Japan Earthquake (1 Viewer)

It seems that reporting from australia is more knee jerk than here in the UK I think the BBC has been very factual (based on the loose fact we know) and have played down the sensational. Perhaps, OZ are nearer and their reporters are panicking more???

I think when its bandied around about what is a safe level of radiation I air on the side that none is the safest level. Its the reason when you get an x-ray at hospital the radiologists are behind a screen and wrapped in protective clothing as exposure to even low levels is dangerous.

Anyone who spouts out how safe it is or, that levels are low and non harmful to humans let them move their family to Fukishima or near Chernobyl then, I will see how safe it really is.

Mitch
 
Traces of radiation now reaching California but at supposedly non-dangerous levels. Here's hoping all those people panic buying the iodine pills don't go off the deep end and take them. I don't think that the Japanese are even taking them. -- Al
 
Radiation levels above legal limit in spinach and milk on farms near nuclear plants.
Mark
 
Mitch,
I think the paper press in particular has a problem covering this story. Editors want stories to fill their pages. Those on the ground in Japan can report what they see and hear so that is relatively easy to put together something.

From what I can see in the two daily Aussie papers I read there are many many journalists and commentators writing about the events. Some would be being paid on a per word basis. If they have not been to Japan or a press conference then where do they get their information ? Often it is Proffessor so and so from the Uni of Blah Blah. The number of nuclear experts in Australia seems to be quite high considering there is not one nuclear power station in the country. Other sources are the internet and previous stories about nuclear power events etc. With all these writers competing to get their copy printed (and get paid for it) it is not surprising some sensational stuff gets in the papers. The UK Daily Mail has been mentioned over here as having some over the top articles although I have not read them.

TV News programmes also have a similar problem in providing content on a daily basis.
I don't think Australia would be any different from other countries in this respect.

Regards
Brett
 
.........The number of nuclear experts in Australia seems to be quite high considering there is not one nuclear power station in the country........ Brett

No nuclear power stations but for our international friends we do have 1 nuclear reactor for research purposes at Lucas Heights about 30 kilometres south of Sydney CBD.

Rated by our intelligence community as a prime terrorist target, Greenpeace had no problems breaching security and hanging banners in 2001. Hope security is tighter today:

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I had not heard about this but, thats quite scary considering. Must have been some red faces at the security meeting after that.
Mitch

No nuclear power stations but for our international friends we do have 1 nuclear reactor for research purposes at Lucas Heights about 30 kilometres south of Sydney CBD.

Rated by our intelligence community as a prime terrorist target, Greenpeace had no problems breaching security and hanging banners in 2001. Hope security is tighter today:

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Interesting article from Time (link to the entire article): http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,2059453,00.html?hpt=Sbin

The chaos at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant — explosions, fires, ruptures — has not shaken the bipartisan support in partisan Washington for the U.S.'s so-called nuclear renaissance. Republicans have dismissed Japan's crisis as a once-in-a-lifetime fluke. President Obama has defended atomic energy as a carbon-free source of power, resisting calls to halt the renaissance and freeze construction of the U.S.'s first new reactors in over three decades.

But there is no renaissance.

Even before the earthquake-tsunami one-two punch, the endlessly hyped U.S. nuclear revival was stumbling, pummeled by skyrocketing costs, stagnant demand and skittish investors, not to mention the defeat of restrictions on carbon that could have mitigated nuclear energy's economic insanity. Obama has offered unprecedented aid to an industry that already enjoyed cradle-to-grave subsidies, and the antispending GOP has clamored for even more largesse. But Wall Street hates nukes as much as K Street loves them, which is why there's no new reactor construction to freeze. Once hailed as "too cheap to meter," nuclear fission turns out to be an outlandishly expensive method of generating juice for our Xboxes. (See pictures of an aging nuclear plant.)

Since 2008, proposed reactors have been quietly scrapped or suspended in at least nine states — not by safety concerns or hippie sit-ins but by financial realities. Other projects have been delayed as cost estimates have tripled toward $10 billion a reactor, and ratings agencies have downgraded utilities with atomic ambitions. Nuclear Energy Institute vice president Richard Myers notes that the "unrealistic" renaissance hype has come from the industry's friends, not the industry itself. "Even before this happened, short-term market conditions were bleak," he tells TIME.

Around the world, governments (led by China, with Russia a distant second) are financing 65 new reactors through more explicit nuclear socialism. But private capital still considers atomic energy radioactive, gravitating instead toward natural gas and renewables, whose costs are dropping fast. Nuclear power is expanding only in places where taxpayers and ratepayers can be compelled to foot the bill. (See pictures of the worst nuclear disasters.)

In fact, the economic and safety problems associated with nuclear energy are not unrelated. Trying to avoid flukes like Fukushima Daiichi is remarkably costly. And trying to avoid those costs can lead to flukes.
 
It seems that reporting from australia is more knee jerk than here in the UK

Please Mitch, there's a good reason for that. The bushland near my place is full of giant radioactive mice! :confused:

Ummm whoops sorry. I've just been told that they were actually Kangaroos. :redface2: :D
 
Ha Ha Ha!!!!
Mitch

Please Mitch, there's a good reason for that. The bushland near my place is full of giant radioactive mice! :confused:

Ummm whoops sorry. I've just been told that they were actually Kangaroos. :redface2: :D
 
How do those things taste and can they really wear boxing gloves?
 
How do those things taste and can they really wear boxing gloves?
I had Kangaroo last night Scott and although their meat does taste a bit leathery I must admit that prior to cooking I neglected to remove the gloves. :wink2:
 
How do those things taste and can they really wear boxing gloves?

Mate they don't need to wear gloves when they get upset look out,but they only get angry after they have had a beer or 2 can't handle the grog............^&grin
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Crikey! I really hi-jacked this thread didn't I!

If the Seabrook plant ever blows, Ispwich Bay will see......

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