Rebar wasn’t even used to reinforce the concrete foundations under water
tanks, says worker
Kit Daniels
Infowars.com
January 6, 2014
A Japanese worker who spent six months at the Fukushima nuclear power plant
says that he isn’t surprised about the latest radioactive leaks from the plant
because of its shoddy construction and repair work, including the use of duct
tape to “fix” key equipment.
Yoshitatsu Uechi, 48, told the Asahi Shimbun newspaper that he and his fellow workers were
under such intense pressure to perform “repairs” as quickly as possible on the
devastated plant that adhesive tape was used on critical equipment and that they
even neglected to apply rust inhibitor on the radioactive water tanks.
“I couldn’t believe that such slipshod work was being done,” he said. “Even
if it was part of stopgap measures.”
Back in Oct. 2012, Uechi and another worker climbed to the top of a storage
tank holding radioactive water in order to bolt a steel lid over its
opening.
When they reached the top, he noticed that the opening, one foot in diameter,
was only covered with white adhesive tape and that the water level was less than
two feet from below the opening.
He was given only four bolts to fasten the lid even though there were eight
bolt holes in total.
Uechi also revealed cost-cutting techniques used during the plant’s
construction, such as the decision to use wire net to reinforce the concrete
foundation under the water tanks instead of much stronger and more commonly used
rebar.
Furthermore, waterproof sheets were placed over the joints inside tanks
instead of sealing agent, which would have been much more effective at stopping
leaks.
Uechi’s experiences add to the already exhaustive evidence that the nuclear
disaster is far more deadly than what the Tokyo Electric Power Company and the
Japanese government suggest.
As we reported today, a Geiger counter reading of background radiation at a beach near San
Francisco shows over five times the normal, safe level.
Government officials, however, rejected the possibility that the severe
increase in radiation was linked to the Fukushima disaster.
But as we also reported last week, the Department of Health and Human
Services has ordered 14 million doses of potassium iodide, which protect the body from radiation poisoning.
Japanese officials even admitted that the radiation levels surrounding the
plant were 18 times higher than they previously reported.
(H/T: The Voice of Russia)
Monday, January 6, 2014
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