Investogators inspect the damaged building housing the No.3 reactor at TEPCO's Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant on June 17, 2011. Photograph: Kyodo/Reuters

The first “independent” review of the Fukushima nuclear disaster was published today and it does not make reassuring reading. Japan is perhaps the most technologically advanced nation on Earth and yet, time after time, the report finds missing measures that I would have expected to already be in place. It highlights the fundamental inability for anyone to anticipate all future events and so deeply undermines the claims of the nuclear industry and its supporters that this time, with the new generation of reactors, things will be different.

I used quote marks on the word “independent” because the report comes from the International Atomic Energy Association (pdf) (IAEA) which, while independent of Japan, is far from independent from the nuclear industry it was founded to promote. But this conflict of interest only makes the findings of the IEAE’s experts more startling.

Investogators inspect the damaged building housing the No.3 reactor at TEPCO's Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant on June 17, 2011. Photograph: Kyodo/Reuters

So let’s take a look at some of the 15 conclusions and 16 lessons (I’ve edited a bit for brevity).

There were insufficient defence-in-depth provisions for tsunami hazards. In particular, although tsunami hazards were considered [in] 2002, the tsunami hazard was underestimated. Moreover, those additional protective measures were not reviewed and approved by the regulatory authority. Severe accident management provisions were not adequate to cope with multiple plant failures.

So, they looked at the tsunami risk, badly underestimated the scale of what was needed and then the regulator failed to check their work.

Japan has a well organized emergency preparedness and response system … and dedicated and devoted officials and workers. [But] complicated structures and organizations can result in delays in urgent decision making.

Even in one of the best nuclear safety regimes, the complexity of accidents can overwhelm the emergency response.

The siting and design of nuclear plants should include sufficient protection against infrequent and complex combinations of external events and these should be considered in the plant safety analysis;
Any changes in external hazards or understanding of them should be periodically reviewed for their impact on the current plant configuration

This, in other words, says that the unexpected will occur and tacitly admits it can’t be planned for.

Plant layout should be based on maintaining a ‘dry site concept’, where practicable, as a defence-in-depth measure against site flooding;
An active tsunami warning system should be established with the provision for
immediate operator action.

Nuclear power plants shouldn’t be able to flood and need tsunami warning systems to operate safely, the inspectors conclude. It’s very worrying that this is a “lesson to be learned”, in a world where many reactors are already sited on coasts, while sea levels are rising and storms are increasing in intensity.

For severe situations, such as total loss of off-site power or the engineering safety systems, simple alternative sources for these functions (such as mobile power, compressed air and water supplies) should be provided. Such provisions should be located at a safe place and the plant operators should be trained to use them.
Nuclear sites should have adequate on-site seismically robust, suitably shielded, ventilated and well equipped buildings to house the Emergency Response Centres.

More frighteningly obvious “lessons” to be learned: you need back-up equipment in a safe place that people know how to use, and somewhere safe for the emergency response to be run from.

Emergency Response Centres should have available as far as practicable essential safety related parameters, such as coolant levels, containment status, pressure, etc, [delivered by] hardened instrumentation and lines.
External events [can] affect several plants and several units at the plants at the same time. This requires a sufficiently large resource in terms of trained experienced people, equipment and supplies.
The risk and implications of hydrogen explosions should be revisited and necessary mitigating systems should be implemented.

Yet more “lessons”: you need to ensure you know what’s happening in the reactor, you need to have enough people to cope and the risk of hydrogen explosions has been underestimated.

Nuclear regulatory systems should ensure that regulatory independence [is] preserved in all circumstances.

The last lesson is also chilling, when you consider the implied alternative.

To sum up, when you build a reactor you are committing to controlling the nuclear fury at its heart for half a century or more, and controlling the waste produced for many thousands of years (using methods no-one has yet developed).

On those timescales, unforeseen events are a certainty, with hugely costly consequences. The earthquake and tsunami that hit Japan were extreme, and the IAEA report tries to argues that new nuclear safety regulations should learn lessons from the failure of the system at Fukushima to cope.

But the real lesson is that it is impossible to cover all eventualities. That means nuclear power is not safe or, given the colossal clean-up costs, cheap. Regretfully, I believe it is an illusory answer to the problem of rising greenhouse gas emissions and climate change.

 

Source

Share

email

Email, you’ve come a long way, baby.

In its 40-year tenure as a form of communication, email has run its course from the domain of über nerdy computer scientists to one of the most common ways to keep in touch, both personally and professionally.

Although email as a mode of communication was around for ten years before the term “email” was actually coined, we now count on it in our daily lives. In fact, the use of email has become so pervasive that the Oxford English Dictionary recently added a slew of email acronyms to its official canon.

And finally, just this year, the AP Stylebook, a.k.a. the holy book of all (or most) journalists, amended the spelling of e-mail to email, allowing articles such as this one to save bigtime on hyphens.

To give you a timeline of email’s progress through the decades, here’s a commemorative 40th anniversary infographic from email delivery company Reachmail.

Click image to see larger version.

Source

Share

Each year at the typical U.S. nuclear plant, there’s a 1 in 74,176 chance of an earthquake strong enough to cause damage to the reactor’s core. But an earthquake isn’t the only threat. A trembler coupled with a tsunami like the one that hit Fukushima Daiichi could cause catastrophic damage to nuclear plants.

Since the disaster at fukushima, there’s been a lot of speculating about U.S. nuclear sites at risk for a major earthquake. Here, we take a look at which might fall victim to a tsunami scenario like Japan experienced.

Source

Share

by

Global Internet traffic is expected to quadruple between 2010 and 2015, according to data provided to Mashable by Cisco.

By that time, nearly 3 billion people will be using the Internet — more than 40% of the world’s projected population. On average, there will be more than two Internet connections for each person on Earth, driven by the proliferation of web-enabled mobile devices.

Internet traffic is projected to approach 1 zettabyte per year in 2015 — that’s equivalent of all the digital data in existence in 2010. Regionally speaking, traffic is expected to more than double in the Middle East and Africa, where there will be an average of 0.9 devices per person for a projected population of 1.39 billion. Latin America is close behind, with a 48% increase in traffic and an estimated 2.1 devices per person among a population of 620 million.

The rest of the world will experience more moderate growth in terms of traffic, but the number of devices per person is forecast to increase significantly. By 2015, there will be an average of 5.8 devices per person in North America, 5.4 in Japan and 4.4 in western Europe.

Somewhat surprisingly, it is neither mobile phones nor tablets that are expected to grow the most in the next four years. Rather, flat panel televisions will experience the greatest production increase globally, up 1,063% from 2010, followed by tablets (750%), digital photo frames (600%) and ereaders (550%). The number of non-smartphones and smartphones is expected to increase by 17% and 194% worldwide, respectively.

Share

by Todd Wasserman

The Social Ad Series is supported by LoopFuse, which provides forever-free marketing automation software that closes the loop between sales and marketing with smarter lead capture, scoring, and nurturing — plus Salesforce.com integration. See how lead management with LoopFuse increases revenue.

Twitter was influenced by texting, which — group messaging aside — isn’t a big advertising platform. So it’s not surprising perhaps that despite its strong growth, Twitter still isn’t an advertising powerhouse. Part of the reason is the fear of killing the golden goose: Run too many ads and your users will flee to a competing service. But another reason is that the founders of Twitter want to invent something new. Slapping banner ads on Twitter.com clearly doesn’t have any appeal.

Nevertheless, Twitter has to make money somehow, and charging for access doesn’t appear to be on the table. So, as the infographic below demonstrates, Twitter has waded into advertising slowly, adding a Promoted Tweet here and a Promoted Trend there in an attempt to find a winning formula. As with Facebook, Twitter’s decision to hold off on advertising seems like a smart move in retrospect. The platform is now well established enough that no serious competitors exist. Time will tell, though, if ubiquity equals financial success.

Click on graphic below to see a larger view

Share

Since the March 11 earthquake and tsunami knocked out the Fukushima Dai-lchi nuclear plant’s cooling systems, Tokyo Electric Power Co. (TEPCO) has been struggling to stop radiation leaks and stabilize crippling reactors. Imagining solar panels leaking from Fukushima and slowly spreading across the Pacific paints a much brighter picture than traveling radiation. But because a panels-to-radiation comparison could get a bit tricky, we explore what it might have looked like if the resources now being dedicated to nuclear disaster recovery might have instead been invested in solar panels.

Click on the image below to see a larger view.

Share

solar-infographic-lg

To help draw attention to its plans to build a thin-film solar panel plant in the U.S., General Electric has published an interesting study on the history and future of solar energy.

Green tech and solar energy have been topics of focus in the U.S. in recent years and months. Last July, for example, President Obama announced the country would be investing around $2 billion in solar energy companies. Google has also been at the forefront of bringing solar energy to the masses with a substantial investment in the world’s largest solar power tower plant.

But we’ve got a long way to go before we reach our collective goals. During his 2011 State of the Union address, Obama promised Americans 80% of their electricity would come from clean energy by 2035.

To help us all understand where we’ve come from and where we’re going in terms of solar and other alternative energy, creative agency JESS3 has created the following heliocentric representation for GE and has shared it with us.

 

(more…)

Share