New explosion shakes stricken Japanese nuclear plant

Japanese rescue workers stand with their tools among destroyed homes in residential area of Otsuchi March 14, 2011. REUTERS/Damir Sagolj
Japanese rescue workers stand with their tools among destroyed homes in residential area of Otsuchi March 14, 2011. REUTERS/Damir Sagolj

FUKUSHIMA, Japan, (Reuters) – A fresh explosion  rocked a damaged Japanese nuclear power plant today where  engineers have been pumping sea water into a reactor to prevent  a catastrophic meltdown in the wake of a devastating earthquake  and tsunami.
Japan’s nuclear safety agency said today’s explosion at  the plant’s No.2 reactor was caused by hydrogen. There was no  immediate word on damage, but Jiji news agency quoted the trade  ministry as saying radiation levels remained low after the  blast, the third at the plant since Saturday.
Japan has asked the United States for more equipment to help  cool reactors at the Fukushima nuclear complex, which was hit on  Monday by a dangerous drop in cooling water levels that exposed  fuel rods in the No. 2 reactor.
The full extent of the destruction wreaked by Friday’s  massive quake and tsunami that followed it was still becoming  clear, as rescuers combed through the region north of Tokyo  where officials say at least 10,000 people were killed.
“It’s a scene from hell, absolutely nightmarish,” said  Patrick Fuller of the International Red Cross Federation from  the northeastern coastal town of Otsuchi.
Prime Minister Naoto Kan said Japan was facing its worst  crisis since World War Two and, with the financial costs  estimated at up to $180 billion, analysts said it could tip the  world’s third biggest economy back into recession.
The U.S. Geological Survey upgraded the quake to magnitude  9.0, from 8.9, making it the world’s fourth most powerful since  1900.
Car makers, shipbuilders and technology companies worldwide  scrambled for supplies after the disaster shut factories in  Japan and disrupted the global manufacturing chain.
Japanese stocks were expected to fall further on Tuesday,  after Nikkei futures traded in Chicago fell 6.15 percent  to be 70 points below the Osaka close.
Tokyo’s TOPIX index closed down more than 7.5  percent on Monday, wiping $287 billion off market capitalisation  in the biggest fall since the height of the global financial  crisis in 2008. Insurers’ shares fell for a second day in London  and New York, as world stocks slid to a six-week low.

“NOT CHERNOBYL”
The fear at the Fukushima complex, 240 km (150 miles) north  of Tokyo, is of a major radiation leak after the quake and  tsunami knocked out cooling systems. The complex has seen  explosions at two of its reactors on Saturday and Monday.
The worst nuclear accident since the Chernobyl disaster in  Ukraine in 1986 has drawn criticism that authorities were  ill-prepared and revived debate in many countries about the  safety of atomic power.
Switzerland put on hold some approvals for nuclear power  plants and Germany said it was scrapping a plan to extend the  life of its nuclear power stations. The White House said U.S.  President Barack Obama remained committed to nuclear energy.
Yukiya Amano, head of the International Atomic Energy  Agency, said the reactor vessels of nuclear power plants  affected by the disaster remained intact.
“The nuclear plants have been shaken, flooded and cut off  from electricity,” he told a news conference. But “the reactor  vessels have held and radioactive release is limited.”
Amano, a veteran Japanese diplomatic, added that a  Chernobyl-style disaster was “very unlikely”.
An explosion at the Soviet Chernobyl plant sent radioactive  fallout across northern Europe.
Whilst the Fukuskima plant’s No.1 and No.3 reactors both  suffered partial fuel rod meltdowns, operator Tokyo Electric  Power Co (TEPCO) said the No. 2 reactor was now the  biggest concern.
A sudden drop in cooling water levels when a pump ran out of  fuel had fully exposed the fuel rods for a time, an official  said. This could lead to the rods melting down and a possible  radioactive leak.
TEPCO said it had resumed pumping sea water into the reactor  early on Tuesday.
“This is nothing like a Chernobyl,” said Murray Jennex, a  nuclear expert at San Diego State University. “At Chernobyl you  had no containment structure — when it blew, it blew everything  straight out into the atmosphere.”
Nonetheless, the government warned those still in the 20-km  (13-mile) evacuation zone to stay indoors. TEPCO said 11 people  had been injured in the blast.
U.S. warships and planes helping with relief efforts moved  away from the coast temporarily because of low-level radiation.  The U.S. Seventh Fleet described the move as precautionary.
South Korea, Hong Kong, Singapore and the Philippines said  they would test Japanese food imports for radiation.
France’s ASN nuclear safety authority said the accident  could be classified as a level 5 or 6 on the international scale  of 1 to 7, putting it on a par with the 1979 U.S. Three Mile  Island meltdown, higher than the Japanese authorities’ rating.
Japan’s nuclear safety agency has rated the incidents in the  No.1 and No.3 reactors as a 4, but has not yet rated the No. 2  reactor.
TOWNS FLATTENED
About 850,000 households in the north were still without  electricity in near-freezing weather, Tohuku Electric Power Co.  said, and the government said at least 1.5 million households  lack running water. Tens of thousands of people were missing.
“The situation here is just beyond belief, almost everything  has been flattened,” said the Red Cross’s Fuller in Otsuchi, a  town all but obliterated. “The government is saying that 9,500  people, more than half of the population, could have died and I  do fear the worst.”
Kyodo news agency reported that 2,000 bodies had been found  on Monday in two coastal towns alone.
Whole villages and towns have been wiped off the map by  Friday’s wall of water, triggering an international humanitarian  effort of epic proportions.
“When the tsunami struck, I was trying to evacuate people. I  looked back, and then it was like the computer graphics scene  I’ve seen from the movie Armageddon. I thought it was a dream .  it was really like the end of the world,” said Tsutomu Sato, 46,  in Rikuzantakata, a town on the northeast coast.
In Tokyo, commuter trains shut down and trucks were unable  to make deliveries as supermarket shelves ran empty.
Estimates of the economic impact are only now starting to  emerge.
Hiromichi Shirakawa, chief economist for Japan at Credit  Suisse, said in a note to clients that the economic loss will  likely be around 14-15 trillion yen ($171-183 billion) just to  the region hit by the quake and tsunami.
Even that would put it above the commonly accepted cost of  the 1995 Kobe quake which killed 6,000 people.
The earthquake has forced many firms to suspend production  and shares in some of Japan’s biggest companies tumbled today, with Toyota Corp dropping almost 8 percent.
Global companies from semiconductor makers to shipbuilders  faced disruptions to operations after the quake and tsunami  destroyed vital infrastructure, damaged ports and knocked out  factories.
“The earthquake could have great implications on the global  economic front,” said Andre Bakhos, director of market analytics  at Lec Securities in New York. “If you shut down Japan, there  could be a global recession.”
The Bank of Japan offered a combined 15 trillion yen ($183  billion) to the banking system earlier in the day to soothe  market jitters.