"Fukushima is the
biggest industrial catastrophe in the history of mankind," Arnold Gundersen, a former nuclear industry senior vice president, told Al Jazeera.
"The fuels are now a molten blob at the bottom of the reactor," Gundersen added. "That blob is incredibly radioactive, and now you have water on top of it. The water picks up enormous amounts of radiation, so you add more water and you are generating
hundreds of thousands of tons of highly radioactive water."
Hot particles:
"We are discovering hot particles everywhere in Japan, even in Tokyo," he said. "Scientists are finding these everywhere. Over the last 90 days these hot particles have continued to fall and are being deposited in high concentrations. A lot of people are picking these up in car engine air filters."
Radioactive air filters from cars in Fukushima prefecture and Tokyo are now common, and Gundersen says his sources are
finding radioactive air filters in the greater Seattle area of the US as well.
The hot particles on them can eventually lead to cancer. "These get stuck in your lungs or GI tract, and they are a constant irritant," he explained. arly people in Fukushima prefecture have breathed in a large amount of these particles. Clearly t
he upper West Coast of the US has people being affected. That area
got hit pretty heavy in April."
A problem of infinite proportions
Gundersen's assessment of solving this crisis is grim.
"Units one through three have nuclear waste on the floor, the melted core, that has plutonium in it, and that has to be removed from the environment for hundreds of thousands of years," he said. "Somehow, robotically, they will have to go in there and manage to put it in a container and store it for infinity, and that technology doesn't exist.
Nobody knows how to pick up the molten core from the floor, there is no solution available now for picking that up from the floor."
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