Japan sends robots in to stricken nuclear plant
TOKYO (AP) — Nuclear safety officials say the first radiation measurements taken inside two reactor buildings at Japan’s crisis-stricken nuclear plant show a harsh environment but not one that will be impossible for humans to work in.
Nuclear safety agency official Hidehiko Nishiyama said Monday the measurements taken by two robots sent in to units 1 and 3 of the tsunami-wrecked Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant mean that workers trying to restore plant systems will only be able to stay for short intervals inside the reactor buildings.
He said the radiation would not delay progress toward achieving a cold shutdown of the plant within nine months.
READ MORE
- Its Bondee time, the new Singapore-based ‘virtual plaza’ powered by AWS
- Hacking hackers: Here’s how the FBI took down the Hive ransomware group
- Here’s how APAC organizations are embracing cloud computing benefits
- Used smartphones are outselling new models, with half a billion shipments expected in three years
- Observing data privacy day: The importance of protecting personal information in the digital age