Of
                                    all the places in all the world where no one in their right mind would build scores of nuclear power plants, Japan would be
                                    pretty near the top of the list.
  | 
| An aerial view of the Hamaoka plant in Shizuoka Prefecture, "the
                                    most dangerous nuclear power plant in Japan"  | 
The Japanese archipelago is located on the so-called Pacific Rim of Fire, a large
                                    active volcanic and tectonic zone ringing North and South America, Asia and island arcs in Southeast Asia. The major earthquakes
                                    and active volcanoes occurring there are caused by the westward movement of the Pacific tectonic plate and other plates leading
                                    to subduction under Asia.
Japan sits on top of four tectonic plates,
                                    at the edge of the subduction zone, and is in one of the most tectonically active regions of the world. It was extreme pressures
                                    and temperatures, resulting from the violent plate movements beneath the seafloor, that created the beautiful islands and
                                    volcanoes of Japan.
Nonetheless, like many countries around the
                                    world -- where General Electric and Westinghouse designs are used in 85 percent of all commercial reactors -- Japan has turned
                                    to nuclear power as a major energy source. In fact the three top nuclear-energy countries are the United States, where the
                                    existence of 118 reactors was acknowledged by the Department of Energy in 2000, France with 72 and Japan, where 52 active
                                    reactors were cited in a December 2003 Cabinet White Paper.
The
                                    52 reactors in Japan -- which generate a little over 30 percent of its electricity -- are located in an area the size of California,
                                    many within 150 km of each other and almost all built along the coast where seawater is available to cool them.
However, many of those reactors have been negligently sited on active faults,
                                    particularly in the subduction zone along the Pacific coast, where major earthquakes of magnitude 7-8 or more on the Richter
                                    scale occur frequently. The periodicity of major earthquakes in Japan is less than 10 years. There is almost no geologic setting
                                    in the world more dangerous for nuclear power than Japan -- the third-ranked country in the world for nuclear reactors.
"I think the situation right now is very scary," says Katsuhiko Ishibashi,
                                    a seismologist and professor at Kobe University. "It's like a kamikaze terrorist wrapped in bombs just waiting to
                                    explode."
Last summer, I visited Hamaoka nuclear power plant
                                    in Shizuoka Prefecture, at the request of citizens concerned about the danger of a major earthquake. I spoke about my findings
                                    at press conferences afterward. 
  | 
| A map of Japan annotated by the author, showing the tectonic plates,
                                    areas of high ("observed region") and very high ("specially observed") quake risk, and the sites of nuclear
                                    reactors  | 
Because
                                    Hamaoka sits directly over the subduction zone near the junction of two plates, and is overdue for a major earthquake, it
                                    is considered to be the most dangerous nuclear power plant in Japan.
Together
                                    with local citizens, I spent the day walking around the facility, collecting rocks, studying the soft sediments it sits on
                                    and tracing the nearly vertical faults through the area -- evidence of violent tectonic movements.
The next day I was surprised to see so many reporters attending the two press conferences held at
                                    Kakegawa City Hall and Shizuoka Prefecture Hall. When I asked the reporters why they had come so far from Tokyo to hear an
                                    American geoscientist, I was told it was because no foreigner had ever come to tell them how dangerous Japan's nuclear
                                    power plants are.
I told them that this is the power of gaiatsu
                                    (foreign pressure), and because citizens in the United States with similar concerns attract little media attention, we invite
                                    a Japanese to speak for us when we want media coverage -- someone like the famous seismologist Professor Ishibashi!
When the geologic evidence was presented confirming the extreme danger at Hamaoka,
                                    the attending media were obviously shocked. The aerial map, filed by Chubu Electric Company along with its government application
                                    to build and operate the plant, showed major faults going through Hamaoka, and revealed that the company recognized the danger
                                    of an earthquake. They had carefully placed each reactor between major fault lines.
"The structures of the nuclear plant are directly rooted in the rock bed and can tolerate a quake of
                                    magnitude 8.5 on the Richter scale," the utility claimed on its Web site.
From
                                    my research and the investigation I conducted of the rocks in the area, I found that that the sedimentary beds underlying
                                    the plant were badly faulted. Some tiny faults I located were less than 1 cm apart.
When I held up samples of the rocks the plant was sitting on, they crumbled like sugar in my fingers. "But
                                    the power company told us these were really solid rocks!" the reporters said. I asked, "Do you think these are really
                                    solid?' and they started laughing.
On July 7 last year, the
                                    same day of my visit to Hamaoka, Ishibashi warned of the danger of an earthquake-induced nuclear disaster, not only to Japan
                                    but globally, at an International Union of Geodesy and Geophysics conference held in Sapporo. He said: "The seismic designs
                                    of nuclear facilities are based on standards that are too old from the viewpoint of modern seismology and are insufficient.
                                    The authorities must admit the possibility that an earthquake-nuclear disaster could happen and weigh the risks objectively."
After the greatest nuclear power plant disaster in Japan's history at Tokai,
                                    Ibaraki Prefecture, in September 1999, large, expensive Emergency Response Centers were built near nuclear power plants to
                                    calm nearby residents. 
After visiting the center a few kilometers
                                    from Hamaoka, I realized that Japan has no real nuclear-disaster plan in the event that an earthquake damaged a reactor's
                                    water-cooling system and triggered a reactor meltdown.
Additionally,
                                    but not even mentioned by ERC officials, there is an extreme danger of an earthquake causing a loss of water coolant in the
                                    pools where spent fuel rods are kept. As reported last year in the journal Science and Global Security, based on a 2001 study
                                    by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, if the heat-removing function of those pools is seriously compromised -- by, for
                                    example, the water in them draining out -- and the fuel rods heat up enough to combust, the radiation inside them will then
                                    be released into the atmosphere. This may create a nuclear disaster even greater than Chernobyl.
If a nuclear disaster occurred, power-plant workers as well as emergency-response personnel in the
                                    Hamaoka ERC would immediately be exposed to lethal radiation. During my visit, ERC engineers showed us a tiny shower at the
                                    center, which they said would be used for "decontamination' of personnel. However, it would be useless for internally
                                    exposed emergency-response workers who inhaled radiation.
When I
                                    asked ERC officials how they planned to evacuate millions of people from Shizuoka Prefecture and beyond after a Kobe-magnitude
                                    earthquake (Kobe is on the same subduction zone as Hamaoka) destroyed communication lines, roads, railroads, drinking-water
                                    supplies and sewage lines, they had no answer.
Last year, James
                                    Lee Witt, former director of the U.S. Federal Emergency Management Agency, was hired by New York citizens to assess the U.S.
                                    government's emergency-response plan for a nuclear power plant disaster. Citizens were shocked to learn that there was
                                    no government plan adequate to respond to a disaster at the Indian Point nuclear reactor, just 80 km from New York City.
The Japanese government is no better prepared, because there is no adequate response
                                    possible to contain or deal with such a disaster. Prevention is really the only effective measure to consider.
In 1998, Kei Sugaoka, 51, a Japanese-American senior field engineer who worked
                                    for General Electric in the United States from 1980 until being dismissed in 1998 for whistle-blowing there, alerted Japanese
                                    nuclear regulators to a 1989 reactor inspection problem he claimed had been withheld by GE from their customer, Tokyo Electric
                                    Power Company. This led to nuclear-plant shutdowns and reforms of Japan's power industry.
Later it was revealed from GE documents that they had in fact informed TEPCO -- but that company
                                    did not notify government regulators of the hazards. 
Yoichi Kikuchi,
                                    a Japanese nuclear engineer who also became a whistle-blower, has told me personally of many safety problems at Japan's
                                    nuclear power plants, such as cracks in pipes in the cooling system from vibrations in the reactor. He said the electric companies
                                    are "gambling in a dangerous game to increase profits and decrease government oversight." 
Sugaoka agreed, saying, "The scariest thing, on top of all the other problems, is that all nuclear
                                    power plants are aging, causing a deterioration of piping and joints which are always exposed to strong radiation and heat."
Like most whistle-blowers, Sugaoka and Kikuchi are citizen heroes, but are now
                                    unemployed. 
The Radiation and Public Health Project, a group of
                                    independent U.S. scientists, has collected 4,000 baby teeth from children living around nuclear power plants. These teeth
                                    were then tested to determine their level of Strontium-90, a radioactive fission product that escapes in nuclear power plant
                                    emissions.
Unborn children may be exposed to Strontium-90 through
                                    drinking water and the diet of the mother. Anyone living near nuclear power plants is internally exposed to chronically low
                                    levels of radiation contaminating food and drinking water. Increased rates of cancer, infant mortality and low birth weights
                                    leading to cognitive impairment have been linked to radiation exposure for decades. 
However, a recent independent report on low-level radiation by the European Committee on Radiation Risk, released
                                    for the European Parliament in January 2003, established that the ongoing U.S. Atomic and Hydrogen Bomb Studies conducted
                                    in Japan by the U.S. government since 1945 on Hiroshima and Nagasaki survivors underestimated the risk of radiation exposure
                                    as much as 1,000 times. 
Additionally, on March 26 this year --
                                    the eve of the 25th anniversary of the worst nuclear disaster in U.S. history, at the Three Mile Island plant in Pennsylvania
                                    -- the Radiation and Public Health Project released new data on the effects of that event. This showed rises in infant deaths
                                    up to 53 percent, and in thyroid cancer of more than 70 percent in downwind counties -- data which, like all that concerning
                                    both the short- and long-term health effects, has never been forthcoming from the U.S. government.
It is not a question of whether or not a nuclear disaster will occur in Japan; it is a question of
                                    when it will occur.
Like the former Soviet Union after
                                    Chernobyl, Japan will become a country suffering from radiation sickness destroying future generations, and widespread contamination
                                    of agricultural areas will ensure a public-health disaster. Its economy may never recover.
Considering the extreme danger of major earthquakes, the many serious safety and waste-disposal issues,
                                    it is timely and urgent -- with about half its reactors currently shut down -- for Japan to convert nuclear power plants to
                                    fossil fuels such as natural gas. This process is less expensive than building new power plants and, with political and other
                                    hurdles overcome, natural gas from the huge Siberian reserves could be piped in at relatively low cost. Several U.S. nuclear
                                    plants have been converted to natural gas after citizen pressure forced energy companies to make changeovers.
Commenting on this way out of the nuclear trap, Ernest Sternglass, a renowned
                                    U.S. scientist who helped to stop atmospheric testing in America, notes that, 'Most recently the Fort St. Vrain reactor
                                    in Colorado was converted to fossil fuel, actually natural gas, after repeated problems with the reactor. An earlier reactor
                                    was the Zimmer Power Plant in Cincinnati, which was originally designed as a nuclear plant but it was converted to natural
                                    gas before it began operating. This conversion can be done on any plant at a small fraction [20-30 percent] of the cost of
                                    building a new plant. Existing turbines, transmission facilities and land can be used."
After converting to natural gas, the Fort St. Vrain plant produced twice as much electricity much
                                    more efficiently and cheaply than from nuclear energy -- with no nuclear hazard at all, of course.
It is time to make the changeover from nuclear fuel to fossil fuels in order to save future generations
                                    and the economy of Japan.