Fukushima: They Knew
16 August 12
"Completely and Utterly Fail in an Earthquake" The Fukushima story you didn't hear on CNN
've seen a lot of sick stuff in my career, but this was sick on a new level.
Memos revealed that Japanese officials knew the plant could not stand up to an earthquake. (photo: AP)
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Wiesel was very upset. He seemed very nervous. Very
agitated. . . . In fact, the plant was riddled with problems that, no
way on earth, could stand an earth- quake. The team of engineers sent in
to inspect found that most of these components could "completely and
utterly fail" during an earthquake.
"Utterly fail during an earthquake." And here in Japan was the quake and here is the utter failure.
The warning was in what the investigations team called
The Notebook, which I'm not supposed to have. Good thing I've kept a
copy anyway, because the file cabinets went down with my office building
....
WORLD TRADE CENTER TOWER 1, FIFTY-SECOND FLOOR NEW YORK, 1986
Two senior nuclear plant engineers were spilling out
their souls and files on our huge conference table, blowing away my
government investigations team with the inside stuff about the
construction of the Shoreham, New York, power station.
The meeting was secret. Very secret. Their courage
could destroy their careers: No engineering firm wants to hire a snitch,
even one who has saved thousands of lives. They could lose their jobs;
they could lose everything. They did. That’s what happens. Have a nice
day.
On March 12 this year, as I watched Fukushima melt, I
knew: the "SQ" had been faked. Anderson Cooper said it would all be
OK. He'd flown to Japan, to suck up the radiation and official company
bullshit. The horror show was not the fault of Tokyo Electric, he said,
because the plant was built to withstand only an 8.0 earthquake on the
Richter scale, and this was 9.0. Anderson must have been in the gym
when they handed out the facts. The 9.0 shake was in the middle of the
Pacific Ocean, 90 miles away. It was barely a tenth of that power at
Fukushima.
I was ready to vomit. Because I knew who had designed
the plant, who had built it and whom Tokyo Electric Power was having
rebuild it: Shaw Construction. The latest alias of Stone &
Webster, the designated builder for every one of the four new nuclear
plants that the Obama Administration has approved for billions in
federal studies.
But I had The Notebook, the diaries of the earthquake
inspector for the company. I'd squirreled it out sometime before the
Trade Center went down. I shouldn't have done that. Too bad.
All field engineers keep a diary. Gordon Dick, a
supervisor, wasn’t sup- posed to show his to us. I asked him to show it
to us and, reluctantly, he directed me to these notes about the “SQ”
tests.
SQ is nuclear-speak for “Seismic Qualification.” A
seismically qualified nuclear plant won’t melt down if you shake it. A
“seismic event” can be an earthquake or a Christmas present from Al
Qaeda. You can’t run a nuclear reactor in the USA or Europe or Japan
without certified SQ.
This much is clear from his notebook: This nuclear
plant will melt down in an earthquake. The plant dismally failed to meet
the Seismic I (shaking) standards required by U.S. and international
rules.
Here’s what we learned: Dick’s subordinate at the
nuclear plant, Robert Wiesel, conducted the standard seismic review.
Wiesel flunked his company. No good. Dick then ordered Wiesel to change
his report to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, change it from failed
to passed. Dick didn’t want to make Wiesel do it, but Dick was under the
gun himself, acting on direct command from corporate chiefs. From The
Notebook:
Wiesel was very upset. He seemed very nervous. Very agitated. [He said,] “I believe these are bad results and I believe it’s reportable,” and then he took the volume of federal regulations from the shelf and went to section 50.55(e), which describes reportable deficiencies at a nuclear plant and [they] read the section together, with Wiesel pointing to the appropriate paragraphs that federal law clearly required [them and the company] to report the Category II, Seismic I deficiencies.
Wiesel then expressed his concern that he was afraid that if he [Wiesel] reported the deficiencies, he would be fired, but that if he didn’t report the deficiencies, he would be breaking a federal law. . . .
The law is clear. It is a crime not to report a safety
failure. I could imagine Wiesel standing there with that big, thick
rule book in his hands, The Law. It must have been heavy. So was his
paycheck. He weighed the choices: Break the law, possibly a jail-time
crime, or keep his job.
What did Wiesel do? What would you do?
Why the hell would his company make this man walk the
line? Why did they put the gun to his head, to make him conceal mortal
danger? It was the money. It’s always the money. Fixing the seismic
problem would have cost the plant’s owner half a billion dollars easy. A
guy from corporate told Dick, “Bob is a good man. He’ll do what’s
right. Don’t worry about Bob.”
That is, they thought Bob would save his job and career rather than rat out the company to the feds.
But I think we should all worry about Bob. The company
he worked for, Stone & Webster Engineering, built or designed about
a third of the nuclear plants in the United States.
From the fifty-second floor we could look at the Statue of Liberty. She didn’t look back.
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