http://ex-skf.blogspot.com/2012/03/japan-pm-no-individual-to-blame-for.html
Japan PM: No individual to blame for Fukushima
AFP's Huw Griffith quotes Japan's extremely unpopular Prime Minister Noda saying:
"Rather than blaming any individual person I believe everyone has to share the pain of responsibility and learn this lesson."
Hahahahahahaha. Share the pain. Hahahahahaha. Learn this lesson. Hahahahahaha.
From AFP (3/3/2012; emphasis is mine):
From AFP (3/3/2012; emphasis is mine):
by Huw GriffithA week ahead of the anniversary of the disaster, the premier swatted away a question over criminal responsibility for meltdowns that forced tens of thousands of people from their homes and polluted the land and sea.
TOKYO — No individual can be held responsible for the nuclear meltdowns at Fukushima, Japan's prime minister said Saturday, insisting everyone had to "share the pain".
Yoshihiko Noda told foreign journalists in Tokyo that the Japanese establishment had been taken in by the "myth of safety" around nuclear power and was unprepared for a disaster on the scale of last March's accident.
"Of course, the primary responsibility under Japanese law rests with the operator" of the stricken plant, Tokyo Electric Power (TEPCO), Noda said.
"But the government as well as operators and academia were steeped too deeply in the safety myth and I think that is what we can conclude.
"Rather than blaming any individual person I believe everyone has to share the pain of responsibility and learn this lesson."
Noda's comments come just days after an independent investigation panel revealed the president of TEPCO had wanted to abandon the plant in the days after the tsunami swamped its reactor cooling systems.
A report compiled by private thinktank Rebuild Japan Initiative Foundation said it was only threats by then prime minister Naoto Kan that had prevented TEPCO from leaving the plant to its fate as the accident spiralled out of control.
Noda told reporters lessons had been and were still being learned from Fukushima, including "don't install power sources outside which are likely to be hit by a tsunami".
All but two of Japan's 54 nuclear reactors are presently offline, with local communities unwilling to allow them to restart amid a public backlash over the safety of a once-trusted technology.
Noda said electricity-hungry Japan would diversify its power sources, but stopped short of pledging to abandon atomic energy.
"We have to grow out of our dependence on nuclear and we have to establish in the medium to longer term a society that does not have to rely on nuclear power generation," he said.
"We need to think about the best mix of energy that will give a sense of reassurance to the Japanese people. Some time in the middle of this year we would like to set the direction for this strategy."The prime minister, who came to power almost exactly six months ago, said a year on from the tsunami that claimed 19,000 lives and left hundreds of thousands of people homeless, progress in righting Japan was being made.
But he acknowledged things were not moving as fast as they could.
"Unfortunately there is criticism that what we have done has been inadequate and we have been slow," he said. "We have to be receptive to such criticism."
He said recovery work was well under way, but that reconstruction would continue "intensively" for five years and should be complete in a decade.
"When it comes to reconstruction in areas seriously hit by the tsunami there is debate over whether they have to move to higher ground," he said.
"I think that local residents have to discuss and decide...and time is needed for that."
The establishment taken in by the "myth of safety"? So the prime minister is admitting the power that be in Japan believed in its own lies. That's hard to believe, but "the third generation rule" may well apply here. Those who propegated the "myth" in the early years of nuclear power in Japan, from early 1950s to early 1970s, knew it was a "myth" not reality. Those who came after them dutifully followed the 1st generation knowing full well that it was a "myth" not reality. Then comes the third generation, who grew up under the 1st and 2nd generation who actually started to believe the "myth", as that was the only "reality" for them - that nuclear power plants are safe.
As for his other lame remarks, I don't even want to comment, except for the lesson Noda apparently learned from the Fukushima disaster: Never install the power sources outside. If that's the lesson he learned, where has he been since March 11, 2011?
By the way, the head of Twitter Japan is one of the three directors of Rebuild Japan Initiative Foundation that issued a timely "independent" report on the Fukushima disaster in time for the 1 year anniversary. He has close ties with the Japanese government, a former consultant at McKinsey and a Harvard MBA, GE's director, and one of the "young global leaders" at Davos. A total "insider" elite picked by Twitter to head its Japanese operation.
As for his other lame remarks, I don't even want to comment, except for the lesson Noda apparently learned from the Fukushima disaster: Never install the power sources outside. If that's the lesson he learned, where has he been since March 11, 2011?
By the way, the head of Twitter Japan is one of the three directors of Rebuild Japan Initiative Foundation that issued a timely "independent" report on the Fukushima disaster in time for the 1 year anniversary. He has close ties with the Japanese government, a former consultant at McKinsey and a Harvard MBA, GE's director, and one of the "young global leaders" at Davos. A total "insider" elite picked by Twitter to head its Japanese operation.
and....
http://ex-skf.blogspot.com/2012/03/ministry-of-educaiton-on-speedi.html
Ministry of Educaiton on SPEEDI Simulation: "We Can't Make This Public...."
Kyodo News reports (3/3/2012), nearly one year later:
SPEEDI予測「公表できない」 文科省文書に記載
SPEEDI simulation "cannot be made public", according to a document by Ministry of Education and Science
東京電力福島第1原発事故5日目の昨年3月15日、緊急時迅速放射能影響予測ネットワークシステム(SPEEDI)による放射性物質の拡散予測について、当時の高木義明文部科学相ら政務三役や文科省幹部が協議し「一般にはとても公表できない内容と判断」と記した内部文書が作成されていたことが2日、同省関係者への取材で分かった。
It was revealed on March 2 by speaking with the people involved at the Ministry of Education and Science that an internal memo was created on March 15, 2011, 5th day of the Fukushima I Nuclear Power Plant accident, which shows then-Minister Yoshiaki Takagi and top officials at the Ministry of Education and Science held a meeting that day and agreed that they "cannot make the SPEEDI simulation results public".
文科省は「事務方が作ったメモだが不正確。公表の具体的な判断はしなかった」と内容を一部否定している。
The Ministry of Education denies part of the story, saying "The memo was created by the secretariat but it is inaccurate. There was no clear decision on whether to make them public."
事故直後のSPEEDIの試算公表をめぐる文科省の議事録などは公表されていなかった。
No minutes of the Ministry of Education's meetings have been made public over the SPEEDI results right after the accident.You can be pretty sure that no minutes exist.The Ministry of Education and Science was in charge of SPEEDI. What was made public at that time was that SPEEDI didn't work.
I remember Professor Kunihiko Takeda of Chubu University saying right around March 15 last year that the government (Ministry of Education) decided to hide the result of SPEEDI simulation because it was very, very bad, showing serious radioactive contamination over a wide area.Well he was right.
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