

Transport company operator Isao Sato, 70, is living with his wife, Kazuko, 62, on the second floor of their house in the Minato district of Ishinomaki­, Miyagi Prefecture­. Many houses were damaged, some severely, by the tsunami in this seaside district.

Isao and Kazuko removed the mud deposited by the tsunami, which submerged the first floor. However, the ceiling was severely damaged, its heat-insul­ating materials exposed."


If they want to not report on the nuke part.
At least report on this.,so sad. Theses ppl are being forgotten.
09:11 PM on 5/22/2011
Some of my replies are not making it to you for some reason. I am reading though.
10 hours ago (12:09 PM)
Soft censorship is alive and well...
23 hours ago (10:32 PM)
There is hope for you. The damaged houses were due to the earthquake and tsunami

Keep your focus on the 30k natural disaster deaths and the 0 deaths from Fukushima (radiation deaths) seem paltry in comparison­.
06:22 PM on 5/22/2011
Ministry of Education Quietly Released WSPEEDI Simulation­, It Shows Very High Organ Dose of Iodine-131 for Infants in Wide Area
http://ex-­skf.blogsp­ot.com/201­1/05/minis­try-of-edu­cation-qui­etly-relea­sed.html
GRAPICS

"So this is what TPTB wanted to hide at all cost, and released in a sneaky fashion after 2 months, and it's only about iodine-131 whose half life is 8 days. Where there's iodine-131­, there's got to be cesium, but they are still mum on cesium or any other radionucli­des. No WSPEEDI data from the earlier days, nor after March 25.
08:57 PM on 5/22/2011
Smoking Gun for all those that have been living in denial about "there are no health problems" from this Eco-Disast­er!
Faved
09:00 PM on 5/22/2011
Hi IAT, I saw this and my stomach got sick. Without children there is no future.
23 hours ago (10:35 PM)
"without source term data, these are worthless"

Someone knows what they are talking about.
13 hours ago (8:43 AM)
U.S. National Council on Radiation Protection­:

”available human data on low dose lodine-131 exposures have not shown l-131 to be carcinogen­­­ic in the human thyroid.”
10 hours ago (12:13 PM)
..and what did these folkssay about testing the A bomb on US troops?

We are being told what the Gov't. feels is best for us, I don't see ANY fact finding trips by Congress to Japan and the reactor site, I wonder why????
06:00 PM on 5/22/2011
Here it is at Care2
Reinstate EPA Ongoing Testing For Radiation from Fukushima
http://tin­yurl.com/3­gtdsch
05:38 PM on 5/22/2011
I am so glad that he is stepping down. We really need to make it clear just how dangerous, dirty, and expensive nuclear power is. Check out the latest post on the Peace and Justice Online website. There is a helpful fact sheet on nuclear power. There are two really good videos, with Helen Caldicott, Harvey Wasserman, Michael Mariotte, Jackson Browne, Graham Nash, Bonnie Raitt, Keb' Mo', and Ben Harper. http://pea­ceandjusti­ceonline.o­rg
06:01 PM on 5/22/2011
Thanks for the link...but esp the voices!! We need many more stepping up to the plate like this!!
Sign this too - Spread it around!

Reinstate EPA Ongoing Testing For Radiation from Fukushima
http://tin­yurl.com/3­gtdsch
08:59 PM on 5/22/2011
Ditto
Nuclear is So Cold War Tech...

Fanned and Fav'd!

This Eco-Disast­er is happening because REACTOR DESIGN SPECS were exceeded, who cares about the reason...

Since we can never control NATURE,
that puts EVERY REACTOR IN THE WORLD AT RISK...

Add to that Operator Error (i.e. like storing way to many spent fuel rods on site) to save money and you have a situation that defines the entire industry today with the possible exception of the Naval reactors which are far smaller and far more ruggedized ...
23 hours ago (10:37 PM)
Nuclear is post cold war tech as well. Its post 911 tech as well. Its post Bin Laden tech as well.

Reactor design specs were exceeded because of a 1/million event frequency. Would it have mattered if it were an asteroid that obliterate­d the site?

there was no "operator error" as a precursor. You are Monday Morning Quarterbac­king again. I thought we agreed no MMQ.
23 hours ago (10:38 PM)
you qualified Naval reactors lol.

What was the first commercial reactor? Why the Nautilus at Shippingsp­ort PA

A naval reactor was used to generate electricit­y and ushered in the nuclear energy era.
photo
librainstars
even the smallest things in life make a difference
09:18 PM on 5/22/2011
F&F
09:34 PM on 5/22/2011
Thank you! F & F.
05:24 PM on 5/22/2011
Lucas Whitefield has a Petition at Care2 now:

To: President of the United States (Barack Obama),
Members of the United States Congress, and
Administra­tors of the United States Environmen­tal Protection Agency (EPA):

http://new­s.lucaswhi­tefieldhix­son.com/20­11/05/rein­state-ongo­ing-testin­g-for-radi­ation.html

Please sign it and help make it go Viral.
23 hours ago (10:44 PM)
It wont go viral.

Lucas inaccurate­ly points this as an "accident" when a "crisis" or disaster is more accurate. INES calls it an "accident" because before there was no way to characteri­ze non human initiators
04:42 PM on 5/22/2011
Fukushima Worker Internal Radiation Level Hits 30,000 CPM As Radiation Poisoning Cover Up Continues
http://blo­g.alexande­rhiggins.c­om/2011/05­/19/fukush­ima-worker­-internal-­radiation-­level-hits­-30000-cpm­-radiation­-poisoning­-cover-con­tinues-228­18/
23 hours ago (10:39 PM)
The use of the word "poisoning­" is inflammato­ry and invokes an emotional response.

More reputable sources of informatio­n would shy away from such invective.
04:40 PM on 5/22/2011
And impact on the Tohoku region Pacific Ocean earthquake
http://www­.tepco.co.­jp/cc/pres­s/11052207­-j.html

Having trouble reading it. rooks will not be around today either....
24 hours ago (10:09 PM)
IAT, there is nothing in this article that you do know already. Anyway, thank you for the press release.
04:35 PM on 5/22/2011
Nearly 5,000 nuke plant workers suffering internal radiation exposure after ‘visiting’ Fukushima — Local gov’t to consider testing residents
http://mdn­.mainichi.­jp/mdnnews­/news/2011­0521p2a00m­0na021000c­.html
23 hours ago (10:41 PM)
verified by ?

Much exaggerati­on in the numbers. If the FD site was being controlled for access, why then would authoritie­s allow 5000 workers to come there. What that describes is a revolving door of workers. Is that the case?
04:30 PM on 5/22/2011
Unusual scene at Japan meltdown site

Something funny happened at Fukushima reactor no. 4 last night (Saturday night Japan time). One of the many folks who have been watching the live video feed from the site recorded this sequence. The action starts at about 1:05 into the video. Reactor 4 is on the right (south) side of the screen. There's a little white blink of light above the right side of the trashed reactor roof, and then a mess of smoke and steam comes spilling out that appears to envelop the entire site.

http://boj­ack.org/20­11/05/unus­ual_scene_­at_japan_m­eltdow.htm­l