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This prescient article was published before the fire of 15 March 2011 which 
reportedly occurred in a spent fuel storage site. 

Source: JapanFocus http://japanfocus.org/events/view/51


Japan's Nuclear Crisis: Status of Spent Fuel at Exploded Reactor Buildings 
Unclear
Mar. 14, 2011:By John McGlynn -- The Institute for Energy and Environmental 
Research (IEER) is asking an  important question about Japan's nuclear crisis 
that seems to have been  ignored by the media and in announcements from the 
Japanese government  and Japan's nuclear power industry: What is happening with 
the spent  fuel pools located at the top of the buildings housing the Unit 1 
and  
Unit 3 reactors at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant facility?  Both 
reactor buildings have lost their upper structures due to  explosions possibly 
caused by a hydrogen gas build-up (Unit 1 on March  12, Unit 3 on March 14).
 
IEER writes in its analysis of the situation at the Daiichi nuclear  facility: 
"While Japanese authorities have stated that the reactor  vessel is still 
intact 
[editor's note: Here IEER refers to reactor #1  but the same applies to reactor 
#3], there has been no word regarding  the status of the spent fuel pool 
structure, except indirectly. Is it  still intact? This is a critical question 
as to the range of potential  consequences of the reactor accident."
 
The New York Times has a visual that indicates the location of the spent fuel 
pool near the top of the reactor vessel (here; see frame #3 of The Crippled 
Japanese Nuclear Reactors).
 
The full IEER analysis can be found here. 
 
This excerpt from the analysis highlights the dangerous implications  of any 
disruption of the spent fuel pools by the two reactor building  explosions:
 
"Both reactors [Units 1 and 3] are of the Mark 1 Boiling Water  Design. They do 
not have the sturdy secondary containment buildings of  concrete that is 
several 
feet thick typical of later reactor designs.
 
A special feature of the Mark 1 design is that the used fuel, also  called 
spent 
fuel, is stored within the reactor building in a swimming  pool like concrete 
structure near the top of the reactor vessel. When  the reactor is refueled, 
the 
spent fuel is taken from the reactor by a  large crane, transferred to the 
pool, 
and kept underwater for a few  years. This spent fuel must be kept underwater 
to 
prevent severe  releases of radioactivity, among other reasons. A meltdown or 
even a  fire could occur if there is a loss of coolant from the spent fuel 
pool.  
The water in the spent fuel pool and the roof of the reactor building  are the 
main barriers to release of radioactivity from the spent fuel  pool." 


      
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