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  • 12
    Nov
    2011
    4:28pm, EST

    Outside the Frame: Rare chance to see inside Fukushima, Japan's crippled nuke plant

    David Guttenfelder / AP

    Workers in protective suits gather near their lockers inside the emergency operation center at the crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in Fukushima prefecture, Nov. 12. Members of the media were allowed into the plant on Saturday for the first time since the March 11 tsunami and earthquake triggered the world's worst nuclear crisis since Chernobyl.

    Photographer David Guttenfelder writes:

    Today was a very rare chance to see inside the grounds of Fukushima's Dai-ichi nuclear power plant. It was the first time that the media was allowed access to the site since March, when the earthquake and tsunami triggered explosions and the reactors began to melt down.

    A group of about 50 or more journalists was allowed to go in Saturday. I was the only non-Japanese photographer. We had to put on white haz-mat protective suits, two pairs of gloves, double layers of thick white plastic booties over our shoes, a head cover and a full respirator mask. Officials covered my cameras with plastic bags. I wasn't going to be able to change the settings on my cameras, change the batteries and memory cards, or switch lenses once the bags were sealed shut.

    We boarded two buses and drove past a police checkpoint and into the "exclusion zone"— a 20-kilometer-radius contaminated no-man's land surrounding the destroyed power plant. Everything looks like a ghost town inside the zone. Earthquake rubble still lies in piles. Vending machines sit idle. We saw a pachinko pinball parlor with its front wall caved in. Overgrown weeds and creeping grasses have begun to reclaim abandoned parking lots and sidewalks. Stray cows, dogs and cats still wandered around and crows picked through garbage. The radiation meters showed between 1 and 7 microsieverts here.

    Guards in protective suits checked our buses and waved us through the gate of Dai-ichi. Almost immediately I could see the stacks and ravaged exterior of one of the units. From a distance we stopped the bus and photographed the plant. Japanese TV correspondents did their "stand-ups" wearing the full spacesuits from inside the bus. Then we drove remarkably close to the reactors.

    The buses moved along a narrow street tightly squeezed between the outer wall of the building units and the sea. We were only about 20 yards from the plant wall. The place is devastated. Walls are sheared away. Overturned vehicles and twisted steel beams lie upside down in huge earthquake craters. Abandoned pump trucks, used in early efforts to cool the site, sit idle. Dozens of hoses snake across the ground and through open doors or ruptures in the walls. Everywhere, there are pools of water. Elsewhere on the grounds there were dozens of busy workers. But next to the reactors, there are no signs of life. The radiation meters showed 300 microsieverts even inside the bus.

    It wasn't that easy to photogaph. We were not allowed to get out of the bus which kept moving. We probably had about 3 minutes in total to shoot while the bus rolled past, close to the plant. In fact, we were so close to the plant that my widest lens could only make a full frame of nothing but twisted debris.

    We also visited an emergency operation center near the reactors. I think this place was actually more interesting than seeing the damaged reactor itself because it was here that I found the people. Inside was a giant planning room. On the walls were monitors showing live video feeds on flat screen TVs. Men in white suits and masks typed on computers and added figures on desk calculators. Workers rested on the floor against their lockers. Everyone looked a bit weary to me. 

    I think everyone is wondering, "Who are these people who go to the plant each day to make a living and, on behalf of the country, to battle the worst nuclear disaster since Chernobyl?"  

    Read more here.

    David Guttenfelder / AP

    The crippled Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power station is seen through a bus window in Okuma on Nov. 12. Japan took a group of journalists inside the crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant for the first time, stepping up its efforts to prove to the world it is on top of the disaster.

    David Guttenfelder / AP

    Officials from the Tokyo Electric Power Co. and Japanese journalists pass by a newly built sea barricade next to the crippled Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power station in Okuma, Japan, Nov. 12. Media allowed into Japan's tsunami-damaged nuclear power plant for the first time Saturday saw a striking scene of devastation: twisted and overturned vehicles, crumbling reactor buildings and piles of rubble virtually untouched since the wave struck more than eight months ago.

    David Guttenfelder / AP

    The crippled Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power station is seen through a bus window in Okuma, Japan, Nov. 12.

    David Guttenfelder / AP

    A deserted street inside the contaminated exclusion zone around the crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant is seen from bus windows in Fukushima prefecture, Nov. 12. Conditions at Japan's wrecked Fukushima nuclear power plant, devastated by a tsunami in March, were slowly improving to the point where a "cold shutdown" would be possible as planned, officials said on Saturday during a tour of the facility.

    David Guttenfelder / AP

    A worker carries his belongings as he walks among the temporary housing structures erected for workers at J-Village, a soccer training complex now serving as an operation base for those battling Japan's nuclear disaster, near Tokyo Electric Power Co. (TEPCO)'s tsunami-crippled Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant in Fukushima prefecture Nov. 11, eight months after the disaster.

    David Guttenfelder / AP

    A man dresses in a room where workers leave their clothing before putting on protective suits at J-Village, Nov. 11. Japan's lower house approved a 156 billion USD draft budget to finance post quake reconstruction and boost an economy hit by slow global growth and a strong yen.

    David Guttenfelder / AP

    A worker, left, steps from a radiation screening machine after removing and discarding his protective suit as he arrives at J-Village, Nov. 11.

    David Guttenfelder / AP

    Men sort and clean protective masks at J-Village, Nov. 11.

    David Guttenfelder / AP

    An employee of Tokyo Electric Power Co. looks at piles of used protective clothing that was worn by workers inside the contaminated "exclusion zone," and later will be placed inside containers at J-Village.

    25 comments

    wow. I think thats all there is to say.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: japan, earthquake, nuclear, tsunami, world-news, featured, fukushima, david-guttenfelder, outside-the-frame
  • 12
    Sep
    2011
    1:03am, EDT

    Athit Perawongmetha / Getty Images

    People cry as they observe a minute of silence at 2:46 p.m., the time that the 9.0-magnitude earthquake hit six months ago, as they commemorate the victims of the March 11 earthquake and tsunami on September 11, in Minamisanriku, Miyagi Prefecture, Japan. The earthquake triggered a tsunami wave of up to ten meters which engulfed large parts of north-eastern Japan and also damaged the Fukushima nuclear plant, causing the worst nuclear crisis in decades. The current number of dead and missing is reportedly estimated to be 22,900.

    Japan marks six months since earthquake, tsunami

    Read more here.

    Comment

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  • 25
    Apr
    2011
    2:04pm, EDT

    Anti-nuclear protesters demonstrate in Germany on eve of Chernobyl disaster anniversary

    David Ebener / AFP - Getty Images

    Anti-nuclear protesters march towards the Grafenrheinfeld nuclear power plant near the southern German city of Bergrheinfeld on Monday, April 25. Several Easter Monday protests took place throughout the country on the eve of the 25th anniversary of the Chernobyl disaster and after Japan's nuclear accident at Fukushima.

    Peter Steffen / EPA

    Anti-nuclear activists sit in front of a nuclear power plant during an Easter protest march in Grohnde, Germany, on Monday. Tomorrow, April 26, 2011, marks the 25th anniversary of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster - a date that sparks anti-nuclear protests all over Germany.

    Ingo Wagner / AFP - Getty Images

    Anti-nuclear protesters take part in a march near in the northern German city of Kleinensiel on Monday.

    For more on the anti-nuclear protests in Europe click here. See Chernobyl-related images on PhotoBlog here.

    2 comments

    ALERT Albacore Tuna will migrate from the radioactive waters of Japan and arrive in Northern California by mid summer of this year 2011. If you have children who eat Tuna fish or who may be visiting a friend’s house where it could be served you need to inform yourself of the health risks invo …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: germany, nuclear, protest, demonstration, world-news, chernobyl
  • 19
    Apr
    2011
    1:39pm, EDT

    Images of a French nuclear power plant are stark contrast to destroyed plant in Japan

    Benoit Tessier / Reuters

    A technician inspects the blades of a turbine during a planned maintenance intervention at the Bugey nuclear power plant in Saint-Vulbas, near Lyon April 19, 2011. Electricite de France (EDF) runs the country's 58 nuclear reactors, which meet close to 80 percent of the country's power needs and which its rivals say give the state-owned company a competitive advantage.

    Benoit Tessier / Reuters

    A technician monitors power output in the control room at the operating nuclear power plant at the Bugey nuclear power.

    Benoit Tessier / Reuters

    A technician works above the basin holding nuclear fuel elements at the Bugey nuclear power plant.

    Benoit Tessier / Reuters

    Technicians monitor the MIS (Inspection Machine in Service) robot which inspects inside the reactor's tank during programmed servicing and maintenance at the Bugey nuclear power plant.

    Benoit Tessier / Reuters

    Technicians work near a turbine during a planned maintenance intervention at the Bugey nuclear power plant.

    By Meredith Birkett

    While these images from the Bugey nuclear power plant in France have the usual trappings of a public relations tour, I find it interesting to see a pristine, functioning plant after these weeks of looking at images from the partial meltdowns occurring at the Fukushima nuclear power plants following Japan's devastating tsunami in March.

    Compare these images to ones taken at the destroyed site on March 17.

    Read about the latest attempts to avert a larger nuclear disaster at those plants.

    1 comment

    About the type and find of photographic views I come to expect from a dog-and-pony show tour. Bring the wife and kiddies to see where daddy and mommie works. The way things are 99.999% of the time.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: nuclear, power
  • 8
    Apr
    2011
    7:43pm, EDT

    World's largest concrete pumps fly to Japan

    By Jim Seida

    Erik S. Lesser / AFP - Getty Images

    A Putzmeister concrete pumper is loaded onto a Russian Antonov AN-124 cargo airplane at Hartsfield Jackson Atlanta International Airport on April 8, in Atlanta, Georgia.

    Two of the world's largest concrete pumps were loaded onto Russian cargo jets at American airports headed for Japan.  The Putzmeister America pumps have been retrofitted to to pour water on a Japanese nuclear power plant stricken by an earthquake and tsunami. 

    Erik S. Lesser / AFP - Getty Images

    The 95-ton pumper will be delivered to Japan to assist in the cooling down efforts of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant.

    AP says: The 190,000-pound pump designed by Wisconsin-based Putzmeister America Inc. comes mounted on a 26-wheel truck. Its extendable boom can reach more than 200 feet, and can be operated two miles away by remote control, making it possible to shoot water into hard-to-reach places at the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant in Japan.

    If necessary, the pump could also entomb a damaged nuclear reactor in concrete. After a 1986 disaster, Putzmeister sent 11 pumps to pour concrete over parts of the Chernobyl nuclear plant in Ukraine.

    Nick Ut / AP

    Another Putzmeister is loaded onto a Russian Antonov An-124 cargo jet at the Los Angeles International Airport Friday.

    Moving such a large pump required hiring a Russian Antonov AN-124 cargo jet, one of the world's largest. After landing in Atlanta, the towering plane taxied to a stop near the truck. The plane's nose lifted, revealing a ramp that extended as if the aircraft had stuck out a green, metal tongue.

    Once the ramp was fully constructed, a driver steered the pump truck into the plane.

    That pump and another picked up at Los Angeles International Airport are scheduled to depart Saturday. Putzmeister America's parent company in Germany has already sent a smaller pump and plans to send another.

    The Japanese utility is picking up the cost of shipping the pumps to the region.

    Read the latest news from Japan here.  See a slideshow of images from Japan here.

    Comment

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    Explore related topics: japan, earthquake, nuclear, atlanta, radiation, world-news, putzmeister, concrete-pump
  • 8
    Apr
    2011
    4:19pm, EDT

    Hiro Komae / AP

    Kunio Shiga listens to a battery-powered radio in the living room of his home in Minami Soma, Fukushima prefecture, inside the deserted evacuation zone around the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear complex in northeastern Japan on Friday, April 8. The 75-year-old man had been stranded alone in his farmhouse ever since Japan's monstrous tsunami struck nearly a month ago.

    Man found stranded inside the evacuation zone near the Dai-ichi nuclear plant in Japan

    By Phaedra Singelis, NBC News

    When I saw this photo today, I couldn't believe it. Yesterday we saw photos of animals abandoned in the evacuation zone, but it must have been a surprise to find this man. More photos from Japan.

    AP reports: The farmhouse sits about 500 yards down a mud-caked one-lane road strewn with felled trees, the carcasses of pigs and debris from the March 11 tsunami. Sitting alone inside the cold, darkened home is 75-year-old Kunio Shiga. He cannot walk very far, his wife is missing and he is scared and disoriented. "You are the first people I have spoken to" since the tsunami, he tells the AP. Read the full story here.

    35 comments

    PVperson, EAT CRAP AND DIE you beast...

    Show more
    Explore related topics: japan, earthquake, nuclear, tsunami, natural-disater, evacuation-zone
  • 28
    Mar
    2011
    3:48pm, EDT

    Ghost town near Chernobyl still deserted after 25 years

    Vladimir Simicek / Isifa via Getty Images

    A ferris wheel remains abandoned in the empty town of Pripyat near the Chernobyl nuclear power plant on Friday, March 25, 2011, in Pripyat, Ukraine. The 25th anniversary of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster is next month. On April 26, 1986, a series of explosions destroyed Chernobyl's reactor No. 4 station causing a nuclear meltdown as firefighters tackled a blaze that burned for 10 days and sent a plume of radiation around the world in the worst-ever civil nuclear disaster.

    Isifa / Getty Images Contributor

    A house remains abandoned near the Chernobyl nuclear power plant on Friday in Pripyat.

    Vladimir Simicek / Isifa via Getty Images

    Personal articles are seen in the empty town of Pripyat near the Chernobyl nuclear power plant on Friday in Pripyat.

    Vladimir Simicek / Isifa via Getty Images

    A housing unit remains abandoned in the empty town of Pripyat near the Chernobyl nuclear power plant on Friday in Pripyat.

    Vladimir Simicek / Isifa via Getty Images

    Operating staff work at the control center of the 1st and 2nd nuclear reactor block in the Chernobyl nuclear power plant on Friday in Chernobyl, Ukraine.

    Full story here.

    3 comments

    It is an eerie place. I've been there several times.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: nuclear, anniversary, ukraine, disaster, world-news, chernobyl, wasteland
  • 25
    Mar
    2011
    4:04pm, EDT

    Nicholas A. Groesch / Reuters

    Sailors aboard the aircraft carrier USS Ronald Reagan conduct a counter-measure wash down on the flight deck to remove potential radiation contamination while operating off the coast of Japan while providing humanitarian assistance in support of Operation Tomodachi, March 22, 2011.

    Sailors aboard the USS Ronald Reagan wash the flight deck to safeguard against radiation during their humanitarian mission to Japan

    AP reports:
    ABOARD THE USS RONALD REAGAN — When U.S. Navy helicopters returned from a humanitarian mission on the first weekend following Japan's earthquake and tsunami, Lt. j.g. James Powell felt a slight unease.

    Powell, the radiation health officer aboard the USS Ronald Reagan, knew there was a chance the choppers could have been exposed to radiation from the damaged Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant as they ferried relief aid to northeastern Japan, and even though "the Japanese had told us we'd be fine," he still wanted to be sure.

    "I was kind of nervous about it," the 30-year-old nuclear engineer said. "So I said, 'Let's just go check them, just in case. ... Let's just go check it out.'"

    That was Sunday, March 13 — two days after the earthquake and tsunami had hit the coast and one day after the first explosion from the nuclear plant.

    Thus began three days of mostly sleepless nights for Powell as he and others worked to contain contamination to the $4.5 billion nuclear-powered aircraft carrier and calm the nerves of its crew of about 4,500.

    Powell's first examination showed a level of radiation on the nose of a helicopter 50 times higher than the ship's standard. Further checks showed that helicopter crew members themselves were coming in contaminated.

    "I'd never seen it on a nuclear-powered ship before, I'd never seen any skin contamination, never seen any sort of contamination anywhere that it wasn't supposed to be," Powell said Wednesday in an interview with The Associated Press on the deck of the carrier as sailors cleaned the expansive surface to try to strip it of any residual radioactivity.

    Click here to read the full story.

    Comment

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  • 23
    Mar
    2011
    11:31am, EDT

    The USS Ronald Reagan aircraft carrier gets washed to remove radioactive contamination

    Eugene Hoshiko / AP

    U.S. Navy crew members remove radioactive contamination from a fighter jet on the aircraft carrier USS Ronald Reagan (CVN76) Wednesday, March 23, in the Pacific Ocean off the Japanese coast after 10 days of rescue missions to transport supplies to survivors in an earthquake- and tsunami-devastated area.

    Eugene Hoshiko / AP

    The island on the deck is sprayed for radioactive decontamination aboard USS Ronald Reagan (CVN76) in the Pacific Ocean off the Japanese coast Wednesday, March 23. The carrier is off the Pacific coast of Japan to supply relief supplies to the people suffered from the March 11 earthquake and tsunami.

    Eugene Hoshiko / AP

    U.S. Navy crew members mop up the flight deck to remove radioactive contamination from the aircraft carrier USS Ronald Reagan (CVN76) Wednesday, March 23, in the Pacific Ocean off the Japanese coast after 10 days of rescue missions to transport supplies to survivors in an earthquake- and tsunami-devastated area.

    By John Makely, NBC News

     For the latest images of the recovery efforts in Japan click here.

    2 comments

    Yeah, but they look cold.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: earthquake, navy, nuclear, tsunami, radiation, uss-ronald-reagan, u-s-navy
  • 23
    Mar
    2011
    10:49am, EDT

    First look inside crippled Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant control room

    Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency via AP

    In this photo released by Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency, Tokyo Electric Power Co. workers collect data in the control room for Unit 1 and Unit 2 at the tsunami-crippled Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant in Okumamachi, Fukushima Prefecture, Japan, on Wednesday, March 23.

    Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency via AP

    In this photo released by Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency, Tokyo Electric Power Co. workers collect data in the control room for Unit 1 and Unit 2 at the tsunami-crippled Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant in Okumamachi, Fukushima Prefecture, Japan on Wednesday, March 23.

    Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency via AP

    In this photo released by Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency, a Tokyo Electric Power Co. worker looks at gauges in the control room for Unit 1 and Unit 2 at the tsunami-crippled Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant in Okumamachi, Fukushima Prefecture, Japan, Wednesday on March 23.

    By John Makely, NBC News

     I can't imagine the stress these workers are facing. 

    For the latest images on the story click here.

    12 comments

    If these pictures are not a reason to phase out nuclear reactors and seek clean and renewable alternative power sources, what will be? Candle

    Show more
    Explore related topics: japan, nuclear, world-news, fukushima-dai-ichi
  • 17
    Mar
    2011
    6:07pm, EDT

    New closer aerial views of wrecked reactor in Japan

    This handout image released from Tokyo Electric Power Co (TEPCO) on March 17, 2011 and received via JIJI Press on March 18, 2011 shows the damage to TEPCO's No.1 Fukushima nuclear power plant's fourth reactor building in the town of Okuma, Fubata district in Fukushima prefecture. The Japanese military has used trucks and helicopters to dump tonnes of water onto the quake-hit Fukushima nuclear plant in a bid to douse fuel rods and prevent a disastrous radiation release.

    Tokyo Electric Power / Reuters

    An aerial view taken from a helicopter from Japan's Self-Defence Force shows damage sustained to the No. 3 reactor at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power complex in this handout taken March 16, 2011 and released March 17. Japanese military helicopters and fire trucks poured water on the overheating nuclear facility on Thursday and the plant operator said electricity to part of the crippled complex could be restored in a desperate bid to avert catastrophe. The complex has been torn apart by four explosions since a 9.0-magnitude earthquake and tsunami hit last Friday.

    Tokyo Electric Power / Reuters

    An aerial view taken from a helicopter from Japan's Self-Defence Force shows damage sustained to the No. 4 reactor (C) at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power complex in this handout taken March 16, 2011 and released March 17.

    See more images of the unfolding disaster in Japan.

    8 comments

    @vkmo True, but the byproduct of nuclear energy is the most toxic substance known to man which also happens to remains dangerous to any lifeform for 100,000 years. Ill take my chances with hydro.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: japan, earthquake, nuclear, tsunami, reactor
  • 16
    Mar
    2011
    1:33pm, EDT

    Rare look inside a nuclear reactor

    By Phaedra Singelis, NBC News

    I don't think we'll see the inside of any of the stricken nuclear reactors in Japan anytime soon but if you're curious about what one looks like, LIFE posted a series of historical images from their extensive archives.

    Fritz Goro / Time & Life Pictures / Getty Images / LIFE

    Technicians watch the reactor dome being lowered into place by crane over the reactor pit which is still under construction in 1957 at the Shippingport Atomic Power Station in Pennsylvania.

    Al Penn / Time & Life Pictures/Getty Images / LIFE

    A control room in 1952 at a U.S. reactor.

    J.R. Eyerman / Time & Life Pictures / Getty Images / LIFE

    Technicians test a disc of irradiated plastic for hardness in 1954 at the Arco Breeder Reactor in Idaho.

    J.R. Eyerman / Time & Life Pictures / Getty Images / LIFE

    A universal coffin is used to remove test samples from a reactor at the Arco Breeder Reactor in Idaho.

    See more images from inside various nuclear plants on LIFE.com

    Comment

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Meredith Birkett

Meredith Birkett is a senior multimedia editor for special projects at MSNBC.com. In this role, Meredith works with freelancers, picture agencies, and staff multimedia journalists to produce multimedia projects across all sections of MSNBC.com.

Jim Seida

Jim Seida is a senior multimedia editor at msnbc.com. Fourteen years ago, he helped create multimedia storytelling for an online audience as one of the core group of multimedia producers at msnbc.com. He thrives on field work and telling stories about people with video, still and audio gear.

Phaedra Singelis

is a Supervising Producer at NBC News.com Previously she worked as an editor at the New York Times and the Washington Post in addition to working as a photojournalist at numerous newspapers.

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is a Senior Multimedia Producer for NBCNews.com in New York.

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