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00:00:26日本国民は50年以上にわたり、
00:00:51原子力発電は安全で信頼すべきだと教えられてきました。原子力発電の安全神話を国民に浸透させるために、漫画でさえ利用されていました。みなさん、今日はプルトニウムの本当の話を聞いてください。決して恐ろしいものでも危険なものでもありません。
00:01:00これからずっと、長い間にわたって、過ぎることのないエネルギーをお送りする。頼りになるのこのメッセン。
00:01:12しかし、2011年3月11日の午後、それはすべて変わりました。
00:01:41一つの大きなエネルギーを撮影することができました。
00:02:11大きなエネルギーを撮影することができました。このようなエネルギーを撮影することができました。
00:02:35最小限に抑えるため、政府として総力を上げて取り組んでまいります。私たちはこの惨事を止めるということを託されました。失敗すれば日本が存在しなくなるとも言われました。
00:02:54しかし、50ブレイブ勤務員は、プランティーを撮影することができました。私たちは、全国の戦争に危険することができます。失敗は許されない。命を犠牲にしていても成功しなくてはいけない。
00:03:21命を状態にすることができました。しかし、5分の戦争に行われていることができました。最初に、8分の戦争に行われました。8分の戦争を始めることができました。NHRORSHIMAは、このドルの戦争としています。日本の戦争は、8分の戦争がありました。あなたは、この戦争に行われていることができました。
00:03:32At 9.15, the bomb is dropped.
00:04:14On the first day of November, 1955, the United States Adam and Propheze exhibition opened
00:04:21in Hibiya Park, Tokyo.
00:04:23America's ambassador to Japan, John M. Allison, conveyed a message from President Eisenhower
00:04:29that the exhibit stands as a symbol of our country's mutual determination that the great
00:04:34power of the atom shall be dedicated to the arts of peace.
00:04:38A message from Prime Minister Haruyama.
00:04:41Praise the greatness of atomic science in the present century.
00:04:57Tokyo, from around 250km, the city of Fukushima第一原子力発電所
00:05:04is built.
00:05:08,
00:05:12.
00:05:12.
00:05:13.
00:05:13.
00:05:13.
00:05:13.
00:05:13.
00:05:47I was born in the first place of Fukushima
00:05:51in the second place of Fukushima
00:06:12本当にあの記憶のギリギリ小学校に上がるかわからないかぐらいの時にあの決まったんですねですから
00:06:15入社した時には18歳でした
00:06:22東京電力は大きな会社だけでなく
00:06:28私の静かな街を完全に変えました
00:06:34新しいスポーツ施設の建設や
00:06:38学校まで建てました
00:06:45親は子供に東電学園への進学を進めたりもしました
00:07:01やっぱり東京電力の社員は優秀と見られていたんでしょうね東電の社員は頼りにできる存在で
00:07:09とても深く信用されていました
00:07:23しかし東電は全てに正直ではなかった
00:07:31そしてそれは私たちを完全に無防備な状態へ追い込むことになった
00:07:543.1日の当日の朝っていうのはごくごく普通の日でしたので
00:08:02その日現場におよそ6000人ほど働いていました
00:08:09その中にはアメリカ人もいました
00:08:24その中にはアメリカ人を組み込むことができました
00:08:28その中にはアメリカ人の証書に入ることをやってみます
00:08:31水が入ることを見ることを理解しやすいです
00:08:33その中には24のаныを取り込むことができました
00:08:38あの提供ができたら自分のトリベースに向かわれていたら
00:08:41それに出てきたら海外のために国家にの研究をしていることを
00:08:42見ることができたら
00:08:47超時世代、海外の国に 海外の国に
00:08:50全て、日本に
00:08:52I just loved it.
00:08:54It was a beautiful day.
00:08:55You would think March 11th in Japan might be cold,
00:08:58but it was sunny, beautiful, clear.
00:09:23I just loved it.
00:09:26This year's 2018-19,
00:09:27I think March 11th,
00:09:29and I have the report,
00:09:30and I'm going to ask you all my team,
00:09:35between that and 20th year old,
00:09:35and I看 up the year.
00:09:36I'm going to request more than these days.
00:09:42I will celebrate the 10th!
00:09:43My fortune will introduce you.
00:09:44I don't know.
00:10:32Oh my god, this is weird, I've never experienced a crown shape like this before.
00:10:47It's a very loud, loud, loud, loud, loud, loud.
00:11:01The first of the wind was a very loud, very loud, loud, loud.
00:11:08so
00:11:13I had a lot of the wheels that were so big.
00:11:20I thought it was not the same. I thought it was a weird thing.
00:11:26I was also like that.
00:11:29I was also like driving and my team and my team.
00:11:37I was in Unit 1 on the turbine building. The sound is coming off the structural steel. Like those old
00:11:44Japanese movies, where Godzilla was doing that squeaky metal sound, like that screech he would make. That's what it sounded
00:11:52like to me, you know?
00:11:53And I know I felt the whole building shift, east and down, not inches. It was in feet.
00:12:23I went to the building building, and I was going to the building building.
00:12:31So, I'm going to go to the building building.
00:12:40When I was in the building building, I was told that there was a tsunami coming from the building.
00:12:58My younger people say they have to follow up and their own disks and their own disks.
00:13:05The others who have lost their feet are later and the others who are farther away,
00:13:09and they've made a long line that was a very long time ago,
00:13:16This was really...
00:13:17...and that...
00:13:17...and that...
00:13:17...and that was...
00:13:18...and that...
00:13:19...like...
00:13:20That was a good feeling.
00:13:23We're going to get to the end!
00:13:25We're going to get to the end!
00:13:48He's shredding!
00:13:48He's on the other side.
00:13:49What?
00:13:49Oh, He's on the other side.
00:13:51We're coming!
00:13:52Oh!
00:13:53Someone know!
00:13:54Oh, he's on the other side.
00:13:56Let's move on for a second.
00:14:14Leave here,Д
00:14:22What?
00:14:24Where?
00:14:25Where?
00:14:26Oh!
00:14:27Really?
00:14:31Oh, get it.
00:14:33Oh, get it, get it.
00:14:33Was it?
00:14:35Oh.
00:14:39Got it.
00:14:41Oh, we got it.
00:14:43Oh.
00:14:43Oh, oh.
00:14:44Oh, oh.
00:14:47Oh, oh.
00:14:50Watch it! Watch it!
00:14:54Watch it!
00:15:20Watch it!
00:15:21Oh, there's a big tsunami!
00:15:242波, 3波...
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00:18:02The cabin building was 10 meters in the area, so I couldn't understand what the number was.
00:18:14I couldn't believe it.
00:18:33I got it out of the building and I watched the tsunami come in.
00:18:40The water got higher and higher as it went over the seawall.
00:18:47You would think it's loud, but it's not.
00:18:51It only started to make noise when it started to snap and crack and break things off when it hit
00:18:56land.
00:19:13I didn't think about the plants until I watched it rush around them.
00:19:15I watched it just rush around the four buildings.
00:19:18Off the highlands behind me, like these big black ominous clouds came rolling in real low.
00:19:24It almost felt like it pulled the atmosphere down on us and it began to snow even.
00:19:34It felt like the end of the world.
00:19:46When there was a tsunami that was happening in the middle of the night,
00:19:50it started to be a strange thing.
00:19:55That's what happened to me.
00:19:56That's what I'm going to do.
00:20:23and the panels on the display
00:20:24and the panels on the display
00:20:29and the leaves also on the display
00:20:34and it was dark
00:20:35and finally the driver
00:20:40had no sound
00:20:42and it was calm
00:20:43and the driver said
00:20:50SBO?
00:20:52SBO, Station Blackout,全交流電源喪失ですけれど、東京電力の中でもSBOというのは経験ないですね。発電所の所長がいる対策本部の方にすぐに電話しましたし、原子力発電所って本当にありえない、
00:21:24日照だということの私からの報告でしたよね。
00:21:50eventual tow could be in the tens of thousands.
00:21:52The tsunami waves that followed move so quickly,
00:21:55at a speed of 800 kilometres an hour,
00:21:58that they proved to be an unstoppable and devastating force.
00:22:02I was working as a journalist for The New York Times.
00:22:05I was based in Tokyo, where I'd been living for eight years.
00:22:10After the earthquake struck,
00:22:11we had decided to head north to where the tsunami caused most damage.
00:22:20It was like entering hell.
00:22:28The tsunami had basically ripped away everything that was there.
00:22:35So if you can imagine, just like a field, like a plane,
00:22:41from the surface of the moon, dark gray mud covering everything,
00:22:48an occasional piece of a home or building or even an occasional home
00:22:53that had somehow randomly survived, big pools of water,
00:22:59things were on fire, and mounds of debris, you know,
00:23:04pieces of buildings and fishing boats and crushed buses
00:23:08and mangled cars.
00:23:11There were dead animals, dead pets, and, of course, dead people.
00:23:18No one survives that tsunami.
00:23:20You either get out of the way or you're dead.
00:23:22No one is dead.
00:23:28Thank you very much.
00:23:58One of the most important parts of the原子力発電所 have been closed, but
00:24:04in this case, the impact of the public and the impact of the原子力発電所 has not been confirmed.
00:24:12This is what we need to do with all of our safety.
00:24:17This is what we need to do with the impact of the原子力発電所.
00:24:24We need to make sure that we have the power of the原子力発電所.
00:24:30Khan and the Democratic Party of Japan
00:24:33were a very inexperienced government.
00:24:36This was their first time in office since 1955.
00:24:42And they now had to deal with an extremely challenging set of circumstances.
00:24:47The country was in complete chaos.
00:24:50Thousands of people are missing.
00:24:52And they have this developing situation at Fukushima
00:24:56that had the potential to be many, many times worse than Chernobyl.
00:25:01That disaster involved one reactor.
00:25:05Fukushima involved six.
00:25:09Japan now telling the UN nuclear watchdog, the IAEA,
00:25:13that they have a heightened state of alert
00:25:15that has been declared at their nuclear power plant.
00:25:18This is the Fukushima nuclear power plant.
00:25:21Radiation levels are up, according to the Kyoto News Agency,
00:25:25eight times the normal level at a monitoring station outside the plant,
00:25:301,000 times above normal in a control room inside the plant.
00:25:38The worst-case scenario would be a cataclysmic meltdown of the reactors
00:25:43called a China syndrome.
00:25:49And what that refers to is the, something like 100 tons of uranium fuel is inside the reactor.
00:25:58It melts out of control.
00:26:00It melts down, which means it collapses to the bottom of the vessel,
00:26:03like it's a lump of, like lava, almost.
00:26:08If you can't cool it, which they can't because there's no electricity
00:26:12to pump water into the reactor,
00:26:15it rises to a temperature of something like 2,000 degrees.
00:26:18It burns through the vessel itself.
00:26:22It'll melt through the vessel, drop into the building,
00:26:26almost like bore its way through the concrete because of the heat.
00:26:29It escapes into the earth and is out of control.
00:26:34And if that were to happen,
00:26:36experts talked about the loss of northern Japan.
00:26:42The entire northern half of Honshu becomes uninhabitable
00:26:45if this thing gets out of control.
00:26:47what happens to be in the land of Honshu is an earthquake and the heat.
00:27:01The времена of Honshu takes place to happen soon.
00:27:14So I thought I was going to get to the place immediately.
00:27:23There were roads and there were many places where I could go.
00:27:54I watched four TEPCO guys
00:27:59pulling on a van or something
00:28:00and they got out and they all walked
00:28:02towards me because I was right at the top of the stairs
00:28:05and they all walked
00:28:06down that stairs, they were all in their
00:28:07TEPCO uniforms and they were all about
00:28:0935 years old I'd say, like they were all like
00:28:12in their mid-30s
00:28:14we just all made eye contact as they went
00:28:16by, they went down that stairs
00:28:18and they were probably part of the operations
00:28:20group or whatever and I
00:28:22remember those four guys going down
00:28:24probably had to stay and
00:28:25and work that mess they had
00:28:28when we parted ways
00:28:30and I went up that hill
00:28:32to get to my rental car
00:28:33you know, I didn't know they were going to be headed
00:28:36for a meltdown in less than 24 hours
00:28:38I didn't know at that time
00:28:40how bad things were going to get
00:28:48so I was going to go to the airport
00:28:49and I was a young man
00:28:50and I was going to walk
00:28:52so I went to the airport
00:29:00and I was going to come to the airport
00:29:01so I was going to be able to get
00:29:23後退制のクルーの中での最高責任者ということです。
00:29:38車のバッテリーを10個直列につないで、ケーキを読むための電源にするということを要約できたんですよね。
00:29:40After that, it was set up for 10 minutes or 15 minutes.
00:29:52I read the number of the important parameters and parameters.
00:29:56I'm going to read the news and report on the news.
00:30:04The gas station has decreased.
00:30:09When the gas station is released from water,
00:30:13the gas station is very cold,
00:30:14and a lot of gas stations will occur.
00:30:18The gas station is extremely high.
00:30:24There was no fire.
00:30:26There was no fire.
00:30:31There was no way to stop it.
00:30:37What happened to me was that I had to be the想定.
00:30:45I was like, I'm afraid to leave.
00:30:50If you show this attitude, everyone will spread it on your side.
00:30:56It's going to be a panic.
00:31:20crucial what's meant to happen inside a nuclear power station is this in the reactor the rods
00:31:27of nuclear fuel go through the process of fission the atoms splitting and releasing energy water
00:31:33is pumped in and flows around the fuel where it heats up and turns into steam that drives
00:31:39generators to make electricity but if a reactor runs dry as one did today the fuel rods overheat
00:31:47and melt and that may have started in three reactors the nuclear fuel could then sink to
00:31:53the bottom of the reactor the beginning of what's known as meltdown but provided the steel wall of
00:31:59the container does its job there shouldn't be a leak this was my first experience of a severe
00:32:06accident of this sort i would not hide anything but as prime minister i would also not to say
00:32:14anything i could not be certain of that was my policy i told the special advisor i would go to
00:32:33i was joined by the chairman of the nuclear safety commission i clearly recalled asking is there any danger of
00:32:44an explosion to which the chairman answered with conviction
00:32:47an explosion is out of the question
00:32:51an explosion is out of the question
00:33:17There are no fax in the box.
00:33:19There are no fax since they were included in the box.
00:33:21So they were sent to the box, and they were faxed.
00:33:33As I said, I had no trust in Tokyo.
00:33:38I had no trust in the general public.
00:33:43I didn't believe it was because I didn't believe it was because I didn't believe it.
00:33:47At that time, I watched the film in the広島-長崎-原爆.
00:33:51I watched the film in the moment.
00:33:53It was my head and my head.
00:34:00The other thing was that I was human.
00:34:05There must be a human error.
00:34:09I don't care about the people's lives.
00:34:15I don't care about the people's lives.
00:34:20I don't care about the people's lives.
00:34:30I don't care about the people's lives.
00:34:34I was reading the numbers of the 1st century.
00:34:41I read the numbers of the 1st century.
00:34:46I read the numbers of the 1st century.
00:34:53I read the numbers of the 1st century.
00:35:02I read the numbers of the 1st century.
00:35:05I hear from the 1st century.
00:35:08that the 1st century.
00:35:12When I started to fill it up,
00:35:16I stepped out of it.
00:35:17I'm going to leave outside.
00:35:20I'm trying to tell you that it's not enough.
00:35:25It's time for me to come together.
00:35:30There are a lot of gases that are filled with a lot of gases that are in the middle of
00:35:34the fire.
00:35:37The human being in there is a lot of people who are in the middle of the fire.
00:35:50This is the end of the fire.
00:35:51It's not a way to do it. It's the final procedure.
00:36:00I'll talk to you later.
00:36:02If you go to the site, I'll ask you to do it.
00:36:07I'll ask you to do it.
00:36:08That was the hotline that I wanted to see.
00:36:26From the窓 from the bottom of the窓,
00:36:58we arrived in a war zone
00:37:02The hallway was full of workers, several of whom were lying on the floor.
00:37:07Some were wrapped in blankets.
00:37:10In the conference room, they explained,
00:37:13We are considering whether to vent manually.
00:37:16We will decide in the next hour.
00:37:19I said, we couldn't wait that long.
00:37:22To which they replied,
00:37:24We will create a suicide squad.
00:37:32We were looking at the procedure in the back of the bed.
00:37:35But there was no such thing happening.
00:37:42There is no real thing.
00:37:43No one can't happen.
00:37:45We were looking for a good one.
00:37:49No one can't do that.
00:37:52That's true.
00:37:55At the end of the year,
00:37:56When I was in the U.S. Department, the control center, the control center itself is high, so I'd like
00:38:08to be able to avoid this place until I was in the hospital.
00:38:30This nuclear accident placed the very existence of our country in danger our ability to evade a crisis depended on
00:38:39venting these reactors
00:39:10This is the end of the year
00:39:11This is the end of the year
00:39:37The two of us came here.
00:39:46We asked them to get ready to go to the ground, so we asked them to get ready to go
00:39:52to the ground, so we asked them to get ready to go.
00:39:58I'm still young and I'm still young and I'm still young.
00:40:05I'm still young and I'm still young and I'm still young.
00:40:09I have no idea how to match those people
00:40:11because they were so young and I don't want to push it up.
00:40:14I felt it was hard to make a mistake.
00:40:17When I was in front of my brother,
00:40:19When I walked in, I was able to make the chance to succeed in their own.
00:40:26I wanted to give him a shame to him, so he said he was able to win.
00:40:37My husband, we were dehydrated, but I saw him take his head and take his head.
00:40:46He was able to live on my sword, but that's the moment he would play.
00:40:50And then I got to get out of it immediately.
00:40:54There was a hotline.
00:40:57It was the 1st or 2st.
00:40:59It was a high fire.
00:41:03There was a hotline.
00:41:06So I got to get back to the hotline.
00:41:48The end of the day
00:41:55The end of the day
00:42:23The end of the day
00:42:59The end of the day
00:43:09The end of the day
00:43:39Get me some information quickly
00:43:40Everyone in the country
00:43:42In the world
00:43:43Knew of the explosion
00:43:45But we had no information
00:43:47No explanation
00:43:48The blast was seen and heard for kilometers
00:43:53Reactor 1 at Japan's Fukushima nuclear power plant explodes
00:43:57Sending radioactive gas spewing skywards
00:44:42People talk about 2011 as being a triple disaster
00:44:48But really it was two separate things
00:44:49There was the tsunami and the earthquake
00:44:52Which were an act of nature that killed tens of thousands
00:44:57Then there was the nuclear accident
00:45:00Which was actually something completely different
00:45:02The nuclear accident was an entirely man-made disaster
00:45:08When we started looking into it
00:45:10Even in those first days
00:45:12TEPCO was making mistakes
00:45:16Now there was a big gap between the plant
00:45:19And headquarters in Tokyo
00:45:22The plant was repeatedly asking
00:45:24Could you send up batteries so we can restart our cooling systems
00:45:28Can you send up generators on trucks?
00:45:33But TEPCO management was in such chaos
00:45:35That they just continually sent the wrong items
00:45:38It's like the wrong size batteries
00:45:41Or it's stuff you don't need
00:45:45At some point there's a pile of unused
00:45:50Unneeded objects
00:45:51That just builds up in the parking lot
00:45:55Also the drivers of these trucks
00:45:58That are being sent from Tokyo
00:46:00Refuse to go to the plant
00:46:02They refuse to go near the plant
00:46:04It's too dangerous
00:46:04So they stop at this TEPCO dockyard
00:46:08That's two hours south from the plant
00:46:11And drop off their stuff there
00:46:14And then the TEPCO workers at the plant
00:46:17Are told to drive down and get it
00:46:19So no one is coming to help them
00:46:25On top of all that
00:46:26Reactor 3 is now out of water
00:46:28And has started to produce masses of hydrogen
00:46:36To receive some traffic
00:46:37When the pandemic was passed
00:46:43It felt like the pandemic had been
00:46:44Like a driver's effort
00:46:45A taxi driver
00:46:47Someone comes up to me
00:46:50They got to life
00:46:54You're on the surface
00:46:55What do you mean?
00:46:55What do you mean?
00:46:56What do you mean?
00:46:57What do you mean?
00:46:57What does it mean?
00:46:58I already remember
00:46:58But I was like
00:47:01I believe that I'll go to the end.
00:47:07I can't remember what I'm saying.
00:47:11The people who are in the area of the city are saying,
00:47:15they say,
00:47:15they say,
00:47:16they say,
00:47:17they say,
00:47:18they say,
00:47:18The people who have told me about the local people,
00:47:22including my family,
00:47:26the people who don't have all these things
00:47:31are the people who don't have to do it.
00:47:37So,
00:47:39I said,
00:47:40I was like, I'm going to leave you alone.
00:47:43I was going to leave you alone.
00:47:49I didn't have any contact with my family.
00:47:57I didn't have any contact with my family.
00:48:04I didn't know where my family was.
00:48:10so
00:48:14this is because of the family
00:48:15and they will have to be able to find a way to get a safe path
00:48:24I was able to find a place where I wanted to find a safe path
00:48:29and I finally found a place where I was going
00:48:31and I was asked
00:48:32I was asked
00:48:33to find out a place where I was
00:48:35I was going to be able to find a place where I was
00:48:40I forgot to have a phone call.
00:48:44It was a short time.
00:48:46Well, I was not sure.
00:48:52Of course, I was not sure.
00:48:55But I was not sure.
00:48:57And then,
00:49:00I was able to tell you,
00:49:01I was able to tell you,
00:49:03and I was able to tell you,
00:49:04and I was able to tell you,
00:49:07and I was able to tell you,
00:49:19最悪なことが起こったとしても諦めてくれって伝えましたね。
00:49:24その後、かなえは沈黙でした。もちろん沈黙ですけど。
00:49:27でもすごいですよね。
00:49:30最後にはわかりましたって言いましたからね。
00:49:41Concerns are now being raised over three separate nuclear reactors at Fukushima following an explosion at one yesterday.
00:49:48There are worries that the reactors could overheat, leading to meltdown.
00:49:51There are also safety issues at two other nuclear sites.
00:49:55Officials are reassuring the public that there is no immediate danger, but an exclusion zone around Fukushima has been extended.
00:50:03The evacuation of people from the area now runs into the hundreds of thousands.
00:50:07Strong aftershocks are still being felt across the country, adding to the risks the rescuers face.
00:50:14The problems at the nuclear plants are making a bad situation even worse.
00:50:19Huge swathes of the country still have no electricity supplies.
00:50:26On television here, they're looking for reassurance from the experts.
00:50:30But it's hard for the Japanese public to be sure about the level of risk they face.
00:50:35We are working aggressively to support our Japanese ally at this time of extraordinary challenge.
00:50:42Search and rescue teams are on the ground in Japan to help the recovery effort.
00:50:47The Disaster Assistance and Response Team is working to confront the aftermath of the earthquake and tsunami.
00:50:53As I told Prime Minister Khan last night, the Japanese people are not alone in this time of great trial
00:51:00and sorrow.
00:51:02The US military, which has helped ensure the security of Japan...
00:51:06Honestly, I think the Japanese government worried about an American getting too involved with the nuclear disaster.
00:51:12I think there was a perception in Prime Minister Khan's mind that we would take over if they failed.
00:51:20So they wanted to be able to fix it themselves.
00:51:24But these reactors were American in design, so it was only a matter of time before the US government sent
00:51:30someone.
00:51:32We've also deployed some of our leading experts to help contain the damage at Japan's nuclear reactors.
00:51:39And that someone was me.
00:51:42I'm Charles Casto. I'm a nuclear safety consultant.
00:51:45I've worked in nuclear power for over 45 years.
00:51:50I'd never been to Japan. I knew very little about the country.
00:51:52So I was sort of plopped down in the middle of an international disaster with really no understanding of the
00:51:59culture, the language, the people.
00:52:02Although I did know the facility, the nuclear plant, very well.
00:52:06Because I worked at a plant almost identical to Fukushima Daiichi.
00:52:11So I had been an operator and instructor at that plant.
00:52:14That's partially the reason that I was chosen to lead that effort.
00:52:19When I landed, we rushed to the embassy and I was thrust in a secure video conference with the US
00:52:26government and the US military to discuss next steps.
00:52:30The US has a large military presence in Japan.
00:52:33Over 80,000 people.
00:52:35So we had our concerns.
00:52:37Not a lot of information, a lot of speculation.
00:52:41So one of my goals was to try to reduce that chaos.
00:52:47But it was days before we felt comfortable we were getting good information.
00:52:53Many days.
00:52:55It seems yesterday's explosion in the plant's Unit 1 reactor was caused by a buildup of hydrogen gas inside the
00:53:02building.
00:53:02It destroyed its walls, but the containment chamber surrounding the nuclear core remained intact, preventing a potentially catastrophic radiation leak.
00:53:12But it's now thought that a partial meltdown in a second reactor at the plant Unit 3 is highly possible.
00:53:19A complete meltdown could release uranium and dangerous byproducts into the environment.
00:53:42So on the 14th, the team at the plant were using a small fire truck to pump water into reactor
00:53:483.
00:53:51And so this single fire truck with these hoses is the only thing cooling the reactor.
00:53:58And they're now having to use seawater to do this, which is something TEPCO told them not to do because
00:54:04seawater would ruin the longevity of the reactor.
00:54:07But at this point, saving the reactor is out of the question.
00:54:12They just need to do anything they can to get on top of this.
00:54:16But they just don't have the tools to stop the hydrogen buildup.
00:54:28Let's take a little bit of this.
00:54:32Let's take a little deeper on the SCP-3 rule.
00:54:35Let's take a little bit of that, and let's take a little bit of that.
00:54:43Let's take a little bit of this.
00:55:04Japan's nuclear crisis worsened today when a second reactor building exploded.
00:55:09The suspected hydrogen explosion did lead to the release of some radio active material into the air.
00:55:14Officials have been giving assurances that containment structures that house nuclear material remain intact,
00:55:20but it's becoming clear that those assurances are not based on any certainty about what's going on inside the reactors.
00:55:27A short while ago, the plant owner of the Tokyo Electric Power Company announced that water levels in reactor number
00:55:34two are dangerously low,
00:55:36raising the specter of a nuclear meltdown.
00:55:40As soon as Unit 3 is lost, Unit 2 starts to go downhill.
00:55:46And for various reasons, Unit 2 is worse than Unit 1 or Unit 3.
00:55:49The pressures are much higher.
00:55:52And so the big fear was that the reactor would actually blow up, like a balloon popping,
00:55:59in a Chernobyl-style rupture of the reactor itself.
00:56:07And that's when they start talking about, you know, can we even control the plant?
00:56:13You know, why are we even staying?
00:56:17TEPCO management then calls the government to say, we don't think we can deal with this.
00:56:23We may have to evacuate.
00:56:27I was speechless. If they withdraw now, the very existence of this country would be in jeopardy.
00:56:34We had to contain the accident. And we had to be prepared to lose life in the process.
00:56:42I told them, I'm going to TEPCO headquarters, make preparations.
00:56:50Looking in from the outside, the situation was completely dysfunctional and disconnected.
00:56:55The first meeting was, look at our track record. Look how strong it's been.
00:57:01Well, that's over. You know, that was my thought.
00:57:07TEPCO couldn't get a hold of the situation. And the government also seemed to be completely ill-informed.
00:57:13Prime Minister Khan had experts who he would listen to.
00:57:17They came up with this popcorn scenario, like a chain reaction.
00:57:21One reactor would set off another, then another, and then another.
00:57:25It could just get worse and worse and worse out there.
00:57:49So, he had immense pressure on him. He wanted everything, as you might imagine,
00:57:53wanted everything faster, stronger, bigger.
00:57:57I was sent there to help. They didn't want to listen to an American.
00:58:02Which is understandable, given our history.
00:58:11There's a department at the 2nd floor.
00:58:26That's a major part of the world's history.
00:58:27If I were on Instagram, I'd look for my personal church,
00:58:31and I never had to run through.
00:58:38I was listening to a question and I said,
00:58:41which was a wonderful idea.
00:58:42I was in high school.
00:58:43I tried to build my own relationships.
00:58:43I didn't want to care for any other people.
00:58:44I've been working for a long time, and I've been working for a long time.
00:58:49I've been working for a long time, and I've been working for a long time.
00:58:55I've been working for a long time for a long time.
00:59:00I arrived at TEPCO headquarters a little after 5.30am.
00:59:08A number of monitors were lined up in the operations room.
00:59:12One of them was connected to Fukushima第一.
00:59:15I addressed everyone.
00:59:18This accident is the most important part of this accident.
00:59:23If we were to leave this accident,
00:59:25a few months later,
00:59:27all the nuclear weapons and nuclear weapons will be destroyed.
00:59:33Even if we can't stop this situation,
00:59:37if we can't stop this situation,
00:59:38we won't be able to stop this situation.
00:59:41You are the police officers.
00:59:44Please take your life.
00:59:48If you're 60 years old,
00:59:49you'll be able to leave.
00:59:51You'll be able to leave.
00:59:55You are the police officers.
00:59:57It's all.
00:59:57It's all.
01:00:00It's all.
01:00:05The police officers.
01:00:07It's all.
01:00:07That's all.
01:00:16I'm sorry.
01:00:19He said that he was the top of the country.
01:00:26He was the only way he had to do it.
01:00:30He was really behind him.
01:00:41After all, what he said was important to him.
01:00:44That's what I'm talking about.
01:00:45That's what I'm talking about.
01:00:48After that, there was an explosion of 4th.
01:00:59Atom-catastrophe in Japan has reached a new dimension.
01:01:04In Fukushima, there was a brand and a third explosion.
01:01:14An accident of the type of Chernobyl,
01:01:16which is not the one that is currently happening in the Japanese centrales.
01:01:22We are waiting for the worst,
01:01:24and we hope that this will not happen,
01:01:26to a rupture of the age of confinement,
01:01:28which would liberate the nuclear radio.
01:01:31Good evening.
01:01:32The situation at Japan's Fukushima nuclear plant has gotten worse.
01:01:38While a Tokyo Electric official said in a press conference
01:01:42that he does not believe a critical event is imminent,
01:01:45a senior nuclear industry executive told the New York Times
01:01:49that Japanese nuclear managers are, quote,
01:01:52basically in a full-scale panic.
01:01:58After the Unit 4 explosion, TEPCO did evacuate the plant.
01:02:05Khan agreed to the evacuation of most people from the plant,
01:02:10if a small number would stay, to basically to man the fire trucks.
01:02:15They had three fire trucks that were pumping water into the reactors,
01:02:18and that was it.
01:02:18That was the entire response at that point,
01:02:20was three fire trucks.
01:02:22Khan wanted enough people to stay to man those fire trucks
01:02:25and to monitor the reactors.
01:02:29And a total of 69 people stayed.
01:02:33They're known as the Fukushima 50,
01:02:34but there are actually 69 of them.
01:02:36They were staying so the others could leave.
01:02:40And they stayed knowing that they may not come back.
01:02:45They stood up to death.
01:02:50So, all of this officers turned into a public Sarai.
01:02:55It seemed like a clear communication of the future.
01:03:02They stood up to be out of touch.
01:03:05They said,
01:03:08there was a clear communication in the world.
01:03:09There was no way and there was a clear communication from the public.
01:03:11It wasnt a clear communication between the public that came to us.
01:03:13It was a clear communication between the public.
01:03:13I think it's weird to say that it's a good thing.
01:03:16I think it's a good thing to do with the people who are not able to do it.
01:03:25It's just simply to say that it's a good thing to do.
01:03:44Well, I didn't work on my phone.
01:03:47I got to send the phone.
01:03:48I found it, with my phone,
01:03:53I couldn't do it.
01:03:54I was going to send you an email.
01:03:54So I felt like,
01:03:55I didn't have to send you an email.
01:03:59I asked you to send you an email.
01:03:59Then, I sent you to the children.
01:04:03I told you,
01:04:04I was asking you to ask me a short email.
01:04:08I told you the last time
01:04:09I think I could say that I have a car in my home.
01:04:17But I think it's not a cost to my wife.
01:04:22But I think that's what I want to say.
01:04:27I'm not a child.
01:04:29What is that?
01:04:34When I get to my wife and speak,
01:04:39I feel like I'm going to be a child.
01:04:42I feel like I'm going to be a child.
01:04:43I feel like I'm going to be a child.
01:04:54It's a short message.
01:04:55I sent a mail to you, and I sent it to you, and I sent you a letter.
01:05:03I sent you a letter to you, and I said I had a report with my family.
01:05:12I thought it was a good idea.
01:05:22One of the drivers said,
01:05:25he said,
01:05:28he said,
01:05:29he said,
01:05:30he said,
01:05:31he said,
01:05:33he said,
01:05:34he said,
01:05:34I told him that he said,
01:05:35he said,
01:05:37he said,
01:05:40he said,
01:05:42I thought he said,
01:05:43it's all right.
01:05:47And I thought,
01:05:49he's the same thing,
01:05:50he thought he said,
01:05:51he said,
01:05:52I thought I was going to ask him what he's doing.
01:05:56I didn't have a flash on my face.
01:06:05I was looking for a camera.
01:06:06I was looking for a camera.
01:06:12I was looking for a couple of people.
01:06:17.
01:06:57Japanese engineers marshaled all their remaining tools today in the week-long struggle to prevent
01:07:03a full-blown nuclear disaster.
01:07:06Filmed just yesterday from a military helicopter, this shaky footage is the best image we have
01:07:11yet of the crippled Fukushima nuclear plant.
01:07:14No workers can be seen outside.
01:07:17With radiation at such high levels, it's simply too dangerous.
01:07:21The dense steam is believed to be rising from a storage pool holding 100 tons of nuclear
01:07:26fuel.
01:07:27And alarmingly, two more pools nearby are also heating up.
01:07:34Normally, at least five meters of cooling water cover the rods, stopping them from overheating
01:07:39and protecting workers from a deadly radiation.
01:07:42But reports now indicate the pool has run completely dry, a potentially catastrophic development.
01:07:50Radiation levels there are believed to be lethal.
01:07:53No one can go near.
01:07:55Seven days into this crisis, no one is any clearer on how this nuclear emergency will end.
01:08:15You have to be able to move.
01:08:23You have to be able to move.
01:08:35I couldn't control anything.
01:08:40The only thing that can be done was the monitoring of the loaders and the
01:08:47espère.
01:08:50At this moment, helmets 70 brave souls are still working at the
01:08:54stricken, Fukushima plant in Japan. They are trying to prevent
01:08:58a nuclear meltdown and apparently suffering great radiation.
01:09:02We've obtained a statement from the international
01:09:04atomic energy agency. Pete, that says the level
01:09:08at the plant and I want to make that very clear
01:09:10at the plant itself are enough to kill a man
01:09:14Within five hours.
01:09:45ho toot to cool kyouko 失うっていうかそういうことで
01:10:03冷水に取れてたんじゃないかなと思いますよね前向きでありすぎることは簡単ではなかった
01:10:08I was afraid to go to the plant, but I was afraid to go to the plant.
01:10:15However, the situation is necessary to go outside and help.
01:10:51The rescue team was created by the Hyper Rescue隊.
01:11:02This was a very good time when I was in a week.
01:11:05I had to go to the end of the day and the night of the 12th.
01:11:15I was in the middle of the day of the 11th.
01:11:22I told the air to make a clear line.
01:11:26I was told to answer this at night.
01:11:27I think it was about to make a project in the air.
01:11:32I think it was about the 17th day.
01:11:36I was just a machine and a machine, and I was a pro-teller.
01:11:43I felt like I could do it for myself.
01:11:45I had a feeling that I had a feeling that I could not be able to do it.
01:11:53It was my feeling that if I could not be able to do this country,
01:11:58I could not be able to do it.
01:12:01I think it was my feeling that I could do it.
01:12:16.
01:12:16.
01:12:16.
01:12:16.
01:12:17.
01:12:17.
01:12:17.
01:12:20.
01:12:20.
01:12:20.
01:12:21.
01:12:21.
01:12:21.
01:12:21It's now 400 microns!
01:12:23Yes, it's now 400 microns!
01:12:27It's about 3月18日.
01:12:31I'm leaving.
01:12:40It's like a war.
01:12:52I put a mask on the ground at 10km.
01:13:00It's been a long time since then.
01:13:02In this way...
01:13:13It's not Sir.
01:13:20It's a base of the steering wheel.
01:13:23Look!
01:13:52Oh!
01:13:56There is a fire in the middle.
01:13:59It is from the middle.
01:14:06There was a fire in the middle.
01:14:15I had to pray for God.
01:14:25N
01:14:33There was a dogfight in the back of the boat.
01:14:35He didn't produce water.
01:14:39He said I couldn't leave it.
01:14:59I was going to get to the hospital when I was in the hospital.
01:15:02I had a lot of people who used to wear masks.
01:15:08I was going to take a lot of masks.
01:15:12I was going to take a lot of masks.
01:15:15I thought that was okay.
01:15:17I was going to talk to everyone.
01:15:19I would like to say that everyone has a chance to talk about it.
01:15:34If you don't have an engine or any trouble, if you don't have energy,
01:15:40you can use a lot of water for a long time.
01:15:59It's about 2,500 tons of water on the 18th day, and it's about 2,500 tons of water on
01:16:11the 18th day.
01:16:19It's about 3,500 tons of water on the 18th day, and it's about 3,500 tons of water on
01:16:25the 18th day.
01:16:41I thought I was really helped.
01:16:43I thought I was able to get the water on the 18th day.
01:16:56I was able to get the water on the 18th day.
01:17:18JVLHで汚染検査をして、JVLHで汚染検査をしても汚染していました、体中。洗っても洗っても落ちないというか、冷たい水で洗いましたけど、体落ちなかったですし、
01:17:38服もないので、支給された津波みたいな服を着て、そこで初めてお風呂を逃げさせてもらって、湯船に浸かったときの、本当に体中に染み渡る温かさ。
01:18:02温かさの中で本当にこう、自分は生きて発電所出てきたんだって、その実感を感じた瞬間でしたよね。ああ、本当に。生きてる、生きてるってこう、なんか。湯船に口つけながら。聞かれたくなかったので。湯船に口つけて喋ってましたよね。やってました。
01:18:17このタイプの兵当につ historyは確保になりました。船にうたった訓ツトラックの研究を好きに入りました。雷の物事
01:18:19stitches after their oil and then to the nuclear plant.要がってもらえられたプローバーサービスの研究並びに喋ったり、
01:18:33And they finally start to get a handle on the disaster.
01:18:40What follows is civil suits, inquests, and TEPCO executives making public apologies.
01:19:03It's also revealed that TEPCO received a report warning that a tsunami of 15 meters was possible at the Fukushima
01:19:11plant.
01:19:14But instead of acting on it, TEPCO sat on the report and only gave it to nuclear authorities on March
01:19:217, 2011, four days before the disaster struck.
01:19:31Japan is the nation that invented the word tsunami.
01:19:35So the idea that a Japanese plant wouldn't be ready for its tsunami looks ludicrous, and yet they weren't.
01:19:42When the waves hit, the plant was literally caught with its pants down.
01:19:47You don't even need a wave wall. All you need is a waterproof power system, like you have in a
01:19:53ship or a submarine or something.
01:19:55It wouldn't have taken a whole lot. And they just didn't do it, because to raise the risk of a
01:20:01tsunami,
01:20:01to raise the risk of something like that happening, would go against the orthodoxy of the safety myth.
01:20:08If you question the safety of a plant, even something like, hey, let's have a few more backup systems,
01:20:14it could possibly cost you your career. And so people didn't do it.
01:20:19They had to kill the line. And the plant was left vulnerable to something that, in Japan, frankly, should have
01:20:27been foreseeable.
01:20:29It's foreseeable.
01:20:32After the incertation of the absence of our mission, we have To save the 입니다 of safety.
01:20:46Basically, we have to get the risk of becoming a self-defense system.
01:20:52And that means that we don't have to be the risk of the risk of the price of everything.
01:20:55We can't wait. We have to be able to ride the sea.
01:20:57So we have to be able to drive.
01:21:04原子力というのは民間でやっていいのかいけないのかという問題にも発展するわけなんですけども
01:21:14一民間企業でそれだけきちんと稼ぎながら安全を確保していくっていうような仕組みが
01:21:18本当にキープできるのかって経営者は当然考えるわけで
01:21:22やっぱりなんとか稼働率も良くしないといけないと
01:21:26事故がヒューマンエラーの結果であったかっていったら
01:21:27ヒューマンエラーって言い方はちょっと違うと思いますね
01:21:32人間的要素ですね
01:21:40この話はあまり今でも世界の人はそんなにきちんと学んでないですよ
01:21:47The aftermath of the accident is still going on today
01:21:52And we are still decades from cleaning up the radioactive material in the reactors
01:22:00It'll be my grandchildren who see that cleaned up
01:22:04And after years of mothballing the nuclear program in Japan
01:22:08It's firmly back on the agenda
01:22:11They've restarted 14 reactors and there are plans to build many, many more
01:22:18It's not just Japan
01:22:19Much of the world faced with climate change and energy insecurity
01:22:24Is now turning back the nuclear power
01:22:30If there was a big lesson from the accident
01:22:34It would be the necessity of transparency
01:22:37And coming, being frank with people, right?
01:22:41You would hope that lesson has been learnt
01:22:43But the government has never been fully transparent
01:22:46About what happened in Fukushima
01:22:49TEPCO has never revealed fully what happened
01:22:52We have very few records of what was being said or done at that time
01:22:57It feels like any question of risk, any question of what can go wrong is gone
01:23:02And people just don't want to talk about that
01:23:05We're back to, you know, don't worry about it, we'll take care of it, everything's okay
01:23:23And their messaging leaves us wondering
01:23:26Has anything really changed?
01:23:29Is there any benefits to those who were doing well?
01:23:32We don't need to take care of it
01:23:38We don't need to leave a whole lot
01:23:38We have an issue with that
01:23:39We don't have to leave a whole lot
01:23:39But they've never threatened for people
01:23:40If you have to leave a whole lot
01:23:46Do not let your community be back
01:23:47We don't have to leave a whole lot
01:24:22日本の国内の中では東京電力が悪我々社員も東京電力の社員かみたいなそういう厳しい言葉もかけられましたし家族も子どもたちもそうですけれどお前らずっと安全だ大丈夫だって言ってたよなとか
01:24:26I don't think it's a hero, I think, all of them.
01:24:33On the other hand, from the U.S. or from the U.S.,
01:24:40the U.S. 50,
01:24:40those brave emergency workers who are walking into a wall of radiation.
01:24:46When I was in a形 of expression,
01:24:51when I was there,
01:24:54when I was there,
01:24:55when I was there,
01:24:57I felt a strange feeling.
01:25:03I always wanted to say,
01:25:07I didn't want to say anything.
01:25:16The operators there do not see themselves as heroes.
01:25:20You know, they felt they were culprits more than heroes
01:25:23that they caused the accident, which they didn't.
01:25:26Someone told me that, you know,
01:25:27we feel like Vietnam veterans,
01:25:29you know, that in America,
01:25:31where, you know,
01:25:32we think we fought a noble battle,
01:25:34but our people don't think this is a noble war.
01:25:38So, we're not heroes.
01:25:42But for me, unlike the military,
01:25:44none of those who stayed behind at that plan
01:25:46expected they would have to give up their life.
01:25:49They, like anyone else with a nine-to-five job,
01:25:52turned up on the 11th with their lunchboxes
01:25:54to work their shifts.
01:25:56Then they were faced with all this.
01:25:59And they chose to stay.
01:26:02And I think understanding that,
01:26:05anyone would have to agree
01:26:07that they are absolutely heroic.
01:26:09they could pass the soldiers to the Earth.
01:26:22I think that's important.
01:26:29Hopefully they lived there and have to see
01:26:31a lot of violence.
01:26:31But there are definitely
01:26:36pieces of Yukiko,
01:26:37many of these things,
01:26:38there are many people who had been
01:26:39I don't know what to do.
01:26:39I thought that the person who was here was a proof of the fact that he was here.
01:26:50I thought that he was a good one.
01:27:11Oh, my God.
01:27:42Oh, my God.
01:28:36Oh, my God.
01:29:08Oh, my God.
01:29:31Oh, my God.
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