By Taiga Uranaka and Yoko Nishikawa
TOKYO, March 20 (Reuters) - Japan saw some success in its race to avert disaster at a tsunami-damaged power plant, though minor radiation leaks underlined perils from the world's worst nuclear crisis since Chernobyl 25 years ago.
Three hundred engineers have been battling inside a danger zone to salvage the six-reactor Fukushima plant since it was hit by an earthquake and tsunami that also killed
7,653 people and left 11,746 more missing in northeast Japan.
The unprecedented multiple crisis will cost the world's third largest economy nearly $200 billion and require
Japan's biggest reconstruction push since post-World War II.
It has also set back nuclear power plans the world over.
Encouragingly for Japanese transfixed on work at the Fukushima complex, the most critical reactor -- No. 3 which
has highly toxic plutonium -- stabilised after fire trucks doused it for hours with hundreds of tonnes of water.
Work also advanced on bringing power back to water pumps used to cool overheating nuclear fuel.
'We are making progress ... (but) we shouldn't be too optimistic,' said Hidehiko Nishiyama, deputy-general at Japan's Nuclear Safety Agency.
Technicians attached a power cable to the No. 1 and No. 2 reactors, hoping to restore electricity later in the day prior to an attempt to switch the pumps on.
They aim to reach No. 3 and 4 soon after that.
If successful, that could be a turning point in a crisis
classed as bad as America's 1979 Three Mile Island accident.
If not, drastic measures may be required such as burying the plant in sand and concrete as happened at Chernobyl after the world's worst nuclear reactor disaster in 1986.
Facing criticism of its early handling of the situation, plant operator TEPCO's president issued a public apology for 'causing such great concern and nuisance'.
Even after restoring power, the company faces a tricky task reactivating the cooling pumps, with parts of the system probably damaged from the quake or subsequent explosions.
'The workers need to go through the plant, figure out what survived and what didn't, what can be readily repaired and get the cooling systems back up and running to deal with the cores and the spent fuel pools,' said David Lochbaum, of U.S. nuclear watchdog the Union of Concerned Scientists.
FOREIGN ENCOURAGEMENT
Russia's Prime Minister Vladimir Putin recognised
Japan's progress during a trip to reassure residents of eastern regions there was no immediate danger from the nuclear accident.
'Our Japanese colleagues are gradually, not right away and with mistakes ... getting the situation under control,' he said in the city of Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk. 'The work is being done properly, in the right way -- 24 hours a day.'
Putin proposed freeing up energy for Japan by increasing Russian gas supplies to Europe so more liquefied natural gas (LNG) cargoes could go to the Asian nation.
U.N. watchdog the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) also offered encouragement to Tokyo. Its chief Yukiya Amano, who is Japanese, hailed the 'strengthening' of work at the site.
On the negative side, evidence has begun emerging of radiation leaks from the plant, including into food and water.
Though public fear of radiation runs deep, and anxiety has spread as far as the Pacific-facing side of the United States,
Japanese officials say levels so far are not alarming.
Traces exceeding national safety standards were, though, found in milk from a farm about 30 km (18 miles) from the plant and spinach grown in neighbouring Ibaraki prefecture.
The first discovery of contaminated food since the March 11 disaster is likely to heighten scrutiny of Japanese food exports, especially in Asia, their biggest market.
Tiny levels of radioactive iodine have also been found in tap water in Tokyo, one of the world's largest cities about 240 km (150 miles) to south. Many tourists and expatriates have already left and residents are generally staying indoors.
Prime Minister Naoto Kan, who has kept a low profile during the crisis except for shouting at plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Co (TEPCO), sounded out the opposition about forming a government of national unity to deal with the crisis.
But the largest opposition party rejected that.
MOVING EARTH
Showing the incredible power of the 9.0 magnitude earthquake, the largest in tremor-prone Japan's recorded history, Oshika peninsula in Miyagi prefecture shifted a whole 5.3 metres (17 ft) east and its land sank 1.2 metres (4 ft).
In contrast to the generally traumatic and negative images so far, one video emerged showing the crew of a Japanese coastguard vessel successfully riding a massive wave by turning the bow directly at the wall of waters.
The quake and ensuing 10-metre high tsunami devastated Japan's north east coastal region, wiping towns off the map and making more than 360,000 people homeless in a test for the Asian nation's reputation for resilience and social cohesion.
Food, water, medicine and fuel are short in some parts, and low temperatures during Japan's winter are not helping.
The traumatic hunt for bodies and missing people continues.
'This morning my next door neighbour came crying to me that she still can't find her husband. All I could tell her was, 'We'll do our best, so just hold on a little longer,' said fire brigade officer Takao Sato in the disaster zone.
About 257,000 households in the north still have no electricity and at least one million lack running water.
Japan's crisis spooked markets, prompted a rare intervention by the G7 group of rich nations to stabilize the yen on Friday , and may disrupt supplies to auto and technology markets.
Automaker General Motors Co said it was suspending all nonessential spending and global travel, plus freezing production at a plant in Spain and cancelling two shifts in Germany while it assessed the impact of the Japan crisis.
(Additional reporting by Elaine Lies, Tomasz Janowski in Tokyo, and Yoko Kubota and Chang-ran Kim in Rikuzentakata; Gleb Bryanski in Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk, Russia; Eileen O'Grady in Houston; Fredrik Dahl and Sylvia Westall in Vienna; Suzanne Cosgrove in Chicago; Writing by Andrew Cawthorne. Editing by Jeremy Laurence) Keywords: JAPAN/ (Email: andrew.cawthorne@thomsonreuters.com) COPYRIGHT Copyright Thomson Reuters 2011. All rights reserved. The copying, republication or redistribution of Reuters News Content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Thomson Reuters.
TOKYO, March 20 (Reuters) - Japan saw some success in its race to avert disaster at a tsunami-damaged power plant, though minor radiation leaks underlined perils from the world's worst nuclear crisis since Chernobyl 25 years ago.
Three hundred engineers have been battling inside a danger zone to salvage the six-reactor Fukushima plant since it was hit by an earthquake and tsunami that also killed
7,653 people and left 11,746 more missing in northeast Japan.
The unprecedented multiple crisis will cost the world's third largest economy nearly $200 billion and require
Japan's biggest reconstruction push since post-World War II.
It has also set back nuclear power plans the world over.
Encouragingly for Japanese transfixed on work at the Fukushima complex, the most critical reactor -- No. 3 which
has highly toxic plutonium -- stabilised after fire trucks doused it for hours with hundreds of tonnes of water.
Work also advanced on bringing power back to water pumps used to cool overheating nuclear fuel.
'We are making progress ... (but) we shouldn't be too optimistic,' said Hidehiko Nishiyama, deputy-general at Japan's Nuclear Safety Agency.
Technicians attached a power cable to the No. 1 and No. 2 reactors, hoping to restore electricity later in the day prior to an attempt to switch the pumps on.
They aim to reach No. 3 and 4 soon after that.
If successful, that could be a turning point in a crisis
classed as bad as America's 1979 Three Mile Island accident.
If not, drastic measures may be required such as burying the plant in sand and concrete as happened at Chernobyl after the world's worst nuclear reactor disaster in 1986.
Facing criticism of its early handling of the situation, plant operator TEPCO's president issued a public apology for 'causing such great concern and nuisance'.
Even after restoring power, the company faces a tricky task reactivating the cooling pumps, with parts of the system probably damaged from the quake or subsequent explosions.
'The workers need to go through the plant, figure out what survived and what didn't, what can be readily repaired and get the cooling systems back up and running to deal with the cores and the spent fuel pools,' said David Lochbaum, of U.S. nuclear watchdog the Union of Concerned Scientists.
FOREIGN ENCOURAGEMENT
Russia's Prime Minister Vladimir Putin recognised
Japan's progress during a trip to reassure residents of eastern regions there was no immediate danger from the nuclear accident.
'Our Japanese colleagues are gradually, not right away and with mistakes ... getting the situation under control,' he said in the city of Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk. 'The work is being done properly, in the right way -- 24 hours a day.'
Putin proposed freeing up energy for Japan by increasing Russian gas supplies to Europe so more liquefied natural gas (LNG) cargoes could go to the Asian nation.
U.N. watchdog the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) also offered encouragement to Tokyo. Its chief Yukiya Amano, who is Japanese, hailed the 'strengthening' of work at the site.
On the negative side, evidence has begun emerging of radiation leaks from the plant, including into food and water.
Though public fear of radiation runs deep, and anxiety has spread as far as the Pacific-facing side of the United States,
Japanese officials say levels so far are not alarming.
Traces exceeding national safety standards were, though, found in milk from a farm about 30 km (18 miles) from the plant and spinach grown in neighbouring Ibaraki prefecture.
The first discovery of contaminated food since the March 11 disaster is likely to heighten scrutiny of Japanese food exports, especially in Asia, their biggest market.
Tiny levels of radioactive iodine have also been found in tap water in Tokyo, one of the world's largest cities about 240 km (150 miles) to south. Many tourists and expatriates have already left and residents are generally staying indoors.
Prime Minister Naoto Kan, who has kept a low profile during the crisis except for shouting at plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Co (TEPCO), sounded out the opposition about forming a government of national unity to deal with the crisis.
But the largest opposition party rejected that.
MOVING EARTH
Showing the incredible power of the 9.0 magnitude earthquake, the largest in tremor-prone Japan's recorded history, Oshika peninsula in Miyagi prefecture shifted a whole 5.3 metres (17 ft) east and its land sank 1.2 metres (4 ft).
In contrast to the generally traumatic and negative images so far, one video emerged showing the crew of a Japanese coastguard vessel successfully riding a massive wave by turning the bow directly at the wall of waters.
The quake and ensuing 10-metre high tsunami devastated Japan's north east coastal region, wiping towns off the map and making more than 360,000 people homeless in a test for the Asian nation's reputation for resilience and social cohesion.
Food, water, medicine and fuel are short in some parts, and low temperatures during Japan's winter are not helping.
The traumatic hunt for bodies and missing people continues.
'This morning my next door neighbour came crying to me that she still can't find her husband. All I could tell her was, 'We'll do our best, so just hold on a little longer,' said fire brigade officer Takao Sato in the disaster zone.
About 257,000 households in the north still have no electricity and at least one million lack running water.
Japan's crisis spooked markets, prompted a rare intervention by the G7 group of rich nations to stabilize the yen on Friday , and may disrupt supplies to auto and technology markets.
Automaker General Motors Co said it was suspending all nonessential spending and global travel, plus freezing production at a plant in Spain and cancelling two shifts in Germany while it assessed the impact of the Japan crisis.
(Additional reporting by Elaine Lies, Tomasz Janowski in Tokyo, and Yoko Kubota and Chang-ran Kim in Rikuzentakata; Gleb Bryanski in Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk, Russia; Eileen O'Grady in Houston; Fredrik Dahl and Sylvia Westall in Vienna; Suzanne Cosgrove in Chicago; Writing by Andrew Cawthorne. Editing by Jeremy Laurence) Keywords: JAPAN/ (Email: andrew.cawthorne@thomsonreuters.com) COPYRIGHT Copyright Thomson Reuters 2011. All rights reserved. The copying, republication or redistribution of Reuters News Content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Thomson Reuters.