Obama Says NOT to prepare for Radiation….the Government will tell you when.

http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/president-obama-japan-nuclear-crisis-harmful-radiation-us/story?id=13158789

http://www.naturalnews.com/031735_Obama_radioactive_fallout.html

‘Substantial Risk’ Near Fukushima Reactors Prompted Evacuations, Obama Says

By DEVIN DWYER
March 17, 2011
After days of silence on the nuclear crisis in Japan, President Obama today downplayed concerns of a potential radiological impact in the U.S. and defended efforts to evacuate Americans from a zone around the crippled reactors four times larger than one imposed by Japan.

“I want to be very clear: We do not expect harmful levels of radiation to reach the U.S., whether it’s the west coast, Hawaii, Alaska, or the U.S. territories in the Pacific,” Obama said in the Rose Garden.

The president appeared to directly address reports that some Americans have begun stockpiling potassium iodide tablets, which are taken in emergencies to block the body’s absorption of radioactive substances.

“The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and public health experts do not recommend people in the U.S. take precautionary measures beyond staying informed,” Obama said. “Going forward we will continue to keep the American people fully updated because I believe you must know what I know as president.”

But Obama said the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission and other scientific experts believe the danger from radiation spewing out of the Fukushima power plant extends well beyond the 12-mile radius Japanese officials have suggested, and he warned Americans living in Japan to evacuate within a 50-mile radius.

“Even as Japanese responders continue to do heroic work, we know that the damage to nuclear reactors at Fukushima Daiichi plant poses a substantial risk to people who are nearby,” Obama said.

//

“That is why yesterday we called for an evacuation of American citizens who are within 50 miles of plant. That decision was based on a careful, scientific evaluation and the guidelines that we use to keep our citizens safe here in the U.S.,” he said.

Meanwhile, the State Department authorized the voluntary departure of family members of U.S. government personnel late Wednesday and issued a warning to other Americans to “consider departing” Japan.

The first U.S. government-chartered plane ferrying nearly 100 family members of American diplomats and a few private citizens left Japan today for Taipei, Taiwan, with more flights planned for tomorrow depending on demand.

“These measures are temporary and dependents will return when the situation is resolved,” Pentagon spokesman Col. Dave Lapan said.

For now, radioactivity levels are only extreme in the immediate vicinity of the power plant. And forecasts show that winds for the next three to five days would send any contamination away from population zones and out over the sea.

But one U.S. official told ABC News that the situation remains “horrifically worrisome,” despite an apparent information gap between what Japanese power company officials are telling the Japanese government of the situation, and what U.S. has determined through independent reconnaissance.

Obama urged Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan during a phone call late Wednesday to take decisive steps to end the crisis because time is of the essencce.

“We’re sharing with them expertise, equipment and technology so that courageous responders on the scene have the benefit of American teamwork and support,” Obama said of the U.S. effort to assist Japanese engineers at the nuclear site.

U.S. military blocks websites to help Japan recovery efforts

By Mark Preston and Adam Levine, CNN
March 16, 2011 — Updated 1009 GMT (1809 HKT)

Several websites, including YouTube, have been blocked from U.S. military computers in Japan to free bandwidth for recovery efforts.

Several websites, including YouTube, have been blocked from U.S. military computers in Japan to free bandwidth for recovery efforts.

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • YouTube, ESPN, eBay among popular websites blocked on military computers
  • Effort is intended to free up bandwidth for use in helping Japan
  • Blockage is temporary and subject to change, Strategic Command says

  • Washington (CNN) — The U.S. military has blocked access to a range of popular commercial websites in order to free up bandwidth for use in Japan recovery efforts, according to an e-mail obtained by CNN and confirmed by a spokesman for U.S. Strategic Command.

    The sites — including YouTube, ESPN, Amazon, eBay and MTV — were chosen not because of the content but because their popularity among users of military computers account for significant bandwidth, according to Strategic Command spokesman Rodney Ellison.

    The block, instituted Monday, is intended “to make sure bandwidth was available in Japan for military operations” as the United States helps in the aftermath of last week’s deadly earthquake and tsunami, Ellison explained.

    U.S. Pacific Command made the request to free up the bandwidth. The sites, 13 in all, are blocked across the Department of Defense’s .mil computer system.

    Life at a Japanese emergency shelter

    How Japan’s nuclear crisis unfolded

    “This is a response to a time of extreme demand for networks,” Ellison said.

    Ellison emphasized that it was a temporary measure.

    “This blockage will be of a temporary nature and may increase or decrease in the size and scope as necessary,” according to the message distributed to military announcing the move.

    “We are doing this to facilitate the recovery efforts under way in Japan,” Ellison explained. “We are trying to make sure we are giving them as many avenues and as much support as we can.”

    The blocked websites are:

    * Youtube.com

    * Googlevideo.com

    * Amazon.com

    * ESPN.go.com

    * eBay.com

    * Doubleclick.com

    * Eyewonder.com

    * Pandora.com

    * streamtheworld.com

    * Mtv.com

    * Ifilm.com

    * Myspace.com

    * Metacafe.com

    Fukushima nuke plant situation ‘worsened considerably’: think tank

    http://english.kyodonews.jp/news/2011/03/78374.html

    WASHINGTON, March 15, Kyodo

    The situation at the quake-hit Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant in northeastern Japan ”has worsened considerably,” the Institute for Science and International Security said in a statement released Tuesday.

    Referring to fresh explosions that occurred earlier in the day at the site and problems in a pool storing spent nuclear fuel rods, the Washington-based think tank said, ”This accident can no longer be viewed as a level 4 on the International Nuclear and Radiological Events scale that ranks events from 1 to 7.”

    Noting that a level 4 incident involves ”only local radiological consequences,” it said the ongoing crisis is ”now closer to a level 6, and it may unfortunately reach a level 7” — a worst case scenario with extensive health and environmental consequences.

    ”The international community should increase assistance to Japan to both contain the emergency at the reactors and to address the wider contamination. We need to find a solution together,” it said.

    ==Kyodo

    Wind to blow towards Pacific from quake-hit Japan plant

    http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20110316/ts_nm/us_japan_quake_wind_1
    Tue Mar 15, 10:09 pm ET

    TOKYO (Reuters) – The wind near a quake-damaged nuclear complex in northeast Japan, which has released radiation into the atmosphere, will blow from the northwest and out into the Pacific Ocean on Wednesday, a weather official said.

    The wind speed will get stronger in the afternoon, blowing as fast as at 12 meters (39.4 ft) per second, said the official at the Japan Meteorological Agency in Fukushima prefecture where the plant is based.

    The Fukushima Daiichi plant, run by Tokyo Electric Power Co (TEPCO), is about 240 km (150 miles) north of Tokyo on the country’s northeast coast.

    Fire broke out at the plant on Wednesday, prompting some people to flee the capital which has suffered low levels of radiation, but not enough to damage health, officials say.

    Public broadcaster NHK said earlier in the day flames were no longer visible at the plant.

    A massive earthquake and tsunami on Friday crippled the plant’s cooling functions, forcing operator Tokyo Electric Power Co to pour sea water into the reactors, releasing radioactive air into atmosphere.

    Officials said radiation in Tokyo was 10 times normal on Tuesday, when the wind was blowing from the north and northeast.

    (Reporting by Junko Fujita; Editing by Nick Macfie)

    Scientists Project Path of Radiation Plume

    http://www.nytimes.com/2011/03/17/science/17plume.html?_r=2
    By WILLIAM J. BROAD
    Published: March 16, 2011
    A United Nations forecast of the possible movement of the radioactive plume coming from crippled Japanese reactors shows it churning across the Pacific, and touching the Aleutian Islands on Thursday before hitting Southern California late Friday.

    Jung Yeon-Je/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

    At a rail station in South Korea on Wednesday, passengers viewed news reports about Japan.

    Multimedia
    Health and nuclear experts emphasize that radiation in the plume will be diluted as it travels and, at worst, would have extremely minor health consequences in the United States, even if hints of it are ultimately detectable. In a similar way, radiation from the Chernobyl disaster in 1986 spread around the globe and reached the West Coast of the United States in 10 days, its levels measurable but minuscule.

    The projection, by the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty Organization, an arm of the United Nations in Vienna, gives no information about actual radiation levels but only shows how a radioactive plume would probably move and disperse.

    The forecast, calculated Tuesday, is based on patterns of Pacific winds at that time and the predicted path is likely to change as weather patterns shift.

    On Sunday, the United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission said it expected that no “harmful levels of radioactivity” would travel from Japan to the United States “given the thousands of miles between the two countries.”

    The test ban treaty group routinely does radiation projections in an effort to understand which of its global stations to activate for monitoring the worldwide ban on nuclear arms testing. It has more than 60 stations that sniff the air for radiation spikes and uses weather forecasts and powerful computers to model the transport of radiation on the winds.

    On Wednesday, the agency declined to release its Japanese forecast, which The New York Times obtained from other sources. The forecast was distributed widely to the agency’s member states.

    But in interviews, the technical specialists of the agency did address how and why the forecast had been drawn up.

    “It’s simply an indication,” said Lassina Zerbo, head of the agency’s International Data Center. “We have global coverage. So when something happens, it’s important for us to know which station can pick up the event.”

    For instance, the Japan forecast shows that the radioactive plume will probably miss the agency’s monitoring stations at Midway and in the Hawaiian Islands but is likely to be detected in the Aleutians and at a monitoring station in Sacramento.

    The forecast assumes that radioactivity in Japan is released continuously and forms a rising plume. It ends with the plume heading into Southern California and the American Southwest, including Nevada, Utah and Arizona. The plume would have continued eastward if the United Nations scientists had run the projection forward.

    Earlier this week, the leading edge of the tangible plume was detected by the Navy’s Seventh Fleet when it was operating about 100 miles northeast of the Japanese reactor complex. On Monday, the Navy said it had repositioned its ships and aircraft off Japan “as a precautionary measure.”

    The United Nations agency has also detected radiation from the stricken reactor complex at its detector station in Gunma, Japan, which lies about 130 miles to the southwest.

    The chairman of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Gregory B. Jaczko, said Monday that the plume posed no danger to the United States. “You just aren’t going to have any radiological material that, by the time it traveled those large distances, could present any risk to the American public,” he said in a White House briefing.

    Mr. Jaczko was asked if the meltdown of a core of one of the reactors would increase the chance of harmful radiation reaching Hawaii or the West Coast.

    “I don’t want to speculate on various scenarios,” he replied. “But based on the design and the distances involved, it is very unlikely that there would be any harmful impacts.”

    The likely path of the main Japanese plume across the Pacific has also caught the attention of Europeans, many of whom recall how the much closer Chernobyl reactor in Ukraine began spewing radiation.

    In Germany on Wednesday, the Federal Office for Radiation Protection held a news conference that described the threat from the Japanese plume as trifling and said there was no need for people to take iodine tablets. The pills can prevent poisoning from the atmospheric release of iodine-131, a radioactive byproduct of nuclear plants. The United States is also carefully monitoring and forecasting the plume’s movements. The agencies include the Federal Aviation Administration, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the Department of Defense, and the Department of Energy.

    On Wednesday, Steven Chu, the energy secretary, told Congress that the United States was planning to deploy equipment in Japan that could detect radiation exposure on the ground and in the air. In total, the department’s team includes 39 people and more than eight tons of equipment.

    “We continue to offer assistance in any way we can,” Dr. Chu said at a hearing, “as well as informing ourselves of what the situation is.”

    A version of this article appeared in print on March 17, 2011, on page A11 of the New York edition.

    Surgeon General: Buying Iodide a “Precaution”

    http://www.nbcbayarea.com/news/local/Surgeon-General-Buying-Iodine-Appropriate-118031559.html

    Conflicting messages appear in the effort to buy iodide tablets

    By LORI PREUITT
    Updated 12:36 AM PDT, Thu, Mar 17, 2011 
    The fear that a nuclear cloud could float from the shores of Japan to the shores of California has some people making a run on iodide tablets. Pharmacists across California report being flooded with requests.

    State and county officials spent much of Tuesday trying to keep people calm by saying that getting the pills wasn’t necessary, but then the United States surgeon general supported the idea as a worthy “precaution.”

    U.S. Surgeon General Regina Benjamin was in the Bay Area touring a peninsula hospital. NBC Bay Area reporter Damian Trujillo asked her about the run on tablets and Dr. Benjamin said although she wasn’t aware of people stocking up, she did not think that would be an overreaction. She said it was right to be prepared.

    On the other side of the issue is Kelly Huston of the California Emergency Management Agency. Huston said state officials, along with the Nuclear Regulatory Commission and the California Energy Commission, were monitoring the situation and said people don’t need to buy the pills.

    “Even if we had a radiation release from Diablo Canyon (in San Luis Obispo County), iodide would only be issued to people living within a 10-mile radius of the plant,” Huston added.

    Santa Clara County‘s public health officer Dr. Martin Fenstersheib told the Mercury News he also does not recommend getting the tablets, adding some people can be severely allergic.

    “There is no reason for doing it,” Fenstersheib told the paper.

    Either way, the pills are hard to get. eBay prices have skyrocketed.

    Canadian media tells population NOT to take KI precautions

    Taking precautions has always been about ‘better safe than sorry.’ After all, you cannot protect yourself after it’s too late. With that in mind, why are Canadian media outlets telling

    British Columbians that there is NO risk from the Japan-to-West Coast jet stream? Why are they discouraging people from even stocking up on Potassium Iodide (KI), which is already becoming difficult to obtain? If there’s even a small chance of harmful radiation blowing over, why would you tell people not to prepare?

    Even if the dangers do not appear, this seems shortsighted. After all, if these media outlets are wrong, issuing a retraction later will do no good once people are negatively affected.

    Calm down. Japan’s nuclear crisis poses no risk to B.C

    Vancouver Sun
    March 16, 2011

    Can we please stop hyperventilating over the nuclear crisis in Japan?

    Yes, it’s a serious problem – for the Japanese and for the nuclear industry.

    No, it doesn’t pose an immediate risk to people living on the West Coast, as our own public health officers point out. The accident site is separated from Vancouver by 7,500 kilometres of ocean, about the same distance that separates Toronto from Chernobyl.

    Yes, the disaster could get worse -in Japan and particularly for the 12 million people who live in Tokyo, not to mention Chiba or Yokohama. All these people live about as close to the stricken reactor as Vancouver is to Seattle.

    Read full article

    

     

    Iodine therapy unnecessary: B.C. officials 

    CBC News
    March 16, 2011

    The B.C. provincial government is recommending pharmacies not dispense or stockpile potassium iodide for sale in connection to the nuclear reactor situation in Japan.

    “It is recommended that pharmacies do not dispense or stockpile potassium iodide tablets,” provincial health officer Dr. Perry Kendall, said in a statement.

    Kendall said there is no basis to the concern about radioactivity, even in a worst-case meltdown scenario in Japan.

    Read full article

    Fukushima Daiichi nuclear situation in Texas?

    RT
    March 16, 2011

    The intensifying nuclear crisis in Japan is raising anxieties on both sides of the Pacific over the potential impacts of radiation exposure, and a relative lack of official information on radiation has many worried. The nuclear radiation threat continues to spread in Japan after numerous explosions.Meanwhile, the Obama Administration wants to offer new projects to Tokyo Electric who engineered the collapsing nuclear plants in Japan.

    Follow

    Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.