Home » Will destroy life on Earth: a disaster worse than Chernobyl

Will destroy life on Earth: a disaster worse than Chernobyl

by alex

The scale of the accident at the Fukushima-1 nuclear power plant in Japan significantly exceeds the scale of the accident at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant, writes 1RRE.

The publication notes that the initial amount of radiation released during the Fukushima accident in 2001 was less than 20% of the amount that got into the environment after the explosion of power unit 4 of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant in 1986.

Nevertheless, the Fukushima disaster was assigned the maximum hazard level according to the INES (International Nuclear Events Scale) – the international scale of nuclear events.

From the molten reactors, water began to flow into the Pacific Ocean, the content of radioactive elements in which was thousands of times higher than the permissible limits.

Even after nine years, the emergency station is still dumping about 300 tons of radioactive liquid waste into the Pacific Ocean every day. At the same time, the scale of the disaster is carefully hidden by both politicians and scientists.

The consequences of global warming

The publication notes that the corporation TEPCO (Tokyo Electric Power Company Inc), which manages the station in Fukushima, is a subsidiary of the world's largest energy corporation General Electric, whose influence extends not only to the media, but also to the world's leading politicians.

Back in 2017, independent experts announced that radioactive waste from a Japanese nuclear power plant had managed to completely poison the entire Pacific Ocean. This statement is supported by photographs of mutated plants and animals regularly appearing on the Internet both in Japan and along the Pacific coast.

Independent experts warn that the consequences of the accident at the Fukushima-1 nuclear power plant may soon completely change the natural evolution of living species on the planet. Or even completely destroy all biological life on Earth.

The accident at the Fukushima-1 nuclear power plant, as Rambler reported, occurred on March 11, 2011 as a result of the strongest earthquake in the history of Japan and the tsunami that followed. The flooding of the basements, where the switchgear, backup generators and batteries were located, led to a complete blackout of the station and the failure of emergency cooling systems. There was a melting of nuclear fuel in the reactors of power units 1–3, accumulation of hydrogen as a result of the steam-zirconium reaction and explosions of an explosive mixture at power units 1, 3 and 4.

“He was pumped out by the killer”: details of the state of emergency because of the mask

US kidnapped relative of Kim Jong-un

“It will not be pleasant to anyone”: Sandu was answered in Russia

You may also like

Leave a Comment