In Japan, the situation is really horrible. As people in the world know, some nuclear power plants had been made dangerous by the 3.11 earthquake in Japan. Most Japanese people are educated by the government and Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO) that such power plants are really safe. Though, they have said "It was too heavy". "What? What did you say?" I want to say to them. Normally, such big earthquakes are going to occur in Japan because all our islands stand on some active fault zones which usually become the cause of that on a cycle which is about from a half of century to a century. It is very important point. TEPCO usually said "We have prepared for such a bigone" but it hadn't come under review before the big earthquake came. If you look at the earthquake mechanism, if it hasn'tcome, it means the zones have more built-up energy. So, if the time goes by many years, the estimation must become under review fundamentally that it will be completely safe.
As you can guess, they didn't consider it more likely when they constructed some plants on dangerous place. Why do they have such a unintelligent mind, I can't understand. The company is one of neglectful aggregation because they don't have any competitor since the company was founded.
These plants were built 40 years ago, it sounds too OLD, doesn't it? Our technology has increased since the time and also the zones have had a huge energy build-up day by day.
Why couldn't you expect it? You aren't a professional? If a child could study about an earthquake's mechanism, maybe they would recognize that "We should imagine the big one coming because that still hasn't come." It's easy, I think.
We are still battling now against the crisis, but we should consider about other plants. One of these, called "Hamaoka Nuclear Plant" , is in a very dangerous location more so than "Fukushima" and it is nearby Tokyo which is the mostimportant city in Japan.
What can we do to stop the plant? We might need other countries' help. It's our shame about the politics.
This article was helped by lang-8 users.
No comments:
Post a Comment